Certified by Richmond County Memorial Park Cemetery • Mar 01, 2026
Cemetery
Richmond County Memorial Park Cemetery in Rockingham, NC provides cemetery, burial, veteran, and memorialization services. Call us 24/7.
Our team can help you with cemetery property, receptions or floral placement whether youre preplanning final arrangements or need to hold a service soon. We also offer families a variety of cremation placement options. We have expertise in the funeral and burial traditions of many cultures, and our team is proud to offer assistance with planning a memorialization that is best suited for your needs
Details
Wheelchair accessible entranceAvailable
Location
Certified by Richmond County Memorial Park Cemetery • Mar 01, 2026
Certified by Richmond County Memorial Park Cemetery • Mar 01, 2026
Reviews
4.0
4 reviews
5 stars
3
4 stars0
3 stars0
2 stars0
1 star
1
AS
Amanda Scott
Sep 21, 2025
5.0
Such a Beautiful Place.
JD
Joy Diama
Jun 16, 2024
1.0
We can’t visit the grave of my father in-law cuz of those mean geese! They are maybe 30 -40 of them chasing us,we drove almost 2hours for nothing!I hope somebody will take care of it!
ML
Michael Lee
Jun 14, 2022
5.0
Very clean and well kept.
CC
Chastity Coble
Aug 16, 2018
5.0
Someone keeps stealing the Flowers & solar lights off my Fathers Grave.
Frequently Asked Questions About Richmond County Memorial Park Cemetery
What does a Funeral Director do?
Pick up the deceased and transport the body to the funeral home (anytime day or night)
Notify proper authorities, family and/or relatives
Arrange and prepare death certificates
Provide certified copies of death certificates for insurance and benefit processing
Work with the insurance agent, Social Security or Veterans Administration to ensure that necessary paperwork is filed for receipt of benefits
Prepare and submit obituary to the newspapers of your choice
Bathe and embalm the deceased body, if necessary
Prepare the body for viewing including dressing and cosmetizing
Assist the family with funeral arrangements and purchase of casket, urn, burial vault and cemetery plot
Schedule the opening and closing of the grave with cemetery personnel, if a burial is to be performed
Coordinate with clergy if a funeral or memorial service is to be held
Arrange a police escort and transportation to the funeral and/or cemetery for the family
Order funeral sprays and other flower arrangements as the family wishes
Provide Aftercare, or grief assistance, to the bereaved
What do I do when a death occurs?
The funeral home will help coordinate arrangements with the cemetery.
Bring the following information to complete the State vital statistic requirements:
✓ Birthplace
✓ Father's Name
✓ Mother's Name
✓ Social Security Number
✓ Veteran's Discharge or Claim Number
✓ Education
✓ Marital Status
Contact your clergy. Decide on time and place of funeral or memorial service. This can be done at the funeral home.
The funeral home will assist you in determining the number of copies of the death certificates you will be needing and can order them for you.
Make a list of immediate family, close friends and employer or business colleagues. Notify each by phone.
Decide on appropriate memorial to which gifts may be made (church, hospice, library, charity or school).
Gather obituary information you want to include such as age, place of birth, cause of death, occupation, college degrees, memberships held, military service , outstanding work, list of survivors in immediate family. Include time and place of services. The funeral home will normally write article and submit to newspapers (newspaper will accept picture and they will be returned intact).
Arrange for members of family or close friends to take turns answering door or phone, keeping careful record of calls. If Social Security checks are automatic deposit, notify the bank of the death.
When I call, will someone come right away?
If you request immediate assistance, yes. If the family wishes to spend a short time with the deceased to say good-bye, that’s perfectly acceptable. Your funeral director will come when your time is right.
Should I choose Burial or Cremation?
Burial in a casket is the most common method of disposing of remains in the United States, although entombment also occurs. Cremation is increasingly selected because it can be less expensive and allows for the memorial service to be held at a more convenient time in the future when relatives and friends can come together.
A funeral service followed by cremation need not be any different from a funeral service followed by a burial. Usually, cremated remains are placed in urn before being committed to a final resting place. The urn may be buried, placed in an indoor or outdoor mausoleum or columbarium, or interred in a special urn garden that many cemeteries provide for cremated remains. The remains may also be scattered, according to state law.
What is the purpose of embalming?
Embalming sanitizes and preserves the body. Embalming makes it possible to lengthen the time between death and the final disposition, allowing family members time to arrange and participate in the type of service most comforting to them.
Does a dead body have to be embalmed, according to law?
The Federal Trade Commission says, "Except in certain special cases, embalming is not required by law. Embalming may be necessary, however, if you select certain funeral arrangements, such as a funeral with viewing. If you do not want embalming, you usually have the right to choose an arrangement that does not require you to pay for it, such as direct cremation or immediate burial."
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