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Showing posts with the label Kensico Cemetery

Major Howard Pinkney, M.D.

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One of the not to be missed monuments in Kensico Cemetery is the pink pyramid that graces the graves of Civil War surgeon Major Howard Pinkney, M.D., and his family.

J. Gordon Edwards, Silent Film Director

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Silent film director, J. Gordon Edwards, worked for Fox Films before it merged with Twentieth Century Pictures. While with Fox, he directed more than 50 films, including the original Cleopatra, starring silent screen star Theda Bara. The co-mingled cremains of Edwards and his wife, Angela, are inurned in one of the crypt spaces in their mosque-shaped mausoleum, which is decorated with movie props from some of Edwards' movies.

Anne Bancroft Brooks

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 Legendary actress Anne Bancroft is buried  in a shaded corner grave, across the way from her parents. Bancroft, who appeared on stage and screen,  portrayed  Anne Sullivan in  the Broadway production of The Miracle Worker for which she won a Tony Award for Best Actress. She reprised her role in  the 1962 film adaptation, this time winning an Oscar for Best Actress for her performance. One of her most famous roles was as Mrs. Robinson in The Graduate.  Bancroft was married to director, actor, and writer Mel Brooks. The grave of Bancroft's parents, Michael and Mildred Italiano.

D.W. Rohde

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  In the early 2oth century, D.W. Rohde was the secretary of the Fairlawn Cemetery (the cemetery was later incorporated into Valhalla's Gate of Heaven) Society in Westchester County. His tree-stump tombstone in Kensico Cemetery is creatively adorned.

Westchester in Repose

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  My article 'Westchester in Repose' is the cover story for July's American Cemetery & Cremation' magazine. Stories and photos from Gate of Heaven, Ferncliff, Kensico, Sleepy Hollow, and more, are featured.  The memorial that graces the cover commemorates the life of 27-year-old Marc Antony Zambetti, who tragically lost his life while on a business trip for Stella D'Oro, his family's company.

Trylon and Perisphere

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  This monument is a replica of the Trylon and Perisphere structures that served as a centerpiece of the 1939 World's Fair. Images of it were used on a wide variety of promotional materials and, in 1939, it was depicted on a United States postage stamp (swipe to see). Buried here is Reverend Dr. M. Moran Weston II, a civil rights activist and graduate of Columbia University (one of the first African Americans to do so). In addition to his work as a minister, Dr. Moran founded the Carver Federal Savings Bank, and served as a real estate developer so that he could provide opportunities such as equal education and affordable housing to African American communities. Dr. Weston died in 2002, at the age of 91.

Milton Supman --Better Known as Soupy Sales

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  Soupy Sales (Milton Supman) was an actor, comedian, and popular radio & television personality. The Soupy Sales Show, which ran from 1953–1966, was one of the most popular children's shows of the time. It's comedy sketches often ended with Sales getting hit with a pie in his face. That became his trademark. After the show ended, Sales became a regular panelist on the revival of What's My Line? introducing him to a new where a new generation.

The Davison Monument--A Presbrey-Leland Gem

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  Alvah Davison was president of the Davison Publishing Company, a firm which published textile blue books. A Brooklyn resident, he was a regular contributor to various charities. Crafted by Valhalla's renowned Presbrey-Leland monument company, Davison's memorial contains a center sarcophagus with room for two entombments. Surrounded by circular colonnades, in the Greek Doric style, the structure's base is supported by three steps.

The Ukulele Lady

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May Singhi Breen was known as the “The Ukulele Lady.” For three decades --the 1920s to the 1950s -- she wrote ukulele arrangements for piano sheet music. And in 1931, she was responsible for the ukulele being included in the New York Musicians’ list of musical instruments. Singhi-Breen was inducted in the Ukulele Hall of Fame Museum (yes, there is one) in 2000. She was married to composer Peter DeRose a pianist and composer, with whom she often collaborated.  

The Wang Family

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Designer Vera Wang's family rests in style in Westchester County's Kensico Cemetery.   The  Wang family memorial overlooks the Cohasset Plot, a seven acre hillside expanse which contains an abundance of decorative laser-etched monuments bearing Asian surnames. At dusk the ivory granite structure takes on a greyish hue.

Archie Comics Creator: John Goldwater

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J ohn L. Goldwater, the creator of Archie Comics, is buried beneath in Kensico Cemetery. His 2019 New York Times obituary noted that "He is survived by Archie, Jughead, Betty and Veronica in Riverdale, U.S.A."

Frank Vance Storrs: Life is a Book...

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Frank Vance Storrs created Playbill, much to the appreciation of theater-goers everywhere. His whimsical monument in Valhalla's Kensico Cemetery reads: Life is a Book-A Different Page is Turned Each Day-The Happiness of the Next None Dare Say.