Lone Mountain Cemetery
Lone Mountain Cemetery was a complex of cemeteries in the Lone Mountain neighborhood of San Francisco, California, United States on the land bounded by the present-day California Street, Geary Boulevard, Parker Avenue, and Presidio Avenue. Opened 1854, it eventually comprised Laurel Hill Cemetery, Calvary Cemetery, the Masonic Cemetery, and Odd Fellows Cemetery.
Pressure to close the complex began around the beginning of the twentieth century, and by 1941 all remains within it had been moved elsewhere, mostly to a new necropolis in Colma, California, though some were never accounted for.
The land from Laurel Hill Cemetery and Calvary Cemetery was eventually used to create housing and shopping centers within the Lone Mountain neighborhood, the Masonic Cemetery land became the campus for University of San Francisco, and the Odd Fellows Cemetery had maintained the columbarium and surrounding memorial park land, and the additional land was used to create the Angelo Rossi Playground and Pool and some single family housing.
Historical overview of the complex
Formation and usage
Opened May 30, 1854, Lone Mountain Cemetery was planned to cover 320 acres. However the cemetery planners decided a smaller size would suffice the city. In 1854, this area was considered one of the "outside lands", meaning it was outside of what was considered the city of San Francisco and was made of sandy soil. Prior to the establishment of Lone Mountain Cemetery, most of the burials in San Francisco were at the Yerba Buena Cemetery.Many of the burials within the Lone Mountain Cemetery complex were for the wealthy. The paths between the graves were named after known East Coast cemeteries, including Mount Auburn, Green-Wood, and Oak Hill. The cemeteries became a popular place for family outings and picnics on Sunday.
In 1860s there was a legal battle in the city over who was to administer Lone Mountain, as a result they decided to incorporate a section of the complex and settled on a name change to Laurel Hill Cemetery.
Burials in the 19th-century were not always safe, and as urban graveyards such as Lone Mountain Cemetery eventually ran out of space, which resulted in burials without using coffins. It was not uncommon to hear reports of body parts found in mausoleums or near the cemetery during this time. Chinese mourners would leave food offerings for the dead at the cemetery, which in turn brought "hungry vagrants". In 1866, a news story ran that stated "the Lone Mountain cemetery was rapidly filling up, creating deadly gasses" due to the large quantity of remains decomposing.
Removal of cemeteries and remains
The idea started circulating in the 1880s that the cemeteries needed to be moved outside of the city; complaints were made primarily by the nearby property owners who were concerned that the area would discourage any new development in the neighborhood, and for safety. At this point in history the grounds of the cemeteries had started to deteriorate, and became a haven for delinquents. In 1894, J. H. Bond, the editor of the local Richmond Banner newspaper, started to promote the removal of these cemeteries with a move to Colma due to the decay of the gravestones. Bond had been vocal on this issue for two decades and supported the common idea that cemeteries "planted germs of disease in the organs of breathing life." The Catholic Archdiocese opposed the removal of the graves because in Calvary Cemetery they were on "hallowed ground". Another point of argument was the importance of the buried San Francisco pioneers, and moving them would be disrespectful, "preserve the sanctity of the dead". The battle to remove the cemeteries continued for years, with groups such as the "Cemetery Defense League" and "Save our Cemeteries" fighting to stop city evictions.In 1902, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors had passed a law to prohibit the sale of grave lots or to permit any new burials within the city. By late 1910, cremation was also prohibited within the city. The California State Legislature passed the Morris Act in 1921, authored by Clarence W. Morris, which allowed a cemetery to be abandoned if ratified by a majority of lot owners. The Morris Act of 1921 was stopped by litigation and by 1923 a second Morris Act had passed, giving municipalities the ability to remove bodies, but requiring "police power" and requiring burial to have been prohibited by law for a set number of years.
From 1923 until 1929, ongoing litigation prevented the removal of the buried; the majority of the buried were moved on or after 1929. The bodies would be moved at no expense, but, for a headstone to be moved, the family had to pay the cost. As a result, many of the gravestones were reused for the sea wall at Aquatic Park, the creation of a breakwater at the St. Francis Yacht Club in the Marina, lining for rain gutters in Buena Vista Park, and erosion control at Ocean Beach. Contractor Charles L. Harney was paid to dump the large crypts and large tomb markers into the San Francisco Bay. In the present-day, every once in a while the full-sized gravestones will emerge at Ocean Beach, particularly after a storm.
From February 1940 until after World War II, the process of moving the last remains from San Francisco to Colma was completed.
