City Cemetery in Marietta, Georgia is also referred to as Citizen's Cemetery and as Marietta City Cemetery. Many of the prominent early residents of Cobb County, and particularly Marietta, are buried there. City Cemetery is one of the only predominantly white cemeteries to have a section for slaves. There are many slaves entombed at City Cemetery, but only four are known by name. City Cemetery is adjacent to Confederate Cemetery, a cemetery dedicated to the Confederate dead. Confederate Cemetery rests on land donated by Mrs. John H. Glover, the wife of the first mayor of Marietta. The land is now owned and maintained by the State of Georgia. There are several thousand graves there which are dedicated to the Confederate dead, with just over 100 actually being identified with marked graves. The identified and unidentified are buried side by side in plots with the deceased from their home states, with the exception of those unidentified who died in the hospital with no way to identify them, and the thousand or so whose units and states are unknown. Of those identified, the vast majority died in a Confederate Veteran's home, not unlike the modern-day VA centers, and were buried in the Confederate Cemetery with full military honors.