Sunday, October 15, 2023

new construction

 

Construction seems to be busy throughout Cleveland, well especially downtown, and University Circle. A big mausoleum is the first burial spots in a large section of Lake View.


The assembly phase is in progress. The delivered pieces are being laid out in order.
Carefully marked out holes, perhaps to go onto a spindle, or rod?

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Garfield Memorial Rehab continues

to-day
June 18th, 2011
with handrails August 5th, 2020
To-day, without handrails, and some steps have been replaced, the staircase looks wider. 

Saturday, September 24, 2022

Old Logan Cemetery

 

A mediæval white oak sits on the top of the cemetery hill. [see]  The Hocking Canal was going to go through Logan. A cemetery would need to be on high ground. This cemetery began in 1839-49, and burials continued to 1952. A new cemetery was built up on the other side of the street.
Below the oak there is a Lutheran church. Across from the other side of the hill, and on another hill is St. John Catholic.
entrance
Three early stones facing St. John's.
Most of the front of this stone has fallen away, but a remnant of fine carving remains.
Similar story for the stone of Maria Smith, consort of Robert Smith, who departed this life Sept 15 1832(?).  These four fotos are of upright tablet headstones. They are comparatively light, and thin. Before the canals, and especially the railroads came, it was a great chore to transport stone. Shale, slate, and sandstone (brownstone) were easier to quarry, and carve than granite in particular. Many markers were slab, rather than block. Some of the lettering, and design could be light and artful.
Denkmal des verstorbenen
Wilhelm Kley
aus Bielefeld
Er wurde geboren den 13ten January 1805, und starb den 10ten October 1840 in dem Alter von 35 Jahren und 8 Monaten.

memorial of the deceased
Wilhelm Kley
from Bielefeld
He was born January 13, 1805, and died October 10, 1840 at the age of 35 years and 8 months.

Saturday, July 9, 2022

more from Columbus' Green Lawn

Queen of the Most Holy Rosary sits in high grass.
Behind on groundskeeping, June 29th the day of this foto, a local teevee station ran a story about complaints.
In the last few years, some notable people interred have been commemorated by signage.
Washington Gladden was a leader in the Social Gospel Movement, something very different than to-day's Evangelicals.
Not often are swinging saloon doors cut for a gravestone.
A wife remembers her husband.

Thursday, July 7, 2022

Columbus Confederates

Camp Chase was named after Lincoln's Secretary of the Treasury, and former Ohio governor Salmon Chase. It was on the National Road (Route 40, Broad Street). It was first used to train Ohio volunteers, and as a muster station. It became a prison for civilians thought to be engaging with the secessionist forces, and government; and then captured confederate soldiers. Many of the deaths came from small pox. The Us government bought the remaining two acres to use as the present cemetery.
Jeff Davis Day is remembered on an American government sign?
The stone arch replaced a wooden one in 1902. A bronze confederate stands on top.
WSYX ABC 6  tweeted this foto 22 August 2017. The statue was thrown down, and its head was gone. The hat remained. It is believed this was done in response to Unite the Right "rally" on the campus of the University of Virginia, and the city of Charlottesville, which included a homicide by an Ohio trumpster who drove into a crowd of people.  A varied assortment of Nazis, neo-Confederates, klansmen, white supremacists, and other deplorables, and supporters of Trump, came to protest the removal of confederate statues. In May 2019, the repaired Ohio statue was placed atop the arch again. When i photographed on 29 June of this year, a security guard was walking he inside perimeter.
Official estimate is 2,168 buried in 2,122 spots. The boulder has been there since 1897.
Confederate cannonball from Vicksburg

Monday, July 4, 2022

stone difference

Confederate stones are pointy. Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery Columbus Ohio.
United States servicemen's stones are rounded. Green Lawn Cemetery Columbus Ohio.
This was a new stone at Green Lawn. The newness begs a question. Was this a replacement? since he has been dead for a long time, or was he transferred here recently? Well i read in 2019, they replaced stones that were incorrect. Notice this is a Union stone, with a soldier in a Tennessee unit. This may be one of the four that had a pointy stone, and the unit was thought a confederate one; but after Union victories, the Union recruited units from former rebellious parts of the nation. Also, 62 is old for a soldier.

Saturday, July 2, 2022

interesting people and monuments


Emil Ambos *1844, 1898†

Emil enjoyed life. His parents were from German lands. His father became Columbus' first candy maker, and later a banker. Emil went to Center College Pennsylvania, and Ohio's Kenyon college. He retired at 39, after being a saloon keeper and alcohol wholesaler. He kept a stable of horses, lived luxuriously, and really enjoyed fishing. He was generous towards poor children, especially around Christmas. Ambos was recognised as a philanthropist.

Ambos had a 17 page will, the longest in county's history at that date. He set aside five thousand dollars for a bronze statue of himself in his fishing clothes. The sculptor, John Francis Brines cast the bronze in 1901. In 2019, the Smithsonian thought the statue important, and it needed restoration. There was a bullet hole in Emil's head, his trout were taken, and the bronze had gone green, and in bad shape. That year the statue was restored by Michael Major. In the last few years a few major restorations are taking place at Green Lawn. The Schumacher sarcophagus was cleaned, and restored that same summer. Those two monuments are near each other in Section M.
During my two visits, the sun was behind Emil, and very strong. It was not easy to get a clear foto.
Samuel "Chief" Gabriel  *1912, 1980†
_____________________________________________________________________

(DO NOT GIVE OUT LOCATION)

This is a fotocopy of a portion of a page of notable burials in Green Lawn Cemetery.  There were too many undertakers listed, several Ohio governors, Columbus businessmen, speculators, and capitalists; but the only one with a stage direction was Snook.

There turns out to be a tawdry, salacious tale of murder involved in keeping the spot a secret. James Howard Snook was a professor of veterinary surgery at the land grant school in the state's capital. He won two gold medals in team pistol at the Antwerp 1920 Olympics. Snook killed his student mistress in 1929, outside a firing range, near campus. He used a ball peen hammer, and a pocket knife.

Theora Hix was working as a school stenographer at the veterinary college to pay for her education there. For three years the two had a wild affair. Snook was married, and she was very sexually active. Theora wanted Snook divorce, and threatened to kill members of Snook's family.

Snook gave a forced confession. He was checked for syphilis by a botched spinal tap, that caused enduring pain. That doctor was not as adept with the tools of trade. Snook had given himself a vasectomy, so that Theora would not have a child by him. Later, the final cut he made was a precision slice of Hix's throat. 

The trial was a national incident. Snook sat in a beach chair for the trial. The jury took 28 minutes to find him guilty, although she was reaching for a derringer in her purse. I read, a short article that stated laws were changed because of the irregularities in his prosecution. Trial testimony was published, with some of the sex details omitted.

Later, the warden of the prison made up a story of Snook's confession. Snook was executed early in 1930. He was buried under a small grass hugging stone with the name James Howard. His wife, and daughter took a new surname. Ohio Exploration Society says that for 75 years his grave site was a secret.


The snook hook is used in the spaying and neutering of dogs and cats. James Snook created the first one.