Accommodations:
Maps and
information available at
the office or entrance
kiosks. Restaurants and
shopping along Mt. Hope
Ave.
Best time to visit: Year-round with Fall adding
spectacular color (try
late October), and
winter adding an eerie
calm. Spring and summer
are best for flowers.
The rolling hills,
magnificent trees and melancholy artistry
that make up Mount Hope Cemetery in
Rochester, NY, combine to create an eerily
beautiful setting, meant to house
Rochester's dead, at the same time creating
a treasured park and museum to the living.
The narrow roads of the cemetery wind around
the shaded hills leading visitors to parcels
of unique character and mood, making this an
exciting place to explore. From towering
obelisks that seem to pierce the canopy to
headstones that hide under blades of short
grass, the diversity of the stone monuments
here is only trumped by the variety of
classes, races and characters that fill the
ground beneath. Mausoleums symbolizing power
and wealth share hilltops with unmarked
gravestones, and unrelated family plots seem
to randomly intertwine. Here one can find
organization everywhere, with proper rows of
matching stones, and carefully labeled
sections and maps. But the real treasures
here are the solitary markers that lie off
near the hillside or in the shadows in their
own microcosms and surely have their own
stories to tell.
A walk in this cemetery is barely
fulfilling without a guidebook, or better yet an
experienced tour conductor. Even common graves have
stories to tell. Some beaten and broken by time and
weather, tell the story of their time and nurture.
Wives' stones, snapped in half by unknown forces, have
been lovingly rested upon their husband's and the
tragedy of a child's death can be felt in the loving
words engraved for him or her. An historian can easily
discover hundreds of stories buried within the cemetery
grounds, an artist can easily tell a thousand more.
The breathtaking geological landscape,
the eclectic mix of monuments in various states of decay
and repair – from the well-kept and pristine to the
illegible and crumbled, and the tales they all have to
tell - make Mt. Hope Cemetery one of
New York State's best
locations for photography.
Cemetery beginnings...
Roughly 12,000 years ago,
the land that is now Mt. Hope Cemetery was under a mile
of thick glacial ice. If one were to look closely at the
cemetery, evidence of this once predominant ice mass can
be seen throughout the entire landscape. As glaciers
melt they leave behind, among other things, ridges of
rock, rubble, natural embankments and
drumlin
hills. This type of glacial
moraine, to the benefit of the conscientious
observer, weaves its way through much of Mt. Hope
Cemetery, extending east through Highland Park and Cobbs
Hill Park, and forming a risen stretch of land dubbed,
in Rochester’s early days, as “Highland.” This
particular glacier also left four
kettles within the
cemetery grounds, one of which still currently holds
water (named Sylvan Waters). As one walks the roadways
and paths now it’s easy to feel the power of ice that
once was.
While Mother Nature
transformed the 196 acres of Mount Hope Cemetery into
the perfect, park-like setting for the Victorian
cemetery to come, one might wonder who or what made it a
Victorian cemetery?
Initially, in the western
world, it was customary to bury the dead inside churches
or in nearby churchyards. In times of disease, wars, or
any horrific events, mass graves were generally used.
Little regard was made for a cemetery’s location or
landscape, so often times these burial practices, and
the close proximity of unresolved decay, brought about
diseases in the living.. During the reign of Queen
Victoria new, rural, landscaped burial grounds were
started. These flourished. The concept of a cemetery’s
“beautiful park-like landscape” stems from
Pere-Lachaise Cemetery, established in Paris in
1804, located on hills chosen specifically because they
overlooked the beautiful city.
Rochester went through
the process of dealing with its dead right along with
the rest of the world, and cemetery expansion became a
huge concern during times of frequent cholera outbreaks.
While it seemed prudent to remove the early city
cemeteries simply for health purposes, a rural cemetery
was not an easy sell. Families of those already interred
balked at removing their loved ones, and were concerned
about unmarked burials or those without family to rebury
them elsewhere. The costs in securing an adequate amount
of land for a new cemetery seemed extreme. Also, there
was the question of how anyone would get to a rural
cemetery to pay their respects.
"...howling with wild beasts, frogs and simply
too spooky."
