
A curiously shaped rustic mausoleum with Gothic pilasters that seem a little like an afterthought. As we have mentioned elsewhere, all the mausoleums in the South Side Cemetery are missing their doors.
A curiously shaped rustic mausoleum with Gothic pilasters that seem a little like an afterthought. As we have mentioned elsewhere, all the mausoleums in the South Side Cemetery are missing their doors.
A small rustic temple with smooth Doric columns and a cross. All the mausoleums in the South Side Cemetery are bricked up like this; probably they all had bronze doors, and every one has been stolen.
A standard Ionic temple, undistinguished perhaps but very elegant.
This fine polished-granite mausoleum announces his name to anyone who visits this sheltered corner of the cemetery; but D. L. Clark’s real monument is the Clark Bar, which trumpets his name to anyone who visits a convenience-store cash register. Polished granite was expensive, but a very good choice for Pittsburgh, since the grime of industry could be wiped off with little labor and no damage to the stone.
If this mausoleum looks a bit like a miniature courthouse, then Mr. Burleigh should feel right at home: he earned his greatest fame, or infamy, as the Allegheny County district attorney who prosecuted the Homestead strikers in 1892. He was later Pittsburgh city solicitor for many years. You may ask how a man who devoted his life to public service gained the kind of wealth evident in this splendid Ionic temple; but if you do ask it, it is because you are not very familiar with Pittsburgh.