Rosehill Cemetery
Rosehill Cemetery is a historic rural cemetery on the North Side of Chicago, Illinois in the United States. At, it is the largest cemetery in the city of Chicago and its first private cemetery. The Entrance Gate and Administration Building, designed by William W. Boyington in the castellated Gothic style was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. Rosehill Mausoleum, also known as the Community Mausoleum, was built in 1914. It is the largest mausoleum in Chicago and features several stained glass windows by Louis Comfort Tiffany. The Horatio N. May Chapel, completed in 1899, was designed in the English Gothic style by architect Joseph Lyman Silsbee. Rosehill is the final resting place of many notable individuals, including 16 Union Civil War generals, Chicago politicians, business leaders, artists, athletes, and a Vice President of the United States. Well-known names such as Oscar Mayer, Montgomery Ward and Richard Sears are interred at the cemetery. Notable monuments include several Civil War memorials and the Volunteer Firefighters' Monument. As of 2021, the cemetery has over 190,000 interments.
Description
Rosehill Cemetery, located at 5800 N. Ravenswood Avenue in Chicago, is a 350-acre landscaped cemetery, bordered by Western Avenue, Peterson Avenue, Ravenswood Avenue and Bryn Mawr/ Damen/ Bowmanville Avenues. Situated at the city's highest elevation, it is the largest cemetery within the city limits of Chicago. It is located in the north east section of the Lincoln Square community area. As of 2021, more than 190,000 individuals have been interred at Rosehill Cemetery.History
Rosehill Cemetery Company
Chicago's first private cemetery, the Rosehill Cemetery Corporation, was founded by landowner, Francis H. Benson and Chicago physician, Dr. James Van Zandt Blaney on February 11, 1859. Other founders included railroad executive, William B. Ogden and businessman John H. Kinzie. The 350-acre property, originally owned by Benson was located seven miles north of Chicago in the town of Chittenden. Sitting at the highest elevation in Chicago it was an ideal site for a cemetery and was easily accessible from Chicago by train. Dr. Blaney was appointed the first president of Rosehill Cemetery. The first interment was Dr. J.W. Ludlam on July 11, 1859. Rosehill Cemetery was dedicated in a public ceremony on July 27, 1859.Two different stories offer the origin of Rosehill Cemetery's name. One legend claims the area was originally called "Roe's Hill" after pioneer settler Hiram Roe, but a clerical error by the Chicago City Clerk changed it to "Rosehill". A 1913 Rosehill Cemetery Company marketing pamphlet offered a different explanation, suggesting the name came from the wild white roses that once grew on the hill of the original property. Rosehill was designed by landscape architect William Saunders. The garden-style layout, popular in the Victorian era, featured winding roads and paths, large trees, ponds, and expansive lawns. Several natural woodland areas, part of the original design, still exist today at Rosehill. A Gothic Revival style Entrance Gate and Administration Building, designed by architect William W. Boyington, was built in 1864 on Ravenswood Avenue.
During the late 1850s, Chicago city officials decided to close the old City cemetery for health reasons and relocate burials and monuments to suburban cemeteries. The first relocations of interments from the City Cemetery began when Rosehill started selling plots in 1859. Exhumed bodies were transported by wagon to other cemeteries, including Graceland, Oak Woods, and Rosehill cemeteries.
Rose Hill train station
A train station located at Rosehill Drive and Ravenswood Avenue opened in 1855 as a stop on the Chicago and Milwaukee Railway. The station was originally named Chittenden after the surrounding town. When Rosehill cemetery opened in 1859, the railway had become the Chicago and North Western Railway and the station's name was changed to Rose Hill. A custom-built train with a casket compartment traveled daily from Chicago Northwestern Station, transporting funeral parties, cemetery visitors and the deceased directly to the Rose hill station.When the line was elevated in 1896, a new station was constructed in limestone to match the material and castellated Gothic style of Rosehill's Entrance Gate and Administration building.
A new casket elevator was installed, making it easier to lower coffins from the train platform down to the cemetery grounds for burial. The train station closed in 1958. What currently remains of the old train station is the stairway and castellated Gothic style elevator building.
Entrance Gate
The Entrance Gate and Administration Building, designed by architect William W. Boyington was built in 1864. It is an excellent example of Castellated Gothic architecture, which is rare in the Midwest. The architectural style, modeled after medieval castles was popular in the Victorian era. The gatehouse was constructed inLemont limestone, a locally quarried yellow limestone. Boyington also designed the Chicago Water Tower in 1869, using the same castellated Gothic style and matching limestone. The Rosehill Cemetery Administration Building and Entry Gate was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1975. It was also granted Chicago Landmark status in 1980.
Community Mausoleum
Built in 1914, the mausoleum was designed by architect Sidney Lovell. It is the largest mausoleum in Chicago and features an elaborate Greek Revival entrance. Visitors now enter through the modern expansion. The building has two levels, the lower level being partially underground. The Mausoleum's interior is filled with French and Italian marble crypts with floors made of Roman Travertine. Several of the individual crypts have sculptured bronze and brass doors. The mausoleum has undergone eight expansions since it opened. It contains 13,000 crypts and two chapels. There are many family-owned crypts with decorative bronze gates, featuring over 30 stained glass windows, several designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany.Notable interments include Aaron Montgomery Ward, Richard Warren Sears, Milton Florsheim, and John G. Shedd, president of Marshall Field & Company and principal donor of Chicago's Shedd Aquarium in the early 1920's. The John G. Shedd Memorial Chapel consists of the Shedd family crypt and a memorial chapel. The chapel is decorated with a stained glass skylight, marble floors, marble walls and marble benches with leather cushions. The family crypt sits behind decorative bronze doors flanked by tall marble pillars topped with brightly lit urns. According to Matt Hucke, author of Graveyards of Chicago, "the philanthropist commissioned a one-of-a-kind stained glass window from Tiffany that would bathe his crypt in blue light at sunset. The underwater theme of the family room is echoed in the skylight anteroom; even its chairs are adorned with the fanciful oceanic motifs of seahorses and shells."