On December 27, 1836 the
City of Rochester finally acquired the first plot of
land for a cemetery (about 56 acres at quite an expense)
from Silas Andrus (a land speculator) on the east side
of the river, south of the city. General Jacob Gould,
Rochester’s first Democratic mayor, was outraged,
holding back nothing when he announced, “Why, that
ground isn’t fit for pasturing rabbits” Many a citizen
felt the area was “howling with wild beasts, frogs and
simply too spooky.” All voices heard, this wild, glacial
land would eventually grow to become one of the most
beautiful cemeteries in the world.
Silas Cornell
designed the cemetery layout. He carefully put in roads
(14 winding miles of them) and cautiously took out
trees. It was his skill as a landscape architect that
turned this wild, spooky area into a majestic place.
Cornell wanted to name the cemetery “Mount Auburn,”
after a cemetery he had seen in Boston, but this did not
bode well with others. The cemetery remained nameless
for months, while work continued on. William Wilson, one
of the laborers working there, sent his bills to the
city with the notation, “for labor at Mount Hope.” It
was the first known usage of the appellation. Maybe
Wilson had 'hope' for a better life for his family
because of this work, or perhaps, 'hoped' the city would
soon come up with a name for the cemetery. Whatever
Wilson’s reason on 3 October 1838, Mount Hope Cemetery
was officially dedicated. Was Wilson responsible for
naming the cemetery? It is yet undetermined….
Things you may wonder about
Leaving Pebbles or Stones on a Grave Marker As you explore Mt. Hope you may
notice a pebble or small stone left on top of a
tombstone. This Jewish tradition signifies that
someone has honored the deceased person’s memory
with a visit to the grave. While a Jewish tradition,
you will find that this has spread into general use
while retaining the meaning originally behind it.
Victorian
Symbolism In the late 1700s
the perception of death was changing from evil and
sin to hope and forgiveness. Instead of skulls and
crossbones, the enlightened Victorians used willow
trees and angels, anchors and ivy, more natural and
positive symbols on grave markers. The elaborate and
simple grave markers which represent this change in
ideals, can be found throughout the cemetery,
There are many
obelisks to be found reaching for heaven at Mt.
Hope. Often topped with a pyramid, this was a symbol for
the Egyptian god
Ra, who had the power to recreate. There are tree
trunks telling of a life cut off, urns relating the
mourning of a family, flames announcing eternity and
inverted torches telling us of a life snuffed out. Many
variations of the
endless-knot can be found. The delicate, endless
design often addressed the belief in reincarnation.
As you discover stars,
broken columns, lambs, and drapery, rest assured that a
message is there waiting for you. If you want to know
more about the messages, there are many accessible
publications about Victorian cemetery symbols.
The Civil War In
Rochester The 140th Vol. Infantry, led by Col.Patrick
O’Rorke (namesake of the drawbridge in Charlotte), is likely
the better known of Rochester’s regiments but many
Rochester men served many regiments. Mt. Hope’s
Civil War plot (Section BB) is a testament to those
who gave their “last full measure,” but even more of
this war’s casualties are buried throughout the
cemetery.
The bronze sculpture
at the Civil War plot was created by Sally James
Farnham who studied under Frederick Remington (the
American artist best known for his paintings,
drawings and sculptures capturing the vitality and
spirit of the American West).
Mausoleums Mount Hope is
home to 75 building-like tombs, a statement of
opulence class or just preference.
General Jacob Gould, a
Revolutionary War hero, shoe merchant and Rochester
mayor ,who ironically opposed the land purchase that
would become Mt. Hope Cemetery, had his mausoleum built
into the hillside (Section C). Its style is purely
Egyptian and is topped with an Egyptian obelisk, a
symbol of Ra.
Nathan Stein, of the
Stein-Bloch Clothesin Rochester, erected
the largest mausoleum in Mt. Hope. Built in the Greek
Doric style, this awe-inspiring mausoleum can “sleep”
twenty and still have room to dance the night away.
Originally, the
mausoleums provided not only shelter from the weather
for family and friends visiting the departed, but also
shelter from the distractions of the outside world.
