March 2, 2018

A Rainy Day in Hollywood Cemetery

     I love poking around old cemeteries, and perhaps my favorite is Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond. After nearly 3 decades I made a return visit while I was in Richmond on Thursday. I set out on foot from the entrance with just a light rain falling, but soon found myself hightailing it back to my truck as the weather intensified. Fortunately, you are also allowed to drive. Established in 1849, Hollywood was one of the earlier incarnations of the rural cemetery movement, which sought to create beautiful park-like settings, not just for the dead, but for the living to enjoy as bucolic escapes from crowded urban centers. If you want to learn more about this movement and Hollywood, there is a good article here, from a 2012 issue of Magnolia, published by the Southern Garden History Society.

     Not too far from the entrance is Iron Dog, who guards the grave of a toddler who died in 1862.
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     Perhaps the most famous landmark in the cemetery is a 90' tall pyramid, created by the ladies of the Hollywood Memorial Assc. to honor the 18,000 Confederate soldiers buried here. I have always found its simple design in rough-hewn stone to be a stark and apt reminder of how war wastes lives.
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     The cemetery is the final resting place of a who's who of notable Virginians, including Presidents Tyler and Monroe. The later was re-interred from New York, but given the ornate Gothic revival design of his tomb, on a prime spot overlooking the fall of the James, he probably didn't object.
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     Speaking of re-interment, Jefferson Davis' body was moved from New Orleans to Richmond. His wife, Varina, would have preferred their plantation in Mississippi, but she was worried about flooding. You just can't have the bodies of former Confederate presidents floating about. There was a clamor among many Southern cities for the chance to be Davis' final resting place, but Varina chose Richmond for Davis and their family. While I was there on Thursday, it was evident that Davis Circle was in the middle of a big re-work, only appropriate as many across the country are re-working their view of Southern "heroes".
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     While Hollywood has a long history, it is still very much a working cemetery, and there are many contemporary graves. There is also a mausoleum built in the 1990's with a beautiful view of the James River, and the city beyond.
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     Before all of your allotted pixels are gone, I wanted to share with you one last photo, taken by my not-yet-wife of me and a friend posing on the pyramid about 1984/85. I am on the left. Please pardon the shorts and white socks, it wasn't creepy back then. I also want to remind you that my Winter Walk-Off is taking place through 3/19, and I invite all bloggers to participate.

6 comments:

  1. My dad took me to cemeteries to play hide-and-seek when I was little... I have an affinity for them ever since. Your picture of Palmer Chapel Mausoleum is wonderful, maybe even better due to the dreary weather. Are those cherries in massive pink bloom? What a contrast to the rest of the trees.
    Love your vintage photo; 1984 is when I moved to the US. Sometimes I find it difficult to recognize that early version of myself; many changes had taken place since, inside and out.

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    1. I think I would like your father. I was particularly fond of that Palmer photo too, even though it was much more modern then the other parts of Hollywood. The pink trees were Magnolias, but I don't know which cultivar. Unlike you, I don't find it difficult to recognize earlier versions of myself, but I do find it startling.

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  2. I enjoyed this post. I also love old cemeteries, Hollywood among them. I grew up in Richmond and on return visits I often took my mother there to enjoy the peace and quiet and to search out interesting gravestones.

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    1. Hello Pat. I grew up in Richmond too, and I visit often lately, as my son lives there. However, I have not enjoyed the peace and quiet of Hollywood for many years.

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  3. Cute photo at the end, Les. It's always fun to see a personally historical photo along with the other history. :) I always find cemeteries fascinating (I guess that's strange?). We had one at the end of the road when I was growing up, and we would frequently walk and bike through it when I was a kid. I also find famous historical cemeteries fascinating. King's Chapel in downtown Boston, Author's Ridge in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Lincoln's tomb in Springfield... Now this one will be on my "plan to visit" list. So much rich history there.

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    1. Hello Beth, when you head to Charleston, make sure you visit the Unitarian Cemetery, and the church it surrounds. It is right downtown, and one of the most peaceful spots in the city.

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