Gate of Heaven Cemetery (Hawthorne, New York)
Gate of Heaven Cemetery, approximately 25 miles (40 km) north of New York City, was established in 1917 at 10 West Stevens Ave. in Hawthorne, Westchester County, New York, as a Roman Catholic burial site. Among its famous residents is baseball player Babe Ruth, whose grave has an epitaph by Cardinal Francis Spellman and is almost always adorned by many baseballs, bats and caps. Adjacent to the Garden Mausoleum is a small train station of the Metro-North Railroad Harlem Division named Mount Pleasant, where four trains stop daily, two northbound and two southbound. Several baseball players are buried here.
The upper entrance to Gate of Heaven Cemetery | |
Details | |
---|---|
Established | 1917 |
Location | |
Type | Roman Catholic |
Owned by | Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York |
Notable interments
- Robert Abplanalp (1922–2003), inventor of the aerosol spray valve
- Fred Allen (1894–1956), actor and comedian
- Spruille Braden (1894–1978), diplomat
- Ralph Branca (1926–2016), professional baseball pitcher who gave up the Shot Heard 'Round the World to Bobby Thomson in 1951
- Thomas Breslin (194?–1992), Executive Vice President National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees 1199C
- Heywood Broun (1888–1939), journalist
- Ronald Paul Bucca (1954–2001), New York City Fire Department Marshal killed in the September 11 attacks
- Charles A. Buckley (1890–1967), United States Representative from New York
- Frances W. "Billie" Cagney, née Vernon (1899–1994), dancer and wife of James Cagney
- James Cagney (1899–1986), actor
- Emil A. Ciccotelli (1929–1998), Chief of Detectives New York City Police Department
- Mary Higgins Clark (1927–2020), novelist
- Bob Considine (1906–1975), author
- Angelo "Gyp" DeCarlo (1902–1973), mobster
- Philip D'Antoni (1929–2018), film producer
- Dudley Digges (1880–1947), stage and film actor
- Paul Dixon (1918–1974), television and radio entertainer
- Bella Dodd (1904–1969), activist, teacher and attorney
- Dorothy Donnelly (1876–1928), actress, playwright, librettist, producer and director
- Jessica Dragonette (1900–1980), singer
- James Farley (1888–1976), Postmaster General and advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Samuel J. Foley (1891–1951), attorney, judge and Bronx County District Attorney
- Bill Froats (1930–1998), baseball player
- Henry Jacques Gaisman, philanthropist and inventor of the safety razor
- Hector Guimard (1867–1942), French architect and most prominent representative of the Art Nouveau movement in France
- Ernest E.L. Hammer, Administrator of the Bronx, Supreme Court Justice Of the State Of New York, presided over Bruno Hauptman trial for extradition in the Lindbergh baby kidnapping
- Frank Hardart (1884–1972), son of founder of Horn & Hardart automat
- Julie Haydon (1910–1994), actress
- Anna Held (1872–1918), actress and singer
- Portland Hoffa (1905–1990), actress
- Phillips Holmes (1907–1942), actor
- Phillips Holmes (1911-1942), Royal Canadian Air Force airman of World War II (lying in a Commonwealth war grave)[1]
- Bess Houdini (1876–1943), wife of magician Harry Houdini
- Peter Hujar (1934–1987), photographer and artist
- G. Murray Hulbert (1881–1950), United States Representative from New York
- Ethel D. Jacobs (1910–2001), thoroughbred racehorse owner
- Peggy Hopkins Joyce (1893–1957), actress and socialite
- Arthur Judson (1881–1975), co-founder of CBS
- Dorothy Kilgallen (1913–1965), journalist and television personality
- Richard Kollmar (1910–1971), Broadway producer
- T. Vincent Learson (1912–1996), IBM chairman and Ambassador at Large for Law of the Sea Matters
- Ernesto Lecuona (1896–1963), composer and songwriter
- James J. Lyons (1890–1966), Bronx Borough President from 1934 to 1962
- Ann Mara (1929–2015), wife of Wellington Mara
- Tim Mara (1887–1959), founder of the NFL New York Giants
- Wellington Mara (1916–2005), owner of the NFL New York Giants
- Billy Martin (1928–1989), Major League Baseball player/manager
- Malachi Martin (1921–1999), Irish Catholic priest and writer
- Anne O'Hare McCormick (1880–1954), Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Pat McDonald (1871–1954), Olympic champion weight-thrower
- Charles B. McLaughlin (1884–1947), attorney, judge and Bronx County District Attorney
- John McSherry (1944–1996), Major League Baseball umpire
- Sal Mineo (1939–1976), actor
- Condé Nast (1873–1942), publisher
- George Jean Nathan (1882–1958), drama critic
- Elliott Nugent (1896–1980), actor, director and screenwriter
- John P. O'Brien (1873–1951), politician and mayor of New York City
- Richard W. O'Neill (1898–1986), soldier and Medal of Honor recipient in World War I
- Fulton Oursler (1893–1952), writer
- Westbrook Pegler (1894–1969), Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Mike Quill (1905–1966), founder of Transport Workers Union of America
- Dan Reeves (1912–1971), former owner of the NFL Los Angeles Rams
- Michael Restel (1924-2014), World War II Navy Veteran
- Babe Ruth (1895–1948), Hall of Fame baseball player
- Claire Merritt Ruth (1900–1976), wife of baseball great Babe Ruth
- Dutch Schultz (1902–1935), mobster[2]
- Charles M. Schwab (1862–1939), steel magnate (remains later moved to St. Michael Cemetery in Loretto, Pennsylvania)
- Arnold Skaaland (1925–2007), professional wrestler
- Spyros Skouras (1893–1971), former president of 20th Century-Fox
- Lisa Steinberg (1981–1987), child murder victim
- Daniel V. Sullivan (1886–1966), attorney, judge and Bronx County District Attorney
- Henry Waters Taft (1859–1945), lawyer and author, brother of President William Howard Taft
- James H. Torrens (1874–1952), politician
- Jimmy Walker (1881–1946), mayor of New York City
- Bill Wendell (1924–1999), television announcer
- William B. Widnall (1906–1983), former US Congressman
- Malcolm Wilson (1914–2000), Governor of New York for whom the previous Tappan Zee Bridge over the Hudson River was named
- Sal Yvars (1924–2008), Major League Baseball catcher
Image gallery
- New monuments
- Kehoe mausoleum
- Cremation urn
- The tower near Bradhurst Avenue
- Main entrance
- Brenner mausoleum
- The shrine near the grave of Babe Ruth
- The Gothic Bridge
- Saint Francis of Assisi Chapel
- Child tombstone
- Frieze at entrance to Queen of Peace Mausoleum
- Statue at Upper Entrance
- The Receiving Tomb
References
- "CWGC casualty record".
- Brooks, Patricia (22 October 2008). "The Rich and Famous, at Rest in Eden". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
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