Laurel Hill Cemetery (formerly Lone Mountain Cemetery)
History
The Lone Mountain Cemetery was 55.4 acres at the time of founding and was located between California, Euclid, Masonic and Arguello Streets. The first burial at Lone Mountain Cemetery was interred on June 10, 1854, and he was named John Orr.In the 1860s, there was a legal battle in the city over who was to administer Lone Mountain. As a result, Lone Mountain Cemetery was renamed to Laurel Hill Cemetery, with the filing of the articles of incorporation by many wealthy locals, including William Chapman Ralston, John Parrott, Henry Huntly Haight, Nicholas Luning, James Otis, Alvinza Hayward, Henry Mayo Newhall, and C. C. Butler. The new name of Laurel Hill Cemetery started in 1867, and it was named after the Laurel Hill garden cemetery in Philadelphia.
Notable burials
In 1848, Phineas Gage had survived a work accident when a large iron rod driven was completely through his head, destroying parts of his brain and skull. He died in 1860 and was buried in Lone Mountain Cemetery. In 1866, his physician John Martyn Harlow exhumed his skull in order to study it, and placed the skull with the iron bar on display at the Warren Anatomical Museum. In 1940, as part of the mandated cemetery relocations within the city of San Francisco, Gage's headless body was relocated to Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California.One of the notable grave markers within Lone Mountain Cemetery was for senator David Colbreth Broderick who died in the Broderick–Terry duel of 1859; the Broderick's Monument, which was a tall stone obelisk on a platform with stairs and a low railing surrounding it. During the 1906 earthquake the Broderick's Monument obelisk lost its upper portion.
Some of the other notable pioneer burials at this site included Judge Silas W. Sanderson; politician, Samuel Williams Inge; lawyer, Thomas W. Sutherland; lawyer Thomas O. Larkin; surgeon and University of California, San Francisco founder Hugh H. Toland; the builder of the first wharf in the city, Squire Clark; an early sheriff, David Scannell; newspaper editor, James King of William; Commodore James Thomas Watkins; founder of Woodward's Gardens, Robert B. Woodward; the inventor of the cable car, Andrew Smith Hallidie; politician, James Van Ness; U.S. Senator, William M. Stewart; U.S. Senator, John Percival Jones; San Francisco mayor, James Otis; businessman, William Chapman Ralston; and U.S. Senator, James Graham Fair.
Grave relocations
Some of the families of those interred at the Laurel Hill and Calvary Cemeteries moved their family remains at their own expense. In June 1901, an unknown number of remains from Laurel Hill Cemetery were moved to the Japanese Cemetery, Cypress Lawn Memorial Park, and the Serbian Cemetery, all in Colma. 35,000 of the Laurel Hill remains were removed between 1939 and 1940, and placed in redwood coffins, and were taken to Colma; where they were stored for six years in Cypress Abbey Mausoleum. World War II had delayed the construction of a new burial chamber; and after the war the cost to build was too high, so instead the remains were placed beneath a large burial mound at Cypress Lawn. It was not until 1993, that the memorial obelisk for those that were re-interred was placed on the 5 acre mound at Cypress Lawn.There had been plans to create a 5-acre memorial park in the Laurel Hill neighborhood, which did not receive enough support. The land for the Laurel Hill Cemetery became subdivided for housing and shopping centers.
The site of the Laurel Hill Cemetery is listed as a California Historical Landmark.
Calvary Cemetery
History
The Calvary Catholic Cemetery, also known as Mount Calvary Cemetery was 49.2 acres in size, founded by Archbishop Joseph Sadoc Alemany who purchased sloped land on Lone Mountain on August 16, 1860. It was located between Geary, Turk, Saint Joseph, and Masonic Streets.The graves of this cemetery were predominantly of the Irish. In 1860, a chapel was built on Point Lobos, where Joseph Alemany held mass once a month. In 1862, 4 wooden crosses were added to the top of Lone Mountain.
Notable burials
Charles Cora was an Italian-born gambler, who had met Belle Cora, a 19th-century prostitute in New Orleans. They moved to San Francisco together for work; and eventually Charles Cora was hung in 1852 by the San Francisco Committee of Vigilance. Right before the hanging, he married Bella Cora, and when he died she buried him at the Mission Dolores Cemetery. She was told that she couldn't be buried next to her husband at Mission Dolores, so she disinterred Charles Cora and buried him at Calvary Cemetery; and when she died, she was buried next to him in Calvary. In 1916, the San Francisco Bulletin newspaper published a serial about the Coras by Pauline Jacobson. As a result of the news coverage, Bella Cora and Charles Cora were disinterred from Calvary Cemetery and reburied beneath a common headstone at the Mission Dolores Cemetery.Notable graves in Calvary included politicians, James A. McDougall; Eugene Casserly; and Delos R. Ashley.