United States historic place in Washington, D.C.
United States historic place
Rock Creek Cemetery is an 86-acre (350,000 m2 ) cemetery with a natural and rolling landscape located at Rock Creek Church Road, NW, and Webster Street, NW, off Hawaii Avenue, NE, in the Petworth neighborhood of Washington, D.C. , across the street from the historic Soldiers' Home and the Soldiers' Home Cemetery . It also is home to the InterFaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington .
On August 12, 1977, Rock Creek Cemetery and the adjacent church grounds were listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Rock Creek Church Yard and Cemetery .
Adams Memorial , designed by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens as a gravestone for Marian Hooper Adams , a Washington, D.C. socialite who committed suicide in 1885. A replica sits in the National Portrait Gallery .
The mausoleum's interior at Rock Creek Cemetery
The cemetery was first established in 1719 in the British colonial Province of Maryland as a churchyard within the glebe of St. Paul's Episcopal Church within the Rock Creek Parish. Later, the vestry decided to expand the burial ground as a public cemetery to serve the city of Washington, D.C. , which had acquired the cemetery within its boundaries as established in 1791. The cemetery was formally recognized and established through an Act of Congress in 1840.
An expanded cemetery was landscaped in the rural garden style , to function as both a cemetery and a public park . It is a ministry of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Rock Creek Parish , with sections for St. John's Russian Orthodox Church and St. Nicholas Orthodox Cathedral .
The park-like setting of Rock Creek Cemetery has several notable mausoleums , sculptures, and tombstones . The best known is the Adams Memorial , a contemplative, androgynous bronze sculpture seated before a block of granite that was created by Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Stanford White . It marks the graves of Marian Hooper Adams and her husband, Henry Adams , and sometimes, mistakenly, the sculpture is referred to as Grief .[ 2] [ 3] Saint-Gaudens entitled it The Mystery of the Hereafter and The Peace of God that Passeth Understanding .
Other notable memorials include the Frederick Keep Monument , the Heurich Mausoleum, the Hitt Monument, the Hardon Monument, the Kauffman Monument that is known as The Seven Ages of Memory , the Sherwood Mausoleum Door, and the Thompson-Harding Monument.[ 4]
Sculptors of works in the cemetery [ edit ]
Gutzon Borglum , Rabboni , 1909
James Earle Fraser , Frederick Keep Monument , 1920
Laura Gardin Fraser , Hitt Memorial, 1931
William Ordway Partridge , Kauffmann Memorial , also known as Seven Ages or Memory , 1897
Brenda Putnam , Simon Memorial, 1917
Vinnie Ream , Edwin B. Hay Monument, 1906
Augustus Saint-Gaudens , Adams Memorial , 1890
Mary Washburn , Waite Memorial, 1909
Adolph Alexander Weinman , Spencer Memorial, after 1919
Numerous fine works by unknown sculptors also exist in the cemetery.[ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
Cleveland Abbe (1838–1916), prominent meteorologist
John James Abert (1788–1863), chief of the Corps of Topographical Engineers
Henry Adams (1838–1918), writer, descendant of two U.S. presidents; grave is marked by the Adams Memorial
Clover Hooper Adams (1843–1885), Washington hostess and accomplished amateur photographer, wife of Henry Adams; grave is marked by the Adams Memorial
Alice Warfield Allen (1869–1929), mother of the Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson
Doug Allison (1846–1916), baseball player
Frank Crawford Armstrong (1835–1909), Confederate general
Timothy P. Andrews (1794–1868), Union Army general and paymaster-general of the United States Army (1862–1864)
James B. Aswell (1869–1931), educator and member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1913 to 1931
Gravesite of inventor Emile Berliner and his family members
Abraham Baldwin (1754–1807), U.S. Senator, signer of the U.S. Constitution , first president of the University of Georgia
Cecil A. Beasley , Alabama state senator
Willard L. Beaulac (1899–1990), U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay, Colombia, Cube, Chile and Argentina[ 8]
Melville Bell (1819–1905), Scottish teacher and inventor, father of Alexander Graham Bell , Hubbard Bell Grossman Pillot Memorial
Joseph Bray Bennett (1833–1913), Wisconsin state senator and appointments clerk at the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Andrew H. Berding , journalist and former Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs
Emile Berliner (1851–1929), German-born American inventor of the gramophone
Arthur A. Birney (1852–1916), U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia[ 9]
John W. Bischoff (1850–1909), composer and organist.
