Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Snow – The Road to William Rockefeller

The large mausoleum in the center is that of William Rockefeller, Jr. “William Avery Rockefeller Jr. (May 31, 1841 – June 24, 1922) was an American businessman and financier. Rockefeller was a co-founder of Standard Oil along with his elder brother John Davison Rockefeller. He helped to build up the National City Bank of New York, which became Citigroup. He was also part owner of Anaconda Copper Company, which was the fourth-largest company in the world in the late 1920s. He was a prominent member of the Rockefeller family.(Wikipedia).

On the left is the Mausoleum of John Dustin Archbold (See: Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. John Dustin Archbold Mausoleum). The column on the right is part of the Harris plot (See: Sleepy Hollow Cemetery – The Harris Plot). For now I don’t know much about the other structures on the right.

Taken with an Olympus OM-D EM-10 and Panasonic Lumix G Vario 14-42 f3.5-4.6 II

Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Snow – A Trio of Mausoleums

The largest one is the mausoleum in the Middle, the final resting place of William Boyce Thompson:

Business Magnate. He operated silver and copper mines in Montana and Arizona. He moved to New York City, New York and became director of the Federal Reserve bank of New York (1914 to 1919) and was twice a delegate to the Republican National Convetion (1916, 1920). In 1919, he founded the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research in Yonkers, New York which has since become a research institute of Cornell University. He also founded the Boyce Thompson Arboretum in Superior, Arizona. His life has been memorialized in a biography entitled “The Magnate” by Hermann Hagedorn. (Find a Grave)

On the left the mausoleum of John C. Juring and his wife Frances Bryant Fisher Juhring.

J.C. Juhring, merchant, was born in New York City and is the son of John C. and Lena (Stuke) Juhring. His father was a successful real estate operator during the period from 1850 to 1875, and at the time of his death resided in Lincoln Place (Wilson Street), Brooklyn. John C. the younger received his preliminary education in the public schools, and after a preparatory course entered Mount Washington Collegiate Institute from which he was graduated in 1869. He entered the employ of Francis H. Leggett & Company, importing and manufacturing grocers, in 1873, and as the result of a close attention to his duties, reliability and rapidly acquiring the knowledge necessary to develop and push business, he was rapidly advanced in positions of trust. He was given an interest in the firm’s profits, and in 1892 he was admitted to partnership. In1892, when the firm was changed to a corporation, he was chosen as its Vice President and Secretary. He was one of the charter members of the Merchant’s Association of New York, and at its first meeting in 1897, he was elected its first Vice-President and proved to be one of its most active workers. Imbued with an unusual degree of civic pride, he laid plans to secure members, and with a short period after its organization he succeeded in adding to the membership roll one hundred and fifty representative firms.

Mr. Juhring is recognized as a public-spirited citizen, and one who always has in mind the welfare and best interests of the city of his birth.

Mr. Juhring’s eminent executive and business qualifications have led to his selection for many positions of trust. He is a director of the Coal and Iron National Bank of New York City, a Trustee of the Citizens Savings Bank, besides being connected in a similar capacity with many other commercial institutions. In politics he is a Republican, but of independent views, and he has given his unqualified support to all the movements looking to an improved condition in the administration of the local government. He is a member of the Merchant’s Club of New York as well as of several important out-of-town social organizations. He was married on October 19, 1901, at the Majestic Hotel, in New York City, to Miss Frances Bryant Fisher, an interesting feature of the wedding being the presence of Miss Helen M. Gould as one of the bridesmaids.

It has been well said of Mr. Juhring by one who knows him intimately: “He possesses a pleasing personality and a wonderful capacity for details. He combines perseverance with persistency; great tenacity of purpose to accomplish results. His motto is ‘Keep on keeping on’. He is self-contained, courteous in manner, somewhat reserved, yet straightforward and a strict disciplinarian, but well liked for his fair dealings’ (First Citizens of the Republic: An Historical Work Giving Portraits and Sketches of the Most Eminent Citizens of the United States, 1906. Page 207-208. He is included in this volume along with such luminaries as Thomas Edison, Mark Twain, and William Howard Taft – All of them middle aged to elderly white men of course.) .

The third mausoleum is inscribed “Dula Wightman”, but so far I have been unable to find any information about it.

Taken with an Olympus OM-D EM-10 and Panasonic Lumix G Vario 14-42 f3.5-4.6 II

Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Snow – Some black and white images


Enclosed plot. I liked the ornate metalwork.


