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Chippiannock Cemetery: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 41°28′54″N 90°34′40″W / 41.48167°N 90.57778°W / 41.48167; -90.57778
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History: clean up, typo(s) fixed: Davenport’s → Davenport's (4)
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==History==
==History==
Rock Island was in need of a permanent cemetery in 1854. The town's population was 5,000 and the dead were being buried somewhat haphazardly in Bailey Davenport’s pasture, which is now [[Longview Park Conservatory and Gardens|Longview Park]].<ref name=rigov>{{cite web
Rock Island was in need of a permanent cemetery in 1854. The town's population was 5,000 and the dead were being buried somewhat haphazardly in Bailey Davenport's pasture, which is now [[Longview Park Conservatory and Gardens|Longview Park]].<ref name=rigov>{{cite web
|url=http://www.rigov.org/citydepartments/ced/chippiannockcemetery.html|title=Chippiannock Cemetery, 2901 12th Street |publisher=City of Rock Island|accessdate=2011-04-01|last=|first=}}</ref> The first board of directors of the Chippiannock Cemetery Association included Holmes Hakes, S.S. Guyer, William L. Lee, Bailey Davenport, and Henry A. Porter. In 1855 Chippiannock's founders purchased {{convert|62|acre|ha}} on Manitou Ridge and secured the services of noted [[landscape architect]] Almerin Hotchkiss to design a [[cemetery]] patterned in the [[rural cemetery]] style of [[Mount Auburn Cemetery|Mt. Auburn]] in [[Massachusetts]] (America's first garden-style cemetery). Almerin Hotchkiss also designed [[Green-Wood Cemetery]] in [[Brooklyn]] and [[Bellefontaine Cemetery]] in [[St. Louis, Missouri|St. Louis]].
|url=http://www.rigov.org/citydepartments/ced/chippiannockcemetery.html|title=Chippiannock Cemetery, 2901 12th Street |publisher=City of Rock Island|accessdate=2011-04-01|last=|first=}}</ref> The first board of directors of the Chippiannock Cemetery Association included Holmes Hakes, S.S. Guyer, William L. Lee, Bailey Davenport, and Henry A. Porter. In 1855 Chippiannock's founders purchased {{convert|62|acre|ha}} on Manitou Ridge and secured the services of noted [[landscape architect]] Almerin Hotchkiss to design a [[cemetery]] patterned in the [[rural cemetery]] style of [[Mount Auburn Cemetery|Mt. Auburn]] in [[Massachusetts]] (America's first garden-style cemetery). Almerin Hotchkiss also designed [[Green-Wood Cemetery]] in [[Brooklyn]] and [[Bellefontaine Cemetery]] in [[St. Louis, Missouri|St. Louis]].
[[File:Chippiannock Cable.JPG|thumb|left|upright=1.3|Cable monument by Paul de Vigne]]
[[File:Chippiannock Cable.JPG|thumb|left|upright=1.3|Cable monument by Paul de Vigne]]
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The property consists of a western slope and the crest of Manitou Ridge. The site features gently rolling wooded hills that climb to a broad plateau. It is located near the midpoint between the [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]] and [[Rock River (Mississippi River)|Rock Rivers]]. Hotchkiss designed a system of curvilinear driveways winding around the various burial sections.
The property consists of a western slope and the crest of Manitou Ridge. The site features gently rolling wooded hills that climb to a broad plateau. It is located near the midpoint between the [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]] and [[Rock River (Mississippi River)|Rock Rivers]]. Hotchkiss designed a system of curvilinear driveways winding around the various burial sections.


The cemetery includes impressive monuments by [[Alexander Stirling Calder]] and [[Paul de Vigne]]. Many of the monuments reflect attitudes about death and mourning from the [[Victorian Era]]. Some of the more memorable grave markers include life-size stone statues, a ship’s anchor, a six-ton granite ball, a baby’s cradle, the sleeping dog statue guarding the Dimick children, and the mourning woman at the Cable monument.<ref name=rigov/>
The cemetery includes impressive monuments by [[Alexander Stirling Calder]] and [[Paul de Vigne]]. Many of the monuments reflect attitudes about death and mourning from the [[Victorian Era]]. Some of the more memorable grave markers include life-size stone statues, a ship's anchor, a six-ton granite ball, a baby's cradle, the sleeping dog statue guarding the Dimick children, and the mourning woman at the Cable monument.<ref name=rigov/>