Many of the mausoleums had lovely stained glass windows
and relatively comfortable sitting areas. Now, many of
these incredible structures are locked or permanently
sealed to protect the residents. Their outer glory
remains an intrigue and statement of personal taste.
The Gatehouse and
Gazebo At the north entrance is the
Neo-Romanesque style gatehouse built by A.J. Foster
in 1874 (on the left) and the Moorish-style gazebo,
erected in 1872 (on your right). Both look
incredibly new, as they should, considering they
have undergone major restoration.
The Original
Chapel After coming in through the
north gate and driving past the cast-iron Florentine
fountain you come face to face with the original
1862 Gothic Revival chapel and its 1912 addition.
The newer addition fits in particularly well with
the original structure, except for its enormous
chimney. Constructed this way to lift the smoke up
and over the chapel and nearby ridge, designed by J.
Foster Warner (son of the gatehouse designer, A.J.
Warner), who was able to blend together the chapel
and the main crematory styles quite well, without
sacrificing the proficiency of the chimney. It was
one of the earliest crematories built in the United
States.
"there have been more than 375,000 burials
at Mt Hope, marked or unmarked."
The Monuments Early tombstones were generally
made of marble or slate, but Victorians used granite
most often. Granite didn’t flake like slate, was
incredibly hard and came in a wide variety of colors
and textures. Marble was a second choice.
If you look closely you
may come upon a few bluish gray markers. This is molded
metal. Not stone. It’s almost pure zinc so as it ages,
it protects the metal underneath and its color change
often appears to be that of stone. While inexpensive and
often ordered from catalogs, the century old, molded
metal monuments in Mt. Hope have hardly lost their
detail.
Burial Numbers Surely, as you wander through
Mt. Hope you must wonder how many people are buried
here. You may have noticed small, flat markers, no
larger than a football engraved only with the single
word BABY or GRANDMOTHER or GRANDFATHER. Yes, there
are unmarked graves as well. However, incredibly
thorough records of the burials have been kept
throughout the cemetery’s history. Because of this,
we know there have been more than 375,000, marked or
unmarked.
Did you know?
The magnificent trees on this plot of
land included red, black and white oaks,
chestnut, American beech, red and sugar maples,
basswood, tulip trees and white ash. On the
tenth anniversary of the cemetery, Ellwanger &
Berry Nursery (then across the street from Mt.
Hope) gave a gift of fifty shade trees including
European purple, fernleaf and weeping beeches,
Nikko fir, Caucasian spruce, Norway maple and
variegated sycamore maple trees. Some trees in
this cemetery are at least 400 years old!
Silas Cornell,
the landscape architect who laid out Mt. Hope
also penned and published a wall map of
Rochester in 1839 that was so accurate and so
detailed, that it became the base plan of the
city from which all later surveys and maps were
tied. His sundial, on the front lawn of the old
First Presbyterian Church on South Fitzhugh
Street, was so accurate that one could set their
watch by it. His grave is in Section G.
The Rev.
Thomas James was born a slave in
Canajoharie, New York in 1804 and died in
Rochester in 1891. He founded the A.M.E. Zion
Church in Rochester, and during the Civil
War, he assisted Union authorities in the relief
of newly liberated blacks in Louisville,
Kentucky. His autobiography, The Wonderful
Eventful Life of Rev. Thomas James, is a
quiet statement of an extraordinary man. (Range
1 Lot 367 ½)
William Carter
(Section A) was the first burial at Mt. Hope.
However, the cemetery wasn’t officially open at
the time of his burial. The first burial after
the cemetery’s dedication was Samuel Miller,
who quite astonishingly passed at the exact time
the cemetery was consecrated. Talk about good
timing!
Lillian Wald
was a practical idealist who worked to create a
more just society, and is widely regarded as the
founder of visiting nursing. While nursing was
her lifework, her concern over the horrendous
treatment of African-Americans (especially the
rash of hundreds of lynchings) led her to be one
of the seminal founders, in 1909, of the NAACP
(National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People). Her grave is in Section 3 at
the corner of Grove Avenue and Evergreen Avenue.
George B.
