Listed
on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, Crown Hill Cemetery has
been a vital part of the Indianapolis community dating back to its first
interment, Lucy Ann Seaton, on June 2, 1864. Since then, Crown Hill has grown
from a “rural cemetery” into the nation’s third largest private cemetery and is
a community treasure that serves a broad range of needs and stands as a
monument to the memories of hundreds of famous Hoosiers and the thousands more
who selected Crown Hill as their final resting place.
Published by the Indiana Historical
Society Press in cooperation with the Crown Hill Heritage Foundation, Crown Hill: History, Spirit, and Sanctuary examines
the cemetery’s complete history and places its story in a the larger historical
context of the development and growth of American landscape architecture. In
addition, the book includes vignettes of the famous families and individuals
buried and/or entombed at Crown Hill and numerous photographs of the cemetery,
its remarkable architecture, intricate sculptures memorializing the dead, and
its lush landscape in every season. The cemetery is not only a place of memory,
but it is also a place of contemplation for thousands of Indianapolis residents
that pass through the site annually for such special events as Memorial Day,
Benjamin Harrison’s birthday, Veterans Day, and other public and private group
tours. Its rural setting also draws nature lovers to see deer, foxes,
red-tailed hawks, and the more than 250 species of trees and shrubs on the
grounds.
As far back as 1711, there were
those who advocated for the development of landscaped cemeteries in rural
settings. Since the founding of Mount Auburn Cemetery near Boston,
Massachusetts, in 1831, Americans had looked to bury their loved ones in these
rural cemeteries located on the outskirts of cities and towns across the United
States. These locations were civic institutions designed for use by the public
as a place to enjoy refined outdoor recreation and be exposed to art and
culture.
The
first burial ground in Indianapolis was a five-acre tract on Kentucky Avenue
near the White River. The 1821 graveyard became the nucleus of Greenlawn
Cemetery (later known as City Cemetery). By the 1860s this cemetery was unable
to meet the needs of the growing capital city. With the suggestion of a Fort
Wayne businessman, Hugh McCullough, some of the leading citizens of
Indianapolis called upon John Chislett, a landscape architect from Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, with the development of what came to be Crown Hill Cemetery,
which began with 274 acres bought for $51,000. Over the years additional
acreage has been added to Crown Hill, the last coming in 1911.
Today,
the cemetery occupies a 555-acre plot of land in northwest Indianapolis,
bordered in the south and north by Thirty-second and Forty-second Streets
respectively. More than 200,000 individuals are buried there, including many
notable native and adopted Hoosiers.
Crown Hill: History, Spirit, and Sanctuary costs $39.95 and is available from the IHS's Basile History Market.
4 comments:
Le passage d'autrefois.
En marchant
dans le ciel
la tendre pensée
devient le
soupir qui
chante le matin.
Francesco Sinibaldi
La virtuosité des sensations.
Une image
éblouissante
m'appelle, dans
le son d'un oiseau
solitaire: c'est
la voix du soleil,
le chant du matin
qui donne une
poésie.
Francesco Sinibaldi
Walk in the sun.
Here, in
the sweet
atmosphere
created by a
sullen desire,
the light of
a new day
invites me
to smile near
a delicate branch.
Francesco Sinibaldi
Suave cantilena.
El el candor
de la noche
de nuevo regresa
la luz infinita
de una tierna
poesía, el soplo
del viento y
la cándida voz
que recuerda
el pasado.
Francesco Sinibaldi
La estrella de la fidelidad.
Una línea
brillante toca
el perfil de
la noche encantada
y esta poesía,
regalando el
amor, dona
el encanto de
la vida serena.
Francesco Sinibaldi
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