Maple Grove Cemetery (Queens)
History
Maple Grove is a 65-acre cemetery established in 1875 on the "Backbone of Long Island" by Colonel William Sterling Cogswell and business associates. It consists of two sections; Monumental Park and Memorial Park. The Victorian Era Monumental Park was the first section opened in 1875 and laid out in the rural cemetery tradition with panoramic winding roads through a forest covered hilly terrain, with the original entrance at Queens Boulevard. The Lodge Building, located at the Queens Boulevard entrance, and the Receiving Tomb were erected in 1875. The Victorian Administration Building was erected in 1880 at the Lefferts Boulevard and Kew Gardens Road Entrance. All were designed by noted New York City architect James E. Ware (1846–1918).
The Memorial Park section was opened in 1943. The Lodge was torn down and the original Queens Boulevard Entrance was moved further south on Queens Boulevard, next to Briarwood subway station (E, F, and <F> trains). Memorial Park's Presidential Circle includes a memorial to the 21 people interred at Maple Grove who died in the 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. There are approximately 83,000 interments, with approximately 30,000 of them in the Monumental Park section. In Memorial Park the new Center at Maple Grove building, designed by architect Peter Gisolfi, was opened in 2009. The Maple Grove offices were moved from the old Victorian Administration Building into the Center. It also houses the Celebration Hall, Community Room, the Columbarium etc. A third entrance was created next to the Center on Kew Gardens Road at 129th Street.
Friends of Maple Grove
The Friends of Maple Grove Cemetery, Inc. is a not-for-profit, membership organization with the purposes of supporting and enhancing the operations of Maple Grove Cemetery, located in Kew Gardens, Queens, New York. Friends members desire to increase public knowledge and appreciation of the artistic, historical, horticultural and cultural resources of the Cemetery. The Friends promotes ties between Maple Grove Cemetery and the community it serves and sponsors a variety of programs and activities.
Notable interments
- LaVern Baker (1911–1997), rhythm-and-blues singer
- Albert H. Bosch (1908–2005), member of the US House of Representatives
- Martin Branner (1888–1970), cartoonist
- George W. Corliss (1834–1903), soldier, Civil War Congressional Medal of Honor recipient
- Leslie Kaliades (1961–1999), artist known for her photography about her experience with AIDS
- Anthony Mason (1966–2015), basketball player
- Irving Rapper (1898–1999), film director
- Jimmy Rushing (1901–1972), singer
- George Coles Stebbins (1846–1945), gospel hymn writer
- Fred Taral (1867–1927), U.S. Racing Hall of Fame jockey
- James E. Ware (1846–1918), architect
- Edward Wright, (1829–1901), sailor, Civil War Congressional Medal of Honor recipient
- Vincent Youmans (1898–1946), songwriter
- Octavia St. Laurent (1964-2009), Actress, Singer
References
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- ^ Kathy Howe (January 2004). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Maple Grove Cemetery". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Archived from the original on 2012-10-18. Retrieved 2011-01-12. See also: "Accompanying 56 photos".
- ^ "Friends of Maple Grove Cemetery".