Selden was a Rochester attorney and
inventor. On his tombstone is the likeness of the early
gasoline automobile which he invented (despite Henry
Ford’s claim to the contrary). When the Rochester
Trolley horses became too ill to pull a trolley up to
Mt. Hope, Mr. Selden made a gasoline driven trolley for
this purpose. Mr. Selden held the patent, which Ford
ignored. Mr. Selden sued him, and after an 11 year court
battle, Henry Ford paid George B. Selden royalties and
kept on making cars. George B Selden’s marker is found
in Section C, Lot 108.
James Hard,
a Civil War veteran born in 1841 and died in
1954 is believed to be the oldest man buried in
Mt. Hope. Cynthia Fitzpatrick was born of
slave parents in Mississippi in 1864 and died
in Rochester in 1983 at the age of 118. Yes, she’s the oldest
female buried at Mt. Hope.
"Though you’ll come across Nathaniel
Rochester, Susan B. Anthony, Frederick Douglass,
you won’t find George Eastman."
Though you’ll
come across Nathaniel Rochester (Section
R), Susan B. Anthony (Section C),
Frederick Douglass (Section T) and a host of
other historic figures buried at Mt. Hope, you
won’t find George Eastman. Mr. Eastman
was cremated at Mt. Hope but his ashes can be
found in a special memorial area at the entrance
to Kodak Park.
Believe it or
not, Buffalo Bill’s children are buried
in Mt. Hope Cemetery. You can find that marker
in Range 2 at the corner of Elm Avenue and
Woodland Avenue.
“The Rochester
Mirage.” There once was a two story pavilion on the
highest summit of Mt. Hope called Fandango.
It was a favorite resting and gazing spot for
visitors. On April 16th, 1871 it seemed, to
confused spectators, as though Lake Ontario had
flooded over the city and Canada was well within
view. Some who witnessed this incredible sight
claimed that they could see Rice Lake in Canada.
New arrivals to Fandango that day assured the
frightened visitors that Rochester was unchanged
and perhaps the startling sight was a result of
unique atmospheric conditions. This incredible
event would be reported in Frank Leslie’s
Illustrated Newspaper a month later as “The
Rochester Mirage.”
Places you may want to leave a pebble
John Jacob
Bausch and Henry Lomb Founders of
Bausch & Lomb Company. (Section D)
Hiram
Sibley Founder of
Western Union and instigator of the purchase
of Alaska. (Section V)
Lewis Henry Morgan
(1818 - 1881)
Studied the Iroquois so thoroughly he
is considered the father
of the science of modern
anthropology and social
theory.
He wrote
"The League of
the Iroquois."
(Section
F)
Rochester
Orphan Asylum A general marker
identifies the burial area. The original
asylum was a home on Sophia Street.
(Section 0 - north end of First Avenue)
Alexander
Millener George Washington’s drummer.
(Range 2 north end at Elm and Second
Avenues)
Susan B.
Anthony Women’s rights activist.
(Section C - near Indian Trail)
Elizabeth
Hollister Frost An eminent Rochester
novelist and poet. (Section G - along Dell
Avenue)
Dr.
William C. Warfield Veteran of World War II, best remembered for
his deep baritone voice. The Showboat tune,
“Old Man River” has yet to be sung as this
vocal musician rendered it. A teacher and
constant tribute to music and Rochester, he
sings now at Mt. Hope. (Section AA)
General
Elisha Gaylord Marshall Captured in the crater at Petersburg during
the Civil War and survived to receive a high
brevet commission, though the battle at the
crater was a Union disaster. (Section G)
Albert
Hotchkiss Civil War youth, captured and died in
Andersonville Prison in Georgia, then
reburied by his family in Mt. Hope.
(Section C - Indian Trail)
May
Fielding
In
the Home for the Friendless plot, there is a
sad, yet very kind marker for this 15 year
old, while slave girl. (Section P)
Nancy
Harris Quakenbush
Her marker states that she was born on the
spot she’s buried. She was born there in a
log house before Mt. Hope Cemetery was
created. (Section H)
Seth Green Invented the fish hatchery and gained
national fame when he quadrupled the fish
population of the Connecticut River.
(Section S)
Myron
Holley
(1779
- 1841)
State Assemblyman who
helped convince the
state to fund the
Erie Canal project.
