Holyhood Cemetery Explained

Holyhood Cemetery
Location:Heath Street, Brookline, Massachusetts
Coordinates:42.32°N -71.1669°W
Built:1857
Architect:Patrick Keely
Architecture:Gothic Revival
Added:October 17, 1985
Refnum:85003275

Holyhood Cemetery is a cemetery located in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Description

Laid out in 1857, the cemetery was designed to reflect the rural cemetery movement begun at Cambridge's Mount Auburn Cemetery. It was the first such cemetery in Brookline.[1] The cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. Most of the cemetery has the layout typical of rural cemeteries, with winding lanes and attractive landscaping. One section, known as the "German Acre" and located near the entrance, has a more traditional rectilinear form; it was laid out for a congregation of predominantly German Catholics. The cemetery chapel, built 1859–62, is set on a hill near its center, and was designed by Patrick Keely, an architect of Catholic churches. It is a Gothic Revival structure, built out of puddingstone.[2]

Notable burials

Kennedy family

Holyhood Cemetery is best known for being the final resting place of Joseph and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy (parents of U.S. President John, U.S. Attorney General Robert, and U.S. Senator Edward). Their daughter, Rosemary Kennedy, is also buried here, along with several other family members.

The last child born to President Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, was also buried at Holyhood Cemetery, until being removed to Arlington National Cemetery, along with a stillborn daughter originally buried in Newport, Rhode Island, following their father's assassination and burial there in 1963.

Others

Holyhood is also the final resting place of former Boston Mayor and U.S. Representative Patrick Collins (mayor) with a memorial sculpted by Cyrus Edwin Dallin,[3] Cardinal John Wright, golfer Francis Ouimet; baseball player George Wright;[4] Irish poet and journalist John Boyle O'Reilly;[5] author, poet, journalist and diplomat James Jeffrey Roche, and lightbulb pioneer and engineer Martha J. B. Thomas. John Geoghan, an American Roman Catholic priest and serial child rapist is also interred there.[6]

Commonwealth War Grave

The cemetery contains one Commonwealth war burial, of an American-born Royal Air Force Cadet of World War I William Becker Hagan.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History | Holyhood Cemetery Association. holyhood.com.
  2. Web site: NRHP nomination for Holyhood Cemetery. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. September 6, 2015.
  3. Book: Modern Cemetery. 1909. google books. 490.
  4. Web site: Historic Figures | Holyhood Cemetery Association. holyhood.com.
  5. Book: Keneally, Thomas. The Great Shame: A Story of the Irish in the Old World and the New.
  6. http://archive.boston.com/globe/spotlight/abuse/stories5/082903_funeral.htm.
  7. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/4010287/HAGAN,%20WILLIAM%20BECKER