Footsteps (not mine) among the gravestones.


Memorial Bench.


Stone walls.


The Pocantico River as it runs through Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.

First picture taken with a Sony A6000 and Canon 50mm f1.4 LTM. All others taken with an Olympus OM-D EM-10 and Panasonic Lumix G Vario 14-42 f3.5-4.6 II.

Old Grave in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery

The face of the red sandstone grave marker may be slowly flaking away, but the memory of Catriena Ecker van Tassel will live forever. In Washington Irving’s short story The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, hapless schoolmaster Ichabod Crane is smitten by the comely 17 year old Katrina van Tassel, but he must compete with town thug Abraham ‘Brom Bones’ van Brunt. Folklorists say that the character Katrina van Tassel is based on Eleanor van Tassel Brush, although the character’s name is based on Eleanor’s aunt Catriena Ecker van Tassel. Her grave is without a doubt the most visited grave in the Old Dutch Burying Ground. The area around Catriena Ecker van Tassel’s grave is peppered with other members of the van Tassel family. The latin inscription, Mors Vincit Omnia, topping her gravestone translates to “Death Conquers all”. (Stories in Stone New York. A field guide to New York City area Cemeteries and their residents by Douglas Keister)

Irving describes Katrina as follows:

Among the musical disciples who assembled, one evening in each week, to receive his instructions in psalmody, was Katrina Van Tassel, the daughter and only child of a substantial Dutch farmer. She was a blooming lass of fresh eighteen; plump as a partridge; ripe and melting and rosy-cheeked as one of her father’s peaches, and universally famed, not merely for her beauty, but her vast expectations. She was withal a little of a coquette, as might be perceived even in her dress, which was a mixture of ancient and modern fashions, as most suited to set off her charms. She wore the ornaments of pure yellow gold, which her great-great-grandmother had brought over from Saardam; the tempting stomacher of the olden time, and withal a provokingly short petticoat, to display the prettiest foot and ankle in the country round.

Note the winged head on the gravestone. According to Angels and Ghosts:

On the East coast of the United States, skilled artisans were hired by people in the 1600 and 1700s, often before their deaths, to create elaborate gravestone carvings. New England cemeteries, consequently, are reknowned for having an abundance of burial sites with winged cherubs and souls adorning the markers of the deceased.

Prior to winged souls and flying cherubs decorating graveyards, however, morbid ideas of death were carved into markers for about 60 years. These ‘death heads’ were just as significant as the ‘soul effigies’ and ‘winged cherubs’ that would eventually follow; for all of these types of stone carvings reveal a shift in American culture away from dogmatic religious beliefs to more of a free spirit mindset. This change in gravestone carvings began around 1630 and continued through the 18th century. People were moving away from condemning Puritan beliefs that focused more on frightening ideas of eternal suffering, namely Hell. The populous was preferring a non-condemning take on the afterlife, something more spiritual, let’s say.

Early Winged Gravestone Art

The first carvings that were made were not the pleasant winged cherub or human faces. Preceding the lighter, angelic facial expressions were carvings of skulls or even skulls with crossbones. These skull motifs are known as ‘death’s heads’ – non-religious symbols found on the markers that sometimes bore wings. Skulls were prominent on gravestones between 1630-1690. The messages of the skeletal iconography seem to suggest that whatever happens to the soul after death was not known, as far as its journey or fate; but death had come calling for its victim – that was certain. The wings, when used, however, also might have conveyed the hope of rescuing the dead from the earth plane, or even hell, taking them up into the heavens and a higher estate.

Winged Cherubs on Cemetery Stones

Cherubs eventually began to replace the skulls, beginning in the 1690s, as a way to indicate a childlike innocence, a higher wisdom about life, and, of course, the hope of a resurrection and an afterlife. Cherubs with wings, essentially angels, were much more soothing than skulls and bones to say the least. And the new, positive outlook on the afterlife began to show in headstone epitaphs, too. Positive sayings began replacing grim warnings used in the past.

These ‘winged effigies’ might look like angels, but they often were artist depictions of either cherubs or, possibly, the human soul. When we look at the faces between the wings, we might catch the artist imagining the person’s soul (think human face here instead of a chubby little angel face) being lifted upward to the heavens. Along with the carving of the soul, at times, the shape of the stone or the carving itself indicated an archway, or entrance path, into the afterworld.

Taken with an Olympus OM-D EM-10 and Panasonic Lumix G Vario 14-42 f3.5-4.6 II