Pittsburgh Cemeteries

Pittsburgh Cemeteries

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  • Circular Plots in Allegheny Cemetery

    Almost all the walls and fences that used to surround family plots in Allegheny Cemetery have been taken down, but there is an important exception to the rule. In one section of the cemetery are several circular plots where the low stone walls are maintained. Most of them have a central monument with individual graves orbiting it around the edge of the circle; one or two have no central monuments.

    The Head plot (above) and the Fitzsimons-Morrison plot (below) are two good examples of the style.


  • R. R. Frisbee Mausoleum, Allegheny Cemetery

    An antebellum burial vault, built in 1858 in a restrained classical style. It looks wonderfully ancient and mysterious when you happen on it back in this woodsy section of the cemetery.


  • Hax-McCullough Monument, Allegheny Cemetery

    A row of Haxes and McCulloughs rests in front of this angel under identical slabs. C. C. Hax died in 1927, and this monument was put up in 1928 (according to the cemetery’s Web site). The Haxes made their money in leather goods and the McCulloughs in electric equipment, so this was what you would call a mixed marriage.


  • Some Amateur Tombstones in Brush Creek Cemetery

    HERE
    RESTETH IN GOD
    CHRISTINA WEGL
    WAS BORN 23 MAY 18—
    DIED 23 DEC. 1811

    [The birth date is obscured in the picture. Sorry about that.]

    Is “amateur” the word we are looking for? There are tombstones in the Brush Creek Cemetery that are remarkable works of folk art—and then there are these, some of which appear to have been made by craftsmen who were quite good at scratching letters in stone, but none of which seem to rise to the level of professional stonecutting.

    There were a fair number of Germans among the early settlers. Some of the families have some of their tombstones in English and others in German. Father Pitt earnestly solicits corrections to his German translations.

    J. W.
    B. 1718
    D. 1802

    The plaque gives the name of this Revolutionary War veteran as John Wagle; he is buried near Christina Wegl, and Wagle and Wegl are almost certainly different ways of spelling the same name.

    IN
    MEMORY
    OF
    PHILIP SMITH
    HE WAS BORN 1743
    AND DIED 1824
    AGED 76

    HERE LIES
    LUDWIG KAEMMERER
    DIED JANUARY
    21ST 1808 AGED
    90 YEARS

    Old Pa Pitt is assuming that the line over the M indicates a doubled letter.

    HERE LIES
    MAGDALENA
    KAEMMERIN DIED
    JUNE 12th IN THE
    YEAR 1794 AGED 26

    If this was installed when Magdalena died, then this is one of the earliest legible tombstones in the area.

    IN
    MEMORY
    OF
    LUDWIG
    KEMERER Junr. HE
    WAS BORN AD 1749
    DEPARDET THIS
    LIFE 1817 AGE —

    This seems to be the work of the same stonecutter—perhaps a family member—who did the two German stones above. Note the different spelling of “Kemerer” in English.

    HERE LIES
    J. CONRAD SCHIDLER
    HE & ELISABETH HIS
    WIFE BORE 10
    CHILDREN HIS PARENTS
    ANDREAS & MARGARET
    HE DIED APRIL 20th
    1796 AGED 58 YEARS
    Text John Chap. II V. 25

    PAUL EBERHART

    ELISABETH
    LINSENBIGLER


  • H. P. Sloterbeck Mausoleum, Allegheny Cemetery

    A Doric mausoleum with rusticated stone: a very common sort of design, but very dignified, and much more picturesque when we add autumn leaves. The stained glass inside is a standard design from the catalogue.


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Pittsburgh Cemeteries

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