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Many notable people have been buried here at Glenwood
Cemetery over the past decades. Some famous...some obscure.
Appealing sculptures yield treasures of artistic
interest. Little stone lambs often mark the graves of infants and small
children.
Some
of the personal, touching stories...
- The
parents of a young man named Victor Blundon erected a monument in 1936
depicting his likeness in stone as well as that of his beloved constant
companion, an Irish setter.
- A
grieving father memorialized a small daughter, Teresina Vasco, sitting
in her rocking chair.
- In
the early years of the twentieth century young Daisy Sterne died in
childbirth.
- For
as long as he survived, her husband planted each spring a blanket of
cultivated daisies on her grave along the west roadway of Section D,
near North Capitol Street.
- At
regular intervals a fire engine bearing new recruits moves reverently
through our gates to honor the grave of young Benjamin Greenup and visit
the monument his Company erected in his memory—the first fireman
killed in the line of duty in the District of Columbia (1856).
Some of the more notable names...
- Constatino
Brumidi, the Italian refugee known as "the Michelangelo of the
Capitol," proud of this United States citizenship, worked for twenty-five
years adorning the rotunda, corridors, and committee rooms over five
presidencies beginning with Millard Fillmore. His beautiful paintings,
murals, and frescoes draw thousands of visitors annually. His devotion
to his adopted country is revealed in the inscription under the photo
of his grave marker.
- Emmanual
Leutze, the artist who painted "Washington Crossing the Delaware"
- Amos
Kendall, a founder of the institution we know today as Gallaudet University
- John
Luckey McCreery, author of the moving poem "There is no death;
the stars go down...To rise upon some fairer shore..."
- Everett
Cooper, the first black member of the Board of Trustees of Glenwood
and the first black officer to be elected president of the Policemen's
Association of the District of Columbia
- Clarke
Mills, who cast the Statue of Freedom surmounting the Capitol dome.
- Strong
John Thomson, dedicated teacher of thousands of District of Columbia
boys. The public school at Twelfth and L Streets N.W. is named for him.
- George
Atzerodt, co-conspirator of John Wilkes Booth, assassin of Abraham Lincoln,
is believed secretly buried in an unmarked grave
- Ernest
W. Brown, District of Columbia Police Chief, founder of the Metropolitan
Police Boys' Club, and a past president of the Board of Trustees of
Glenwood Cemetery.
- Gretchen
Hood, opera star, composer. At age twenty-five, she was embraced on
a spiral staircase in Parliament by an impetuous young man named Winston
Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty and very slim"
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