Category: Allegheny Cemetery

  • Martin Lappe Mausoleum, Allegheny Cemetery

    A small rustic Romanesque mausoleum made almost top-heavy by the large statue of Hope holding her anchor. Father Pitt knows nothing about Martin Lappe except that he died in 1896 and his name is on this mausoleum.

  • Marshall Monument, Allegheny Cemetery

    Marshall monument
    The original image is missing: this one was taken in 2022.

    This monument was put up in 1889. The sculpture is slightly chunky in that particular 1880s way, but it is a fine work: the woman is idealized, but the boy is true to life in his squirmy attitude. One is tempted to say that he has exactly the look of a child who has been bribed to sit still for an artist and has had just about enough of it.

    A pair of urns decorated the steps to the Marshall family plot, but one is cracked and the other missing.

  • Lillian Russell Moore Mausoleum, Allegheny Cemetery

    Probably the most famous beauty in American history, Lillian Russell married four times. Her fourth marriage was to Alexander Pollock Moore, publisher of the Leader in Pittsburgh, and it seems to have been a happy union. When Lillian died in 1922, her mourning husband put up this mausoleum, with the simple epitaph “The world is better for her having lived.” Mr. Moore later went on to be ambassador to Spain and then to Peru, but when he finally joined his wife, she still got top billing. His initials on the door are the only external indication that Mr. Moore is buried here, too.

  • Samuel Watson Carr Monument, Allegheny Cemetery

    Apparently this sandstone Gothic fantasy was considered a masterpiece of the stonecutter’s art; as the cemetery’s site points out, it was photographed for a commemorative book about the cemetery in 1873 (the photographs in the linked copy have faded badly). It originally had a tall spiky pinnacle that nearly doubled the height of the monument; that may be the very top of it sitting in front of the monument (to the right in this photograph). Years of heavy industry have made this just about the blackest monument in the cemetery. The four Gothic spires mark the family plot of the Carrs and Walkers buried here. Mr. Carr must have been rich, but he has left no trace in city directories. This is, however, one of the few monuments in the cemetery signed by the creators: Bulman & Glaister have left their mark prominently on the front of the monument below the main inscriptions.

    And now would you like to hear something just a little scary? From the cemetery’s site: “In the 1873 picture a man stands shoulder-deep in the pavement next to the road with a trapdoor-like slab raised behind him, so that a tunnel must have led beneath the monument. ” In other words, like some sort of Gothic mushroom, this may be only the external manifestation of some large underground mausoleum. But no one—not even at the cemetery—knows for certain. The bronze lip in the picture below does, however, look very much as if it were meant for lifting.

  • Alexander H. King Monument, Allegheny Cemetery

    At last we find that exceedingly popular flower-strewing mourner with both her hands. We have seen her in the Mount Lebanon Cemetery, in the South Side Cemetery (on the Nickel and Baxmyer monuments), and in St. Peter’s Cemetery (Arlington), but always with her hands broken off. Below we see that fragile flower-strewing hand, which old Pa Pitt has photographed quite close for the sake of anyone who would like to restore one of those other statues.

    This is a different Alexander King from the Alexander King who was Richard Mellon Scaife’s great-grandfather.