The Sexton’s House is a [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]] [[farmhouse]] that predates the cemetery. It continues to serve as the home of the cemetery superintendent. There are more than 25,000 people buried at Chippiannock Cemetery.<ref name=rigov/> The preservation of the cemetery is the responsibility of the Chippiannock Cemetery Heritage Foundation as well as other interested citizens.
The Sexton's House is a [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]] [[farmhouse]] that predates the cemetery. It continues to serve as the home of the cemetery superintendent. There are more than 25,000 people buried at Chippiannock Cemetery.<ref name=rigov/> The preservation of the cemetery is the responsibility of the Chippiannock Cemetery Heritage Foundation as well as other interested citizens.


Chippiannock was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 6, 1994.<ref name="nris"/> It was the first cemetery in Illinois to be listed on the National Register.<ref name=Gaul/>
Chippiannock was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 6, 1994.<ref name="nris"/> It was the first cemetery in Illinois to be listed on the National Register.<ref name=Gaul/>

Revision as of 14:55, 1 November 2018

Chippiannock Cemetery
Celtic Cross near entrance, designed by Alexander Stirling Calder
Chippiannock Cemetery is located in Illinois
Chippiannock Cemetery
Chippiannock Cemetery is located in the United States
Chippiannock Cemetery
Location2901 Twelfth St.
Rock Island, Illinois
Coordinates41°28′54″N 90°34′40″W / 41.48167°N 90.57778°W / 41.48167; -90.57778
Area77 acres (31 ha)
Built1850
ArchitectAlmerin Hotchkiss
Architectural styleClassical Revival
Late Gothic Revival
NRHP reference No.94000437[1]
Added to NRHPMay 06, 1994

Chippiannock Cemetery is a cemetery located on 12th Street and 31st Avenue in Rock Island, Illinois, United States. The word “Chippiannock” is a Native American term which means “place of the dead”.[2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

History

Rock Island was in need of a permanent cemetery in 1854. The town's population was 5,000 and the dead were being buried somewhat haphazardly in Bailey Davenport's pasture, which is now Longview Park.[3] The first board of directors of the Chippiannock Cemetery Association included Holmes Hakes, S.S. Guyer, William L. Lee, Bailey Davenport, and Henry A. Porter. In 1855 Chippiannock's founders purchased 62 acres (25 ha) on Manitou Ridge and secured the services of noted landscape architect Almerin Hotchkiss to design a cemetery patterned in the rural cemetery style of Mt. Auburn in Massachusetts (America's first garden-style cemetery). Almerin Hotchkiss also designed Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn and Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis.

Cable monument by Paul de Vigne

The property consists of a western slope and the crest of Manitou Ridge. The site features gently rolling wooded hills that climb to a broad plateau. It is located near the midpoint between the Mississippi and Rock Rivers. Hotchkiss designed a system of curvilinear driveways winding around the various burial sections.

The cemetery includes impressive monuments by Alexander Stirling Calder and Paul de Vigne. Many of the monuments reflect attitudes about death and mourning from the Victorian Era. Some of the more memorable grave markers include life-size stone statues, a ship's anchor, a six-ton granite ball, a baby's cradle, the sleeping dog statue guarding the Dimick children, and the mourning woman at the Cable monument.[3]

The Sexton's House is a Gothic Revival farmhouse that predates the cemetery. It continues to serve as the home of the cemetery superintendent. There are more than 25,000 people buried at Chippiannock Cemetery.[3] The preservation of the cemetery is the responsibility of the Chippiannock Cemetery Heritage Foundation as well as other interested citizens.

Chippiannock was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 6, 1994.[1] It was the first cemetery in Illinois to be listed on the National Register.[2]

It is an important location in Max Allan Collins's graphic novel Road to Perdition, which was the basis for the film of the same name, starring Tom Hanks and Paul Newman.

Notable Chippiannock burials

Denkmann Mausoleum

Further reading

Sexton's House
  • “150 Years of Epitaphs at Chippiannock Cemetery”. Rock Island, Ill.: Chippiannock Cemetery Heritage Foundation, 2006.
  • “Passages: A Collection of Personal Histories of Chippiannock Cemetery”. Bettendorf, Iowa: Razor Edge Press, 2006.
  • "Chippiannock Cemetery" (Images of America series). ISBN 0738577413. Arcadia Publishing, 2010.

References