OHNY - Green-Wood Cemetery

October 12th, 2003 · 11 Comments


Green-Wood Cemetery Entrance, Brooklyn


Green-Wood is filled with really old, beautiful tombstones. The modern ones pale in comparison as far as the artistic expression & effort put into them.


The highest point in Brooklyn is in Green-Wood Cemetary. It’s called Battle Hill, and from this point you can clearly see Manhattan. This hill was once a military battleground in the Battle of Long Island in the Civil War. There is a Civil War Monument on the hill to commemorate it.


We were allowed to go into one of the mausoleums to view this beautiful stained glass.


Mother, Father


William Holbrook Beard was a painter of bears and other animals. For more than a century, Beard was lying in an unmarked grave. On October 15, 2002, a full-sized bronze bear monument, sculpted by Dan Ostermiller and generously donated by him to honor Beard was unveiled. This is the first new sculpture in Green-Wood in many years. (via Tomb With A View, Cemetery Special Events, "Picks of the Month")


Beard’s painting Bulls and Bears in the Market is an icon of the New-York historical Society’s collection. My favorite of his paintings is Dancing Bears


Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn


The catacombs haven’t been open to the public for 165 years. Green-Wood opened them up on Saturday for openhousenewyork but doesn’t have plans to keep them open afterwards. These are the skylights and vents that come out of the vaults of the catacombs underground.


Underground, the corridor of the catacombs is dimly lit with sunlight coming in from the skylights above. Off of the hall, to the left and to the right, are the tombs. Each is has a gate or door and is marked with an engraving.


Gate leading into one of the tombs.


A skylight in one of the tombs.


One of the tombs in the catacombs.


On the way out of the cemetery we came across this large circle of tombstones. Some of them dated back to the 1600’s. I’m still trying to piece together how exactly this can be since the cemetery wasn’t created until 1838. And also, since the Civil War wasn’t even fought on these grounds until the late 1700’s.


The really old, broken, and tilted tombstones were the ones that kind of creeped me out the most. Still, I love looking at them and trying to make out their weathered engravings.


One of our last stops was at William "Boss" Tweed’s family site. Boss Tweed was the notriously corrupt mayor politician of New York City in the late 1800’s.


One last look at the front gate before we leave. Everytime I turned to look at it it’s beauty shocked me. David Bates Douglass was Green-Wood’s landscape architect and first president. It’s him that we should thank for these magnificent arches.

Ever since reading Paul Ford’s essay on Green-Wood Cemetery early this summer it’s been a mission of mine to visit it. So, when I saw it listed as one of the openhousenewyork sites I was so excited to go.

After we were through at the Terrapin Chelsea Art Gallery, we all headed over to John’s Pizzeria, which I still believe is one of the best places for pizza in New York. We’ll see how Tien and Audrey rank it on their Pizza Review Page. After that, Tien and I jetted over to SoHo to catch the NR over to 25th Street in Brooklyn. When we got there a couple came out of the subway saying that the trains weren’t running.. .something about no power.. while talking to them we realized that we were all going to the cemetery so we split a cab.

Green-Wood Cemetery is the most beautiful cemeteries I’ve seen (not that I’ve seen a ton). Green-Wood was founded in 1838 with David Bates Douglass serving as the landscape architect and as its first president. It is the final resting place of nearly 600,000 persons, including some of history’s most memorable figures. Boss Tweed, Leonard Bernstein, Peter Cooper, William Poole (Bill the Butcher), the Brooks, F.A.O. Schwarz, Louis Tiffany, and Charles Pfizer are among the famous (and infamous) buried here. The cemetery is open to the public all the time, but the big draw for the openhousenewyork crowd was the catacombs. The catacombs have not been open to the public for 165 years.

- Tien’s post on Green-Wood Cemetery
- rion’s photos of Green-Wood Cemetery - small stones
- rion’s photos of Green-Wood Cemetery - grave grandeur
- rion’s photos of the catacombs
- Michael Cosentino’s photos of Green-Wood Cemetery
- Michael Cosentino’s photos of the catacombs
- David Gallagher’s photos of Green-Wood Cemetery

Tags: ································

11 responses so far ↓

  • 1 tien mao's little read book... // Oct 12, 2003 at 12:09 pm

    open house, but apparently not for sale

    today was the first day of the inaugural openhousenewyork, a celebration of new york architecture and part of architecture week here in the city. the event opened up over 80 sites that are usually closed to the public. i went…

  • 2 Richard Bowden // Oct 12, 2003 at 5:50 pm

    Photo 14: F.Y.I, the civil war was fought in the 1860’s not the late 1700’s

  • 3 rachelle // Oct 12, 2003 at 8:15 pm

    yeh.. sorry.. in my rush to get these up i messed. The Battle of Long Island, sometimes known as The Battle of Brooklyn was fought on this site in 1776. It was a battle between the American Continental Army and the British Army.

    Unrelated, there is a Civil War memorial nearby.

  • 4 tien // Oct 13, 2003 at 12:49 am

    i hear that sometimes, kids play in cemeteries.

  • 5 rachelle // Oct 14, 2003 at 4:15 pm

    yeh, it’s fun. you should try it.

  • 6 Liz // Nov 15, 2003 at 1:15 am

    Boss Tweed was never mayor of New York he was head of the democratic party and hand picked the mayors through corrupt voting practices.

  • 7 Kristin // Oct 11, 2004 at 1:52 pm

    Just an FYI - there is a ban on photography at Green-wood cemetary. Although it is a beautiful place which should be shared with others, it may be a bit disrespectful to mourners.

  • 8 ted // Oct 19, 2004 at 6:18 pm

    Born in 1934 i lived only three blocks away from the hole in the fence that allowed adventurous tenement bound kids the oppurtunity to enter a wooded area to roam and explore and occasionally lose their way and spend more time there than they had planned on. Different seasons held their own pleasures. After a snow fall, one could walk miles ( it seemed like ) without seeing any foot prints in the snow. Autums with leafless trees and howling winds presented a fantastic landscape and the eerie feeling of being alone in the world. ted

  • 9 rachelleb.com // Nov 3, 2004 at 6:56 am

    Tour of Graceand Cemetery

    On Sunday I took a 2-hour walking tour of Graceland Cemetery. Even though it was Halloween, the tour wasn’t about ghosts or being spooky. It was more historical and I’m thankful for that. Our tour guide, Sylvia, ruled. She was…

  • 10 Rose // Feb 18, 2005 at 4:53 am

    My family has a plot in Green-Wood and it’s beautiful there! Thanks for your hard work and great eye. I’m trying to find a link to the essay you mentioned by Paul Ford. Can you help? Thanks.

  • 11 rachelleb // Feb 18, 2005 at 7:14 am

    Thanks, Rose. This is the link to the essay by Paul Ford http://www.ftrain.com/GreenwoodCemetery.html