LAKE VIEW CEMETERY


Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio

'Lake View Cemetery' is located on the east side of the City of Cleveland, Ohio, along the East Cleveland and Cleveland Heights borders. It was founded in 1869 and sits on 285 acres (1.2 km²) of land. There are over 101,000 people buried at Lake View, with more than 700 burials each year. There are 70 acres (0.3 km²) remaining for future development. Known locally as "Cleveland's Outdoor Museum," Lake View Cemetery is also home to the Wade Chapel, featuring an interior designed by Louis Tiffany, as well as an 80 million gallon capacity concrete-filled dam.
The cemetery is so named because it is partially located in the "heights" area of Greater Cleveland, with a view of Lake Erie to the north. It was modeled after the great garden cemeteries of Victorian era England and France. The Italian stonemasons brought in to create the Cemetery founded the Cleveland neighborhood of Little Italy just to its northwest.
The James A. Garfield Memorial is the most prominent point of interest at Lake View Cemetery. The ornate interior features a large marble statue, stained glass, bas relief, and various historical relics from Garfield's life and presidency. The monument also serves as a scenic observation deck and picnic area. President and Mrs. Garfield are entombed in the lower level crypt, their coffins placed side by side and visible to cemetery visitors.
The other prominent structure in the cemetery is the Wade Chapel. A small-but-magnificent chapel with Tiffany windows and elaborate Bibically-inspired mosiacs on the walls, the edifice is still used for small weddings and located north and down the hill from the Garfield monument. Behind the chapel is a large pond.

Contents
Notable interments
See also
External links

Notable interments


The James A. Garfield Memorial


Newton D. Baker, U.S. Secretary of War during World War I

Francis Payne Bolton, United States House of Representatives

Charles F. Brush, inventor and businessman

William B. Castle, last Mayor of Ohio City, Mayor of Cleveland

Ray Chapman, baseball player for the Cleveland Indians, the only Major League Baseball player to die of injuries sustained on the playing field during a game

Charles Chesnutt, author

Harvey Cushing, pioneer brain surgeon

James A. Garfield, 20th President of the United States

Lucretia Garfield, former First Lady of the United States

Marcus A. Hanna, U.S. Senator and Republican Party boss

John Hay, former United States Secretary of State and aide to President Abraham Lincoln (Hay's monument was created by sculptor James Earle Fraser)

Edwin Converse Higbee, founder of Higbee's, the first department store in Cleveland

Adella Prentiss Hughes, founder of the Cleveland Orchestra

Garrett A. Morgan, inventor of the gas mask and the three-colored traffic light

Eliot Ness, detective, investigator and Cleveland safety director best known member of The Untouchables (Ness's ashes were scattered over a pond in the cemetery, he is not actually buried here.)

John D. Rockefeller, billionaire oil baron and philanthropist

Rufus P. Spalding, abolitionist, judge of the Supreme Court of Ohio, member of the U.S. House of Representatives

Carl B. Stokes, Mayor of Cleveland, United States ambassador, first African American elected Mayor of a major American city

Mantis James Van Sweringen, railroad baron, financier and co-founder of Shaker Heights, Ohio

Oris Paxton Van Sweringen, railroad baron, financier and co-founder of Shaker Heights, Ohio

Jeptha Wade, founder of Western Union Telegraph company

★ Victims of the 1908 Collinwood School Fire

See also



List of United States cemeteries

List of famous cemeteries

External links



Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio

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