Montgomery Blair (1813–1883), Abraham Lincoln's Postmaster General
Ben H. Brown Jr. (1914–1989), former United States ambassador to Liberia
Robert C. Buchanan (1811–1878), military general during the American Civil War and the Mexican War
Robert N. Butler (1927–2010), gerontologist
Evelyn Y. Davis , (1929–2018), American activist shareholder.[ 10]
S. Wallace Dempsey (1862–1949), Republican politician
Hubert Dilger (1836–1911), American Civil War artillerist, captain in the Union Army , Medal of Honor recipient
J. Maury Dove (1855–1924), business executive and hotelier[ 11]
Gerald A. Drew (1903–1970), United States ambassador to Haiti and Bolivia
Roscoe Drummond (1902–1983), journalist and editor[ 12]
Amanda Ruter Dufour (1822–1899), poet
Charles S. Fairfax (1829–1869), Virginia-born California politician who was entitled to the British title 10th Lord Fairfax of Cameron
Stephen Johnson Field (1816–1899), Associate justice of US Supreme Court
Peter Force (1790–1868), politician, U.S. Army lieutenant in the War of 1812 , newspaper editor, archivist, and historian, who served as the twelfth mayor of Washington, D.C., and whose library of historical documents became the first major Americana collection of the Library of Congress
Israel Moore Foster (1873–1950), Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives
William H. French (1815–1881), major general during the American Civil War and the Mexican War
Gravesite of Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor , an editor of National Geographic
Mary Berri Chapman Hansbrough (1872–1951), poet and painter
John Marshall Harlan (1833–1911), Supreme Court associate justice, known as the "Great Dissenter"; wrote the lone dissenting opinion in Plessy v. Ferguson
Patricia Roberts Harris (1924–1985), ambassador, first African-American woman to serve in a presidential cabinet
George L. Harrison (1887–1958), banker, insurance executive, and political advisor during World War II
Patricia McMahon Hawkins (1949–2021), diplomat
Frank Hatton (1846–1894), U.S. postmaster general and editor of the Washington Post
Christian Heurich (1842–1945), German-born American founder of Heurich Brewery (1871–1954)
Samuel Billingsley Hill (1875–1958), U.S. representative from Washington and member of the United States Board of Tax Appeals (now the United States Tax Court )
William Henry Holmes (1846–1933), known for scientific illustration of the American West, his role in the controversy over the antiquity of humans in the Americas, and leadership at the Smithsonian Institution
Gravesite of Oliver Hudson Kelley , who founded the National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry
Bruce Laingen (1922–2019), diplomat
Richard Lawrence (1800–1861), attempted assassin of President Andrew Jackson
Jane Lawton (1944–2007), Maryland Democratic politician, member of the Maryland House of Delegates
Blair Lee I (1857–1944), U.S. Senator from Maryland[ 16]
Blair Lee III (1916–1985), Democratic politician
George E. Lemon (?–1896), patent lawyer and founder of the journal National Tribune
Walter Lenox (1817–1874), mayor of Washington from 1850 to 1852
John Lenthall (1807–1882), naval architect and shipbuilder , Chief Constructor of the Navy from 1849 to 1853 and chief of the United States Navy ' s Bureau of Construction and Repair from 1853 to 1871
Fulton Lewis (1903–1966), radio and television broadcaster
George W. Littlehales , (1860-1943) oceanographer of the United States Hydrographic Office
Alice Roosevelt Longworth (1884–1980), Republican Party icon, daughter of Theodore Roosevelt
Anthony Francis Lucas (1855–1921), Croatian-born mechanical engineer
Arthur MacArthur Sr. (1815–1896), 4th Governor of Wisconsin , grandfather of General Douglas MacArthur
Frank Mankiewicz (1924–2014), journalist and political adviser
Jackie Martin (1903–1969), newspaperwoman
Anna Broom McCeney (1850–1903), mother of vaudeville performer La Belle Titcomb (Heloise McCeney)
Hugh McCulloch (1808–1895), Secretary of the Treasury
George McGovern (1922–2012), Democratic presidential nominee in 1972 and senator from South Dakota
Dempster McIntosh (1896–1984), ambassador
Evalyn Walsh McLean (1886–1947), wealthy heiress, one–time owner of the Hope Diamond and the Washington Post
Washington McLean (1816–1890), businessman, owner of the Cincinnati Enquirer newspaper
John Gordon Mein (1913–1968), ambassador
William Rush Merriam , (1849–1931), governor of Minnesota, father of the United States Census Bureau
