Artwork for podcast Talk With History: Discover Your History Road Trip
History at a Cemetery - Lakeview Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio
Episode 1015th November 2021 • Talk With History: Discover Your History Road Trip • Scott and Jenn of Walk with History
00:00:00 00:30:53

Share Episode

Shownotes

🎙️

We visit Lakeview Cemetery in Cleveland Ohio. The burial sites of President James Garfield, John D. Rockefeller, Eliot Ness, and many more famous Americans.

This was the first video we recorded at a cemetery and it was much more interesting than we imagined!

🚕 Google Map to Lakeview Cemetery

🎥 Video from Lakeview Cemetery

-------------------------------------------------------

⬇️ Help us keep the show going and explore history with us! ⬇️

🧳 Get free travel resources in your inbox.

TheHistoryRoadTrip.com

-------------------------------------------------------

📧 contact: talkwithhistory@gmail.com

additional sound effects from https://www.zapsplat.com

Transcripts

Speaker:

[Music]

Speaker:

greetings and welcome to the talk with

Speaker:

History Podcast I'm your host Scott here

Speaker:

with my wife and historian Jen hello

Speaker:

on this podcast we talk about history's

Speaker:

continuing impact on us and our personal

Speaker:

journey through YouTube as we continue

Speaker:

to explore record and share our history

Speaker:

walks with you

Speaker:

now Jen before we start into the podcast

Speaker:

today I want to get to our five star

Speaker:

question and reviews of the week

Speaker:

so this week we don't have any questions

Speaker:

but we actually did get some five star

Speaker:

reviews

Speaker:

so

Speaker:

um I want to give some a shout out to a

Speaker:

couple of our reviewers and some of them

Speaker:

if

Speaker:

um I am messing up the names then I

Speaker:

apologize because the names that you

Speaker:

left on Apple podcast there are a bunch

Speaker:

of letters and numbers so uh first one

Speaker:

here is just someone said hey this is a

Speaker:

great variety of topics these podcasts

Speaker:

are a great way to learn on my daily

Speaker:

commute so much that I wasn't aware of

Speaker:

and the hosts are wonderfully

Speaker:

entertaining Ah that's very nice so

Speaker:

thank you to

Speaker:

Coco Livy I'm just gonna

Speaker:

so thank you to Coco Livy there uh the

Speaker:

next five star review said you know the

Speaker:

subject is I love the variety there not

Speaker:

pigeonhole to any one type of historical

Speaker:

era or subject I've learned a lot great

Speaker:

podcasts and episodes

Speaker:

and that is from sjb TMS cool thank you

Speaker:

to sjb TMS and one more from someone

Speaker:

that you may know this is a five-star

Speaker:

review the subject is history made

Speaker:

interesting I'm not typically a history

Speaker:

fan but I love talk with history that is

Speaker:

from alley girl510

Speaker:

I know her yes you do know her so again

Speaker:

thank you to thank you to those three

Speaker:

for leaving us some five star reviews we

Speaker:

truly appreciate it and it does help the

Speaker:

show uh for anybody else listening if

Speaker:

you guys want to leave us a five-star

Speaker:

review on Apple podcast or share the

Speaker:

podcast

Speaker:

we would greatly appreciate that also

Speaker:

don't forget to check out our other

Speaker:

podcast the history Buzz where we

Speaker:

interview folks while chatting about

Speaker:

history over a couple of drinks and we

Speaker:

let that conversation wander where it

Speaker:

may

Speaker:

[Music]

Speaker:

so you may not have thought of

Speaker:

graveyards as a place of History

Speaker:

but with just a little bit of research

Speaker:

you'd be surprised at what historical

Speaker:

figures are resting in your local area

Speaker:

Cemetery

Speaker:

this kind of curiosity and other YouTube

Speaker:

channels like our friends over at Whit

Speaker:

doc Cemetery tours and the history

Speaker:

Hunters

Speaker:

brought us to Lakeview Cemetery in

Speaker:

Cleveland Ohio

Speaker:

so Jen why don't you tell us about

Speaker:

Lakeview Cemetery and who we visited

Speaker:

there sure

Speaker:

so

Speaker:

what opened us up to this Cemetery

Speaker:

because the cemeteries since doing this

Speaker:

video we we have ventured more into

Speaker:

Cemetery

Speaker:

tours because we found them so

Speaker:

interesting and had so much history in

Speaker:

them but what brought us to this

Speaker:

Cemetery was President Garfield 20th

Speaker:

president of the United States I worked

Speaker:

at the James Garfield house in Mentor

Speaker:

Ohio the James Garfield house was James

Speaker:

Garfield's

Speaker:

summer home

Speaker:

um in Ohio it was like a farmhouse he

Speaker:

lived there while he was President he

Speaker:

had bought it before he was president

Speaker:

and after he was assassinated his family

Speaker:

continued to live there so I had worked

Speaker:

there I did an internship at the

Speaker:

National Park Service and

Speaker:

when doing that internship everyone

Speaker:

would ask me have you been to his grave

Speaker:

have you been to his Mausoleum you

Speaker:

mentioned that to me a couple times like

Speaker:

that he wanted to visit it and so it's

Speaker:

not close by Mentor is about halfway

Speaker:

between where we lived in Erie and

Speaker:

Cleveland and his grave is in Cleveland

Speaker:

this the cemetery is in Cleveland so we

Speaker:

would have to make like the trip to go

Speaker:

see it so I had talked you into it let's

Speaker:

go to the cemetery let's go see uh

Speaker:

President Garfield but in doing the

Speaker:

research for who else is in Lakeview

Speaker:

Cemetery we were like blown away yeah

Speaker:

and so there was there were some big I

Speaker:

mean there are some names that I even

Speaker:

knew a couple that I didn't I kind of

Speaker:

had to be reminded sure but but to put

Speaker:

this all in context when Jen says

Speaker:

hey we had we did more Cemetery you know

Speaker:

Winston started going to cemeteries more

Speaker:

and did more Cemetery tours I had never

Speaker:

once yeah

Speaker:

thought of going to a cemetery to like

Speaker:

learn history yeah right so there was

Speaker:

Arlington we had done Arlington just

Speaker:

before this yes and this was after it

Speaker:

and it was and really the the driver was

Speaker:

because you were working at the James

Speaker:

Garfield Presidential Library yeah James

Speaker:

Garfield house yes and so when we

Speaker:

finally went down there so tell why

Speaker:

don't you tell our listeners about some

Speaker:

of the other kind of Larger than Life

Speaker:

historical figures that are buried at

Speaker:

this Cemetery in Cleveland it's amazing

Speaker:

because there if you get onto their

Speaker:

website they have kind of like a mission

Speaker:

statement and it's like Lakeview

Speaker:

Cemetery is committed to providing

Speaker:

internment services to all Races and

Speaker:

religions

Speaker:

while preserving its grounds and status

Speaker:

as a nationally recognized landmark of

Speaker:

historical significance now I just read

Speaker:

that and that's kind of the conclusion

Speaker:

we come to just by being there just by

Speaker:

being there I was like these are people

Speaker:

of all Races these are people of all

Speaker:

religions these are people of all these

Speaker:

classes I say this because the richest

Speaker:

man in America

Speaker:

for for years is buried in Lakeview

Speaker:

Cemetery John D Rockefeller is buried in

Speaker:

Lakeview Cemetery and then you also get

Speaker:

like the first African-American mayor of

Speaker:

a major city is buried in Lakeview

Speaker:

Cemetery and then we're getting like a

Speaker:

Lawman Elliot Ness is buried in Lakeview

Speaker:

Cemetery so these huge historic figures

Speaker:

are coming out at us in this one place

Speaker:

of burial yeah and again for if you

Speaker:

don't recognize those names right off

Speaker:

the bat this is John D Rockefeller of

Speaker:

railroads and oil and and

Speaker:

