Calvary Cemetery (Cleveland) Explained

Calvary Cemetery
Established:November 26, 1893
Country:United States
Location:Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Coordinates:41.4404°N -81.6068°W
Type:Private
Owner:Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland
Size:275acres
Graves:300,000 (2017)
Website:Calvary Cemetery
Findagraveid:40155
Politicalgeo:OH/CU-buried.html#cms00456

Calvary Cemetery is a Roman Catholic cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States. The cemetery straddles the border between Cleveland and the city of Garfield Heights, with its offices within the city limits of Cleveland. Calvary Cemetery is the largest Catholic cemetery in Cleveland, and one of the largest in Ohio.

About the cemetery

In 1892, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland purchased approximately 105acres[1] of land east of Broadway Avenue in what was then Newburgh Township. The cost of the land was $600 ($ in dollars).[2] Formerly the Leand farm, it was named Calvary Cemetery. Toledo cemetery designer, horticulturist, and cemetery superintendent Frank Eurich designed Calvary as a lawn cemetery.[3] The land was regraded and other initial improvements made by The William H. Evers Engineering Company. Calvary Cemetery was consecrated on November 26, 1893.[4]

Within just a few years, the cemetery featured a stone receiving vault, waiting room at the entrance, and a number of roads. A streetcar spur ran adjacent to the cemetery, allowing caskets and funeral parties to reach the cemetery by electric train. The 746feet long spur was removed in 1927.

Initially, the cemetery was bounded on its east side by the Connotton Valley Railway, whose tracks were laid in 1882. An additional purchase of land east of the railroad tracks was made in 1900. Various figures have been cited for the size of this property: 50acres,[5] 200acres, and 250acres.[6] Fifty acres appears to be the best figure, and is supported by an industry trade journal which reported the cemetery's total size as a total 160acres in 1900. Additional land was acquired by 1908, giving the cemetery either 250acres or 300acres of total land.[7] The cemetery acquired the 13acres Quigley farm and the 9acres Stegkemper tract in 1910.[8] Calvary's reported size was 350acres in 1936.[9] The streetcar line was torn up in 1947, and the 30feetby2248feetft (byft) strip of land sold to the cemetery for $600 ($ in dollars). Calvary Cemetery reportedly still had more than 300acres of land in 2007.[10]

As of 2007, there were over 305,000 interments at Calvary Cemetery. The first burials, of John and Catharine Hogan, were on November 30, 1893. Husband and wife, they died one day apart and were buried in section 10. The largest number of burials occurred on November 4, 1918, during the Spanish flu pandemic. There were 81 burials that day. The total number of interments that month was 985.[4] The cemetery contains the Commonwealth war graves of two World War I soldiers of the Canadian Army.[11]

Calvary Cemetery is the largest Catholic cemetery in Cleveland, and operated by the Catholic Cemeteries Association.

Memorials

A large memorial angel atop a pedestal inscribed "Our Babies" was dedicated on November 2, 1952, in what is now section 105 of the cemetery. This section was then set aside for the burial of infants and children. The news media did not identify the sculptor or manufacturer.[12]

In 1966, the cemetery opened a new section (now identified as Section 43) near the E. 100th Street entrance. This section was dedicated to in-ground, flat headstones typical of lawn cemeteries. Overlooking the section, the cemetery constructed a grotto and placed a life-size terracotta statue of Christ in the niche. The manufacturer of the statue was not identified by the press.[13]

A statue of Our Lady, Queen of Heaven was erected at the E. 100th Street entrance of Calvary Cemetery in 2001. The statue was paid for by the Lausche Foundation and dedicated to the memory Senator Frank Lausche.

After the Diocese of Cleveland closed or merged more than 75 parishes between 2006 and 2010, several works of art were moved to Calvary Cemetery. After St. Hyacinth Church closed in September 2009, its monument to Catholic war veterans was moved to the entrance of Calvary Cemetery.[14] St. Margaret of Hungary Church originally was located in Cleveland's Buckeye–Shaker neighborhood. In 1960, parishioners erected a life-size statuary group to honor church members who had died in World War II. The group featured a crucified Christ, three women, and two angels. The sculptures were set on brick and concrete pedestals, with a bronze plaque attached to the main pedestal. When St. Margaret of Hungary Church moved to Orange, Ohio, in 1989, the statue group was relocated as well. The church closed in November 2009, and the diocese removed the statuary group a month later. Initially, the diocese intended to disperse the statuary group among several cemeteries. After months of discussion with former St. Margaret parishioners, the diocese agreed to reinstall the complete grouping near the cemetery's 116th Street entrance, where many World War II dead are buried. The cost of the installation was $30,000 ($ in dollars), and the memorial rededicated in mid-September 2010.[15]

Notable interments

References

Notes
Citations

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: God's Acre Opened By Catholics With Many Solemn Ceremonies. The Plain Dealer. November 27, 1893. 4.
  2. News: Hawkins. Larry. Dead-Duck Lots Make Gravy for C.T.S. Now. The Plain Dealer. October 2, 1947. 1, 5.
  3. News: Annual Convention of Cemetery Superintendents. The Monumental News. October 1900. 559. July 11, 2017.
  4. Web site: Calvary Cemetery. The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. February 16, 2005. April 19, 2009.
  5. News: Bishop Horstmann Dies As Recovery Seems Near. The Plain Dealer. May 14, 1908. 1, 2.
  6. News: Catholic Church Grows To 175,000. The Plain Dealer. May 23, 1916. 11.
  7. News: Extend Cemetery Before Thousands. The Plain Dealer. October 26, 1908. 6.
  8. News: Deeds Filed For Cemetery. The Plain Dealer. October 15, 1910. 16.
  9. News: New Type Grass Defeats Winter. The Plain Dealer. March 15, 1936. 27.
  10. News: DeBus. Bill. Bonchak. Jean. Cemeteries deal with growing popularity of cremation. The News-Herald. February 4, 2013. July 11, 2017.
  11. http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/4001739/CLEVELAND%20(CALVARY)%20CEMETERY
  12. News: 10,000 Mark All Souls Feast. The Plain Dealer. November 3, 1952. 8.
  13. News: New Calvary Cemetery Area Is Modernized. The Plain Dealer. June 25, 1966. 39.
  14. News: Hyland. Pat. Diocese removes St. Margaret war memorial in Orange. Chagrin-Solon Sun News. December 3, 2009. July 29, 2018.
  15. News: Boone. Faith. War memorial moved from Orange Village to Cleveland cemetery. Chagrin-Solon Sun News. September 16, 2010. July 29, 2018.
  16. News: Died. The Plain Dealer. October 18, 1927. 27.
  17. News: Tests 'Miracles' of 'Singing Grave'. The Plain Dealer. November 11, 1936. 24.