Mihran Mesrobian (1889–1975), Armenian -American architect
Carmel Offie (1909–1972), Central Intelligence Agency official
Gravesite of George Washington Riggs
John B. Raymond (1844–1886), politician
Isidor Rayner (1850–1912), Democratic politician, U.S. senator from Maryland
George Washington Riggs (1813–1881), banker, founder of Riggs Bank
William A. Rodenberg (1865–1937), politician
Frederick Rodgers (1842–1917), United States Navy rear admiral
Basil Rodzianko (1915–1999), Bishop of Orthodox Church in America Diocese of the West
Tim Russert (1950–2008), journalist, host of Meet the Press
Gravesite of Upton Sinclair
Gravesite of Charles Doolittle Walcott
Grave of Burton K. Wheeler
Edward T. Wailes (1903–1969), U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia, Iran, Hungary and South Africa[ 19]
Charles Doolittle Walcott (1850–1927), Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution
Paul Warnke (1920–2001), diplomat, assistant secretary of state from 1966 to 1969; SALT Negotiator and Director of the Arms Control and disarmament Agency under President Clinton
Sumner Welles (1892–1961), diplomat, undersecretary of State from 1937 to 1943
Burton K. Wheeler (1882–1975), Democratic politician and U.S. senator from Montana
James Alexander Williamson (1829–1902), Union Army general during the American Civil War , Medal of Honor recipient
Richard L. Wilson (1905–1981), journalist
William Windom (1827–1891), U.S. representative, senator, secretary of the treasury (under James Garfield & Benjamin Harrison)
Otis Wingo (1877–1930), U.S. representative from Arkansas's 4th congressional district , 1913–1930
Willie Wood (1936–2020), football player
John Vines Wright (1828–1908), U.S. representative from Tennessee, member of the Confederate Congress, judge of the Tennessee Supreme Court[ 20]
Helen Yakobson, (1913–2002) academic and professor at George Washington University[ 21]
^ "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service . March 13, 2009.
^ Chisholm, Hugh , ed. (1911). "Saint-Gaudens, Augustus" . Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 5.
^ "1886 The Adams Memorial" . Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2008-06-29 .
^ "Cultural Tourism DC" . CulturalTourismDC.org . Archived from the original on 2007-10-09. Retrieved 2008-01-12 .
^ Goode, James M. The Outdoor Sculpture of Washington, D.C. , Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 1974 pp. 343–352
^ Kvaran, Einar E., Cemetery Sculpture in America , unpublished manuscript
^ Marion, John Francis, Famous and Curious Cemeteries , Crown Publishers Inc., New York, 1977 pp. 78–80
^ "Willard L. Beaulac, Former Envoy and Visiting Professor at BSU, Dies" . The Muncie Evening Press . 1990-08-27. p. 18. Retrieved 2024-11-17 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Funeral Services for A. A. Birney Today" . The Washington Herald . 1916-09-06. p. 10. Retrieved 2024-11-22 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Flitter, Emily (2018-11-07). "Evelyn Y. Davis, Shareholder Scourge of C.E.O.s, Dies at 89" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2022-07-18 .
^ "J. Maury Dove" . The Washington Herald . 1924-06-28. p. 16. Retrieved 2024-11-17 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Feinsilber, Mike (1983-10-01). "Noted Syndicated Columnist Roscoe Drummons, 81, Dies" . The News Journal . p. 5. Retrieved 2024-11-16 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Dr. Susan Edson Buried" . Washington, DC: The Evening Star. 15 November 1897. p. 13. Retrieved 27 November 2017 .
^ "H. J. Ellicott Dead" . The Baltimore Sun . 1901-02-12. p. 2. Retrieved 2024-05-01 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Henry Ellsworth Ewing, 1883–1951". Journal of Economic Entomology . 44 (2): 270. 1951. doi :10.1093/jee/44.2.270 .
^ "Blair Lee" . Biographical Directory of the United States Congress . Retrieved 2024-10-20 .
^ United States Congress. "Thetus W. Sims (id: S000441)" . Biographical Directory of the United States Congress .
^ McGrath, Charles (1 August 2012). "Gore Vidal dies at age 86" . Sarasota Herald-Tribune . Halifax Media Group . Retrieved 3 July 2014 .
^ "Edward T. Wailes" . The Daily Times . 1969-07-04. p. 10. Retrieved 2024-11-17 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Wright, John Vines" . Biographical Directory of the United States Congress . Retrieved 2022-10-04 .
^ "Support Yakobson" . Gwu.edu .
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