Showing posts with label Lake View Cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake View Cemetery. Show all posts

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Weekend Journal

Here are the last of my autumn photos and the photos I took at Lake View Cemetery this past Monday.  We enjoyed a spectacular day - one that was perfect for roaming the country side and enjoying Mother Nature's artwork.


 We also enjoyed the artwork of Louis Comfort Tiffany's Wade Chapel at Lake View.  I was so excited to see the window again - this time on a sunny day.  The glass looked self illuminated, and it was gorgeous.


This is the pond near the chapel.  Lake View Cemetery started out as an arboretum and has many different tree specimens on it's 200+ acres.  We walked 3 hours worth.


This is one of the many beautifully detailed mausoleums we looked at.  The cemetery's statuary is really wonderful.








This is John D Rockefeller's final resting place.  His monument is the largest piece of marble cut from a quarry in Vermont and rises 65 feet into the air.






This is one of the reliefs that surround the top of James A Garfield's monument and final resting place.


This is the west side of Garfield's memorial.  Below is the north side and front entrance.



Here's the Cleveland skyline and Lake Erie from the balcony area, outside at the base of the dome.  The dome is not open to the public.  Beneath that is the view looking down into the cemetery's west side.






After our cemetery walk, we headed back towards home and stopped at one of our favorite Lake Metroparks, North Chagrin Reservation.  Here are some of the photos I took there.










RT 615, Kirtland, OH
 It would have been irresponsible to skip ice cream on one of the last warm, autumn days!  This delicious hot fudge brownie sundae was compliments of Malley's Chocolates in Mentor, OH.


Yes - I'm a happy camper!  It's autumn and all is right in my world.  It looks like I've been doing nothing but goofing off and enjoying autumn, but there has been LOTS of art created in between.  I'll get to that tomorrow, but first....

Photo by:  Keith Thompson

The Hazmat Team has some serious Halloween business to attend to!  There are airborne pathogens to search for. 


CELEBRATE * LOVE * CREATE

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Weekend Journal

Lake View Cemetery Field Trip

Last week, my Thursday morning journaling class and I took a trip into Cleveland to visit the Lake View Cemetery.  I have to admit that I had never been there. (Why is it we tend not to visit these places that are so close to home?)

Lake View Cemetery was established in 1869 and is the final resting place for such notables as the 20th President of the United States, James A. Garfield,  Eliot Ness,  John D. Rockefeller, and 22 Cleveland Mayors.  The cemetery is 285 acres of what was originally an arboretum, and it continues to be a working cemetery.  (Click on any photo to enlarge)

Wade Chapel


One would never suspect that this quiet, unassuming structure would contain such history and magnificent beauty within it's interior.  I was absolutely blown away when I walked through the four ton, bronze doors.
Our docent, Wayne, was incredibly knowledgeable and eagerly answered all of our questions.  Wade Chapel Chapel was built in the memory of Jeptha Wade who was the first president of Lake View Cemetery.  The interior, largely made with favrile glass, was entirely designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany.  Tiffany designed 15 of these interiors, and Wade Chapel is only one of 7 that remain.


Forty men and women worked on the interior and it took 2 years to build at a cost of $210.00.  If it were to be built today, the cost would be a whopping $5.5 million!  The lanterns are made of alabaster and weight 1,800 pounds each.


Images from the walls.  I can't tell you how breath taking they are, and the pictures don't do justice to just how magnificent they are.

Not even the floors, ceilings or pews were without the stunning mosaic glass.



It was awe inspiring to be standing in such beauty and history, but we finally made our way to the James A. Garfield Monument.

James A. Garfield Monument


James A. Garfield was a much loved president.  He died several months after surviving the initial surgery from his assassin's bullet.  Unfortunately, his likely demise was due to his physician's lack of today's standard  sterile protocols. 

At the time of his death, half of the country's millionaires lived here in Cleveland on Euclid Avenue in what was known as "millionaire's row".  They could have easily paid for this monument themselves, but they wanted Garfield's monument to be a monument of the people.  Funds were sent by all 13 colonies, and the colonies are represented throughout the monument.  President Garfield and his wife rest side by side, and their caskets are on full display in the crypt.  Their daughter, Molly, and her husband rest in urns at the head of the coffin.

Garfield's monument is rich with mosaics, marble, and stained glass windows.  Here are some of the photos I took on our tour.


To read more about Lake View Cemetery, Wade Chapel, and the James A. Garfield Monument, go HERE.  It was a cold, rainy day when we took our trip, so I can't wait to get back and tour the grounds.  I saw some fabulous monuments and statuary that beg for rubbings and photographs.  I hope you enjoyed my tour!

This is enough inspiration to keep me busy in my art journals for quite some time!  I hope you're finding lots of inspiration for your journaling muse as you "Celebrate, LOVE, and Create!"
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