As a Canal commissioner
he oversaw, by horse,
all the canal work done
in our area. He
was wrongly accused,
then absolved of, taking
funds. His friends
purchased his marker, at
which 6,000 of them
gathered for its
dedication. (Section G - along
Dell Avenue)
Jacob
Myers Invented the first voting
machine used first in Lockport, NY in 1892
then throughout Rochester by 1896. (Range
4)
James
Gould Cutler
Architect turned inventor
best known for his Cutler mail chute, still
used everywhere today. (Section MM)
J. Harry
Stedman
Invented the fuzzy pipe
cleaner (now nearly extinct) and the
streetcar transfer now used by most
bus-transfer systems. (Section MM)
John Snell
Killed at his job as engineer of the steam
engine, Daniel Webster, by a malicious act
(the placing of bars of track across his
track), his last uttered words made him a
local hero. He simply said, “Tell them to
take care of my engine.” (Range 3)
Hartwell
Carver
Father of the transatlantic
railroad. (Range 2 -along Evergreen Avenue)
Henry A.
Ward Geologist and
natural scientist. The boulder on his marker
was one of his finds in Georgian Bay,
Canada. (Section G)
Alfred Ely Was U.S. Congressman at
the time of the Civil War; witnessed Bull
Run and was captured. In Richmond prison for
six months and paraded through southern
streets in a cage - prized Yankee
congressman. He was eventually released (Section D - mausoleum)
Rabbi
Phillip S. Bernstein Internationally known Zionist,
author and distinguished Rabbi of Temple
B’rith Kodesh in Rochester.
(Range 7)
Lucy Lee
Call
Renowned soprano in Europe and
Metropolitan Opera in New York City before
coming to Rochester to teach at the Eastman
School of Music. (Section 0)
Sarah
Kirby Hallowell Willis
Attended first
Women’s Rights Convention and signed the
Declaration of Sentiments - financial
supporter as well of the movement. (Section
V)
Margaret
Woodbury Strong
(1897
- 1969)
The only child of a
highly wealthy Rochester
family, and a tireless
collector of toys and
trinkets from around the
world, her collection of
items from
post-Industrial
Revolution US popular
culture is one of the
largest in the world.
She founded the
"Margaret Woodbury
Strong Museum of
Fascination" in 1968,
which is now the
Strong Museum of Play.
(Section C - along
Linden Avenue)
Sophie
Friederike Johanna Dorothea Steinmuller
Kalmbach
Yes, that’s her name, a
popular belief in the 19th century that the
more saints’ names you had, the better your
chances of reaching heaven. (Section AA)
Colonel
Josiah W. Bissell
The engineer who
built the Erie Canal Aqueduct that still
spans the Genesee River in downtown
Rochester. He also named East Avenue simply
by putting painted signs with the name on
every street corner of the avenue and… the
name stuck. (Section A)
Emily
Sibley Watson Founder of the Memorial Art Gallery has a
distinct flat stone grave near the Watson
family's elaborate Celtic cross. (Section D)
Henry
O’Reilly Founder and publisher of the
Rochester Daily Advertiser and author (1838)
of Sketches of Rochester, the first
comprehensive history of the city. (Section
G)
Blake F.
McKelvey A City Historian of Rochester
best known for his four-volume history of
Rochester some hundred years following Henry
O’Reilly. (Section G)
Edwin G.
Strasenburg A druggist who
manufactured his own compounds and started Strasenburgh Laboratories. After selling his
company he gave back to his community by
financing the planetarium for the Rochester
Museum and Science Center. (Section MM)
Colonel
Nathaniel Rochester The founder of the city that bears his name.
Colonel Rochester died seven years before
Mt. Hope Cemetery started, and was first
buried in the Buffalo Street graveyard. In
1851 he was reburied at Mt. Hope. (Section
R)
Mount Hope Cemetery Tours
The Friends of Mount Hope Cemetery
offer guided walking tours of the cemetery
each weekend, May through October. Free
two-hour, general tours are scheduled on
Saturdays at 1 p.m. and on Sundays at 2 and
2:30 p.m. Phone: (585) 461-3494