Rockefeller Center in New York like he

Speaker:

built that yeah his son built it is his

Speaker:

money yeah his money his you know all

Speaker:

his work right the major first black

Speaker:

mayor of a major city yeah you know

Speaker:

um Elliot Ness so if you've ever seen

Speaker:

The Untouchables you know for me I knew

Speaker:

Elliot from a Tupac song yeah you know

Speaker:

you had no idea who he was I I had I had

Speaker:

no idea but I had actually seen the

Speaker:

movie

Speaker:

um it's a Sean Connery and Kevin Costner

Speaker:

movie so there's some there's some

Speaker:

there's some really not just the

Speaker:

president it's all these other people

Speaker:

yeah and so it opened in 1869

Speaker:

um and it's still in use today has

Speaker:

interesting monuments like there was

Speaker:

like a a crying lady Monument by the

Speaker:

lake and that was actually a lot more

Speaker:

famous than I realized yes and they have

Speaker:

like they have very interesting

Speaker:

tombstones like we'll talk about Alan

Speaker:

freed and his Tombstone looks like a

Speaker:

jukebox yeah the the Allen Friedman was

Speaker:

really interesting the crying lady so

Speaker:

it's basically looks like an she kind of

Speaker:

looks like an angel I don't know if

Speaker:

she's got the wings yeah but for some

Speaker:

reason it's that kind of classic kind of

Speaker:

rusty green yes and for some reason the

Speaker:

patina makes it looks like she's got

Speaker:

tears so it's very artistic and very

Speaker:

it's it's very emotional yes it was and

Speaker:

then when I started doing the video and

Speaker:

making this video video for YouTube I

Speaker:

was like this is actually really well

Speaker:

known it is and it's actually so

Speaker:

different cemeteries have different

Speaker:

missions I would say and Lakeview

Speaker:

cemetery's mission is really to be in

Speaker:

the community they want Community

Speaker:

involvement they have a whole I mean we

Speaker:

see you'll see it in our video they have

Speaker:

a whole daffodil Hill and they want

Speaker:

people to visit it they want people to

Speaker:

drive in their Cemetery take pictures

Speaker:

they want people to walk they want

Speaker:

people to picnic they want people to

Speaker:

kids to play like they encourage that

Speaker:

behavior where you'll get other

Speaker:

cemeteries who very much discourage that

Speaker:

behavior Arlington is one of them so you

Speaker:

have to be very aware of what the

Speaker:

cemetery's purpose and what their

Speaker:

mission is trying to accomplish this was

Speaker:

much more of and we'll go into some of

Speaker:

the characters but just up front this

Speaker:

was much more of a tourist destination

Speaker:

and even the people there when we were

Speaker:

walking around visiting like they just

Speaker:

started chatting with us you know and

Speaker:

they and they saw that we were making

Speaker:

videos and nobody was really bothered by

Speaker:

it I think it's one of the first times

Speaker:

we handed out our business card that's

Speaker:

right yeah that's right

Speaker:

um so so Jen who are the some of the

Speaker:

first kind of historical figures where

Speaker:

we're going to be talking a little bit

Speaker:

about who do we see there

Speaker:

well so one of the ones I really wanted

Speaker:

to talk about was Ray Chapman and Ray

Speaker:

Chapman was a baseball player he played

Speaker:

for the Cleveland Indians and he was the

Speaker:

only major league baseball player who

Speaker:

has died from an injury of a ball during

Speaker:

a game

Speaker:

and he was hit in the head with a

Speaker:

baseball this is this is 30 years before

Speaker:

helmets before so it's even after 30

Speaker:

years after he's hit and killed they

Speaker:

still don't introduce helmets and he is

Speaker:

hit by a Yankee player a pitcher named

Speaker:

Carl Mays and Carl Mays had the

Speaker:

reputation for being kind of a wild

Speaker:

pitcher anyway but after he kills Ray

Speaker:

Chapman

Speaker:

um

Speaker:

his reputation pretty much goes downhill

Speaker:

from there but um and that grave like I

Speaker:

mean I had all sorts of stuff around it

Speaker:

baseballs and gloves yeah and people

Speaker:

bought pennants like Cleveland Indian

Speaker:

pennants that's right and people were

Speaker:

that's those are the people who we gave

Speaker:

our card to yeah people were visiting

Speaker:

that grave so people come there for that

Speaker:

grave and

Speaker:

you know he was only 29 years old he was

Speaker:

very young and what I found interesting

Speaker:

about him

Speaker:

is

Speaker:

he his wife is pregnant when he dies and

Speaker:

she has a daughter and they she gets

Speaker:

remarried to a man in California and she

Speaker:

ends up never really recovering from her

Speaker:

husband's death and she ends up passing

Speaker:

away where her husband in California

Speaker:

just has her sent back to Cleveland and

Speaker:

buried in Calgary Cemetery and why visit

Speaker:

Calgary Cemetery in the Cleveland torso

Speaker:

killer video oh and then the daughter

Speaker:

actually she dies not long after at

Speaker:

eight years old from measles oh my gosh

Speaker:

and she's actually buried in Calvary

Speaker:

Cemetery too so I I sometimes find it

Speaker:

sad when families are separated I feel

Speaker:

like they should be buried with Ray

Speaker:

Chapman you know so that's kind of like

Speaker:

something that I you know just

Speaker:

I always like to look at find a grave

Speaker:

and the connections people still have

Speaker:

sure

Speaker:

um but no Ray Chapman is a very popular

Speaker:

grade because he was killed by a

Speaker:

baseball in a major league game I think

Speaker:

he was pretty close to the radio DJ

Speaker:

no

Speaker:

the rate of DJ is close to eliotness

Speaker:

that's right that's right yeah

Speaker:

so

Speaker:

Elliot nass we can talk about Elliot

Speaker:

Ness a little bit so I was so excited

Speaker:

we're so excited because I loved the

Speaker:

Untouchables so if anyone has seen that

Speaker:

movie with Kevin Costner and Sean

Speaker:

Connery to me it's probably one of Sean

Speaker:

Connery's best roles he wins the Academy

Speaker:

Award for it for best supporting yes his

Speaker:

only Academy Award if he wins it for The

Speaker:

Untouchables yeah and he has the great

Speaker:

line we put it in the video like how far

Speaker:

are you willing to go yeah like you want

Speaker:

to take down Al Capone what are you

Speaker:

prepared to do yeah because you've got

Speaker:

to go all the way yeah that's a classic

Speaker:

it's a classic kind of monster era movie

Speaker:

but for the cops per se from the cops

Speaker:

yes right now the sad thing about The

Speaker:

Untouchables is most of it is highly

Speaker:

historically inaccurate the movie the

Speaker:

movie no they're actually I mean there

Speaker:

was a group right Elliot and S like they

Speaker:

were actually him and like his his other

Speaker:

kind of straight stick cops he had a

Speaker:

small team and they were the they were

Speaker:

anti-prohibitionists so what they did

Speaker:

what he did basically is he did

Speaker:

he was he was brought in to take down Al

Speaker:

Capone and how they did then what they

Speaker:

did is they basically cut out the

Speaker:

middleman with his alcohol Supply and

Speaker:

that's what they did and they kind of

Speaker:

show that in the movie A little bit yeah

Speaker:

and as they're doing that the problem is

Speaker:

when they try to bring them up on

Speaker:

charges of um you know prohibition is

Speaker:

the the judge is paid off right and

Speaker:

that's what happens in real life right

Speaker:

because because Capone had paid

Speaker:

everybody off cops judges so what

Speaker:

happens is they actually are actually

Speaker:

they actually are able to bring them up

Speaker:

on tax evasion charges and uh Elliot

Speaker:

