
Mackinac Island's Post Cemetery
A military cemetery that's designated as a National Historic Landmark, Mackinac Island's Post Cemetery is the oldest cemetery on the island and contains graves that date all the way back to the War of 1812. Both British and American soldiers are buried here. But because many early burials were simply marked with wooden crosses that have long since decayed and disappeared, many burials are no longer identified. Of 108 burials, only 39 remain known. Known burials of note include Ignatius Goldhofer, a Civil War veteran who came to Fort Mackinac in 1869, Edward Biddle, who served as sheriff and village president in the mid 19th century, and Josiah and Isabel Cowes, the infant children of Lieutenant Calvin and Mary Cowles. The flag at Mackinac Island's Post Cemetery continually flies at half mast, making it one of four National Cemeteries with this honor. The cemetery also features a 1907 picket fence and a cannon from Fort Sumter, where the Civil War began.- Legends of Mackinac Island: The story of 'The Chaplain's Lady'
- Abraham Lincoln's ironic link to Mackinac Island

Ste. Anne's Cemetery on Mackinac Island
As the civilian population of Mackinac Island grew in the 19th century, residents began burying their dead and moving existing remains into separate Catholic and Protestant cemeteries near Post Cemetery. Although Ste. Anne's Cemetery is marked by gorgeous stone arches built in 1924, its oldest identified grave dates to 1833 when 8-year-old Mary Biddle passed away. One prominent early Catholic on Mackinac Island is actually buried inside Ste. Anne's Church. At her request, pioneering Mackinac Island fur trader Magdaleine La Framboise was buried beneath the church altar when she died in 1846. However, when the church underwent a renovation in the mid-20th century, her remains were moved to a grave in the adjacent churchyard. Legend has it that the church's steeple began to tilt at that time, and gradually it leaned more and more. When the church re-interred La Framboise's remains in a crypt in the church basement in 2013, the steeple stopped moving - although it's still off center to this day.