Detail of the Gargoyles on the Neo-Gothic Mausoleu…
Mausoleum in the form of an Egyptian Temple in Woo…
Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Mausoleum in the form of an Egyptian Temple in Woo…
Mausoleum in the form of an Egyptian Temple in Woo…
Detail of the Tympanum of the Neo-Gothic Mausoleum…
Wild Turkey in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Celtic Cross Grave Marker in Woodlawn Cemetery, Au…
Detail of a Tree in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Neoclassical Urn in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
A Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
A Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Ship Grave Monument in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2…
Floral Cross Grave Monument in Woodlawn Cemetery,…
Detail of the Floral Cross Grave Monument in Woodl…
Angel in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Ionic "Temple" with Bronze Reliefs Mausoleum in Wo…
Detail of an Angel in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 20…
Cross with a Dollar Sign Monument in Woodlawn Ceme…
Detail of an Angel in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 20…
Detail of the Cross with a Dollar Sign Monument in…
Bridge and Trees in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Trees, Lake, and Mausoleum in the Distance in Wood…
A Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Wild Fungus in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
A Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Victorian "Ara Pacis-Inspired" Tomb Monument in Wo…
Mourner with Cross Grave Monument in Woodlawn Ceme…
Detail of the Mourner with Cross Grave Monument in…
Row of Mausoleums in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 200…
A Chapel-Shaped Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, Au…
Large Cross with Mourner Grave Monument in Woodlaw…
Large Cross with Mourner Grave Monument in Woodlaw…
"Tholos-Shaped" Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, Au…
Our Belle Grave Monument in Woodlawn Cemetery, Aug…
Detail of the Our Belle Grave Monument in Woodlawn…
Mourner with Wreath Grave Monument in Woodlawn Cem…
Detail of a Mourner with Wreath Grave Monument in…
A Large Cross with Mouner Grave Monument in Woodla…
Odd Stone Pedestal (?) in Woodlawn Cemetery, Augus…
A Large Cross with Mouner Grave Monument in Woodla…
Odd Stone Stool or Pedestal (?) in Woodlawn Cemete…
Tree and Mausoleum in the Distance in Woodlawn Cem…
Polygonal-Shaped Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, A…
Detail of a Relief of an Angel on the Polygonal-Sh…
Herman Melville's and His Wife's Graves in Woodlaw…
Doric Temple-Shaped Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery…
Detail of a Grave Monument with a Sculpture of a G…
Detail of Herman Melville's Grave in Woodlawn Ceme…
Greek Temple-Inspired Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemete…
Greek Temple-Inspired Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemete…
Detail of the Pens Left as Offerings on Herman Mel…
Greek Temple-Inspired Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemete…
Greek Temple-Inspired Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemete…
Statue of Mary or a Female Saint (?) in Woodlawn C…
A Mausoleum with Bronze Scrollwork in Woodlawn Cem…
Row of Mausoleums in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 200…
Egyptian-Inspired Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery,…
Detail on a Column of an Egyptian-Inspired Mausole…
Detail of a Sphinx before an Egyptian-Inspired Mau…
A Neo-Gothic Church-Shaped Mausoleum in Woodlawn C…
A Neo-Gothic Church-Shaped Mausoleum in Woodlawn C…
A Neo-Gothic Church-Shaped Mausoleum in Woodlawn C…
Neo-Gothic Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August…
Neo-Gothic Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August…
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Neo-Gothic Mausoleum in Woodlawn Cemetery, August 2008
Alva Smith Vanderbilt Belmont
Birth: Jan. 17, 1853
Death: Jan. 26, 1933
Suffragette. Born and raised in Mobile, Alabama, she was the daughter of a successful cotton merchant and plantation owner. Her parents were ruined at the outbreak of the Civil War and fled to Paris, France with their five children. When they returned to the United States after the war, her mother ran a New York City, New York boarding house and her father brokered cotton to support their family in genteel poverty. Her best friend from her childhood in Mobile, Consuelo Yznaga (later Viscountess Mandeville), introduced her to handsome, wealthy William Kissam Vanderbilt and Alva determined to marry him, which she did in 1875. They were of opposite temperaments and the marriage was unhappy. Alva had three children, Consuelo, William II, and Harold Vanderbilt. Fiery-tempered and ferociously ambitious, she forced her daughter Consuelo to marry the 9th Duke of Marlborough, for which the impoverished duke received more than $2.5 million (an astronomical sum in 1895). Although the marriage made Consuelo miserable, she and her mother reconciled later and Consuelo was at her mother's bedside when she died at her Parisian townhouse and escorted her mother's body home for burial. Alva divorced Vanderbilt and married Oliver H. P. Belmont in 1896. Belmont, whose father had founded an international banking fortune, had been her husband's best friend. After her second husband's death, Alva embraced the Suffragist movement, donating both funds and leadership. An amazingly profligate spender, she constructed and fantastically decorated more than a dozen grand residences, the most famous of which may be Marble House in Newport, Rhode Island (which she sold in 1932 for the Depression-era price of $100,000, less than one-hundredth of the $11 million it had cost in 1892).
Burial: Woodlawn Cemetery
Bronx
Bronx County
New York, USA
Text from: www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=3711
Birth: Jan. 17, 1853
Death: Jan. 26, 1933
Suffragette. Born and raised in Mobile, Alabama, she was the daughter of a successful cotton merchant and plantation owner. Her parents were ruined at the outbreak of the Civil War and fled to Paris, France with their five children. When they returned to the United States after the war, her mother ran a New York City, New York boarding house and her father brokered cotton to support their family in genteel poverty. Her best friend from her childhood in Mobile, Consuelo Yznaga (later Viscountess Mandeville), introduced her to handsome, wealthy William Kissam Vanderbilt and Alva determined to marry him, which she did in 1875. They were of opposite temperaments and the marriage was unhappy. Alva had three children, Consuelo, William II, and Harold Vanderbilt. Fiery-tempered and ferociously ambitious, she forced her daughter Consuelo to marry the 9th Duke of Marlborough, for which the impoverished duke received more than $2.5 million (an astronomical sum in 1895). Although the marriage made Consuelo miserable, she and her mother reconciled later and Consuelo was at her mother's bedside when she died at her Parisian townhouse and escorted her mother's body home for burial. Alva divorced Vanderbilt and married Oliver H. P. Belmont in 1896. Belmont, whose father had founded an international banking fortune, had been her husband's best friend. After her second husband's death, Alva embraced the Suffragist movement, donating both funds and leadership. An amazingly profligate spender, she constructed and fantastically decorated more than a dozen grand residences, the most famous of which may be Marble House in Newport, Rhode Island (which she sold in 1932 for the Depression-era price of $100,000, less than one-hundredth of the $11 million it had cost in 1892).
Burial: Woodlawn Cemetery
Bronx
Bronx County
New York, USA
Text from: www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=3711
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