Eliot ness's brother works for the

Speaker:

treasury and Elliot Ness is actually

Speaker:

working for the treasury at this time as

Speaker:

well and

Speaker:

um it's actually the the three charges

Speaker:

stick and he gets sent to prison for 11

Speaker:

years and there is one moment when Ness

Speaker:

and Capone actually meet I think it's

Speaker:

when Ness takes Capone from the jail and

Speaker:

puts them on a plane to go to another

Speaker:

bigger prison yeah it's the one time

Speaker:

they're actually like in the same

Speaker:

space but the whole point of The

Speaker:

Untouchables and This this term was

Speaker:

coined by the Chicago newspaper for the

Speaker:

six men that Ness gets around him is

Speaker:

they can't be bought right Capone can't

Speaker:

pay them off yeah and so they're

Speaker:

Untouchable by and they try to show the

Speaker:

corruption they try to kind of explain

Speaker:

why they're called The Untouchables yeah

Speaker:

and so that kind of really makes Elliot

Speaker:

ness's career

Speaker:

he moves on to Cleveland so this is this

Speaker:

is what opens us up to like why is he in

Speaker:

Cleveland why is Elena that made no

Speaker:

sense he's from Chicago right this whole

Speaker:

Al Capone case is Chicago yeah he comes

Speaker:

to Cleveland after he's hired a safety

Speaker:

director and

Speaker:

the serial killer starts operating yeah

Speaker:

which is another video it's another

Speaker:

video and we'll talk about it on another

Speaker:

podcast and long story short he sees

Speaker:

unsuccessful in Catching him yeah it

Speaker:

becomes it tarnishes his career and he

Speaker:

ends up going he ends up working for

Speaker:

like a counterfeit company in

Speaker:

Pennsylvania

Speaker:

and uh he he dies of a heart attack very

Speaker:

young 54 years old and he dies

Speaker:

relatively obscure and then a book comes

Speaker:

out about two years later called The

Speaker:

Untouchables yeah and his whole life is

Speaker:

made TV show comes out a movie comes out

Speaker:

Elliot Ness gains notoriety he's in a

Speaker:

song yeah right and now you think it now

Speaker:

he would never recognize the the

Speaker:

famousness that he has because he wasn't

Speaker:

that famous back then he was very he was

Speaker:

very tarnished and discouraged after

Speaker:

what happens in Cleveland yeah

Speaker:

so um and he was a alcoholic he was he

Speaker:

was drinking a lot because again he felt

Speaker:

very he couldn't solve that last case

Speaker:

and he burns down that shanty town and

Speaker:

that really just yeah and we'll and

Speaker:

we'll talk about that yeah but that's in

Speaker:

another video

Speaker:

and we'll talk about that on another

Speaker:

podcast so again so we mentioned earlier

Speaker:

that uh Alan freed his grave is like

Speaker:

across the street so right there so

Speaker:

Elliot Ness

Speaker:

if you see his Tombstone just so we can

Speaker:

color a cover Elliot so fast he's

Speaker:

actually not buried he's that's right

Speaker:

his ashes are there and they're not

Speaker:

actually even by the tombstone they're

Speaker:

in the lake yeah and the police

Speaker:

department spread his ashes in the lake

Speaker:

yeah in this Cemetery in the cemetery so

Speaker:

the tombstone is just kind of like a to

Speaker:

mark that his marker for him yeah yeah

Speaker:

his ashes are close by yeah but not

Speaker:

actually there and then close to that

Speaker:

lake is also Allen freed and Alan freed

Speaker:

is the whole reason why the Rock and

Speaker:

Roll Hall of Fame is in Cleveland yep so

Speaker:

he was a disc jockey to play

Speaker:

African-American music and give credit

Speaker:

to African-American artists I don't

Speaker:

think I realized that and so he coins

Speaker:

the term rock and roll he comes up with

Speaker:

that term and that is the whole reason

Speaker:

it's in Cleveland because Cleveland's

Speaker:

invented he was pretty big back in the

Speaker:

time because even when I was making a

Speaker:

video yeah I could Google something on

Speaker:

YouTube If you Google him on YouTube you

Speaker:

can find his old sure TV shows so after

Speaker:

he does that he starts having big

Speaker:

concerts and I think one of the things

Speaker:

on his tombstones is one of the concerts

Speaker:

he had one of the first the first Rock

Speaker:

and Roll concert was in Cleveland then

Speaker:

he gets hired by bigger TV shows he kind

Speaker:

of does a lot of what de Clark does with

Speaker:

the American Bandstand but Alan Freed's

Speaker:

career is ruined with um he is part of

Speaker:

the Scandal where he's paid by certain

Speaker:

record labels to play their artists

Speaker:

um records right and he does it and so

Speaker:

it's a huge Scandal he's discredited in

Speaker:

the community he's totally ruined and he

Speaker:

ends up dying young of again alcoholism

Speaker:

so and his name is very tarnished where

Speaker:

people don't associate Alan Reed with

Speaker:

the same type of

Speaker:

um stardom as dick is De Clark right

Speaker:

even though it's really Alan freed who's

Speaker:

who sets the stage for Dick Clark so but

Speaker:

Alan freed unfortunately that Scandal

Speaker:

just yeah and just you know if if you're

Speaker:

if you're less interested in this

Speaker:

historical aspect and you let's say you

Speaker:

live in the Cleveland area and you're

Speaker:

going there the tombstone is just cool

Speaker:

it looks amazing it looks like a big it

Speaker:

looks like a big jukebox it's really

Speaker:

really neat it and it and it stands out

Speaker:

just because it's

Speaker:

it it's not your typical headstone it

Speaker:

literally looks like it's like about the

Speaker:

size of what a jukebox should be it's

Speaker:

it's gigantic and you can see it from

Speaker:

Elliot ness's uh and for us we weren't

Speaker:

really expecting to go to his grave but

Speaker:

because you could see it from Elliot

Speaker:

ness's grave and it was what is that

Speaker:

neat we walked over and we was like oh

Speaker:

and you can basically read his story on

Speaker:

the tombstone yeah now I had read also

Speaker:

that he wasn't originally buried there

Speaker:

and then his ashes went to the Rock and

Speaker:

Roll Hall of Fame for a long time and

Speaker:

then the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Speaker:

asked for them to remove his ashes and

Speaker:

his his family put him in Lakeview San

Speaker:

materials oh interesting yeah so I don't

Speaker:

know what that's all about but that's

Speaker:

kind of what happened there

Speaker:

[Music]

Speaker:

now there were some other ones if and

Speaker:

I'm trying to remember so so of course

Speaker:

we do we do Carl Stokes he's that first

Speaker:

um mayor of a major city he's the first

Speaker:

black mayor of Cleveland

Speaker:

and we go to his grave we go to Garrett

Speaker:

Morgan's grave he was an inventor the

Speaker:

three-way traffic light in gas masks yes

Speaker:

that's right I and I was pretty neat

Speaker:

he's African-American he's

Speaker:

African-American as well yes so so think

Speaker:

about that let's pause really quick on

Speaker:

that right traffic lights yeah like this

Speaker:

guy invented traffic lights red yellow

Speaker:

green like thing that everybody knows

Speaker:

nowadays everybody Associates those

Speaker:

colors with you know go stop and slow

Speaker:

down all right speed up or the road rage

Speaker:

or what have you whatever City that

Speaker:

you're living in this guy Garrett Morgan

Speaker:

Garrett Morgan invented that as well as

Speaker:

gas masks I mean talk about two

Speaker:

completely opposite things safety very

Speaker:

safe yeah that's true that's right very

Speaker:

safety oriented but I mean gas masks so

Speaker:

what about do you remember when he no

Speaker:

but they're very like premature gas

Speaker:

masks like the basic the the precursive

Speaker:

yeah precursors yeah what would actually

Speaker:

be used and all that stuff yeah but uh

Speaker:

that was just like it was such a random

Speaker:

super interesting and he was kind of a

Speaker:

little bit further away yes from some of

Speaker:

them so this is a big Cemetery it's 235

Speaker:

Acres yeah it's it was gigantic it's

Speaker:

very big Cemetery so you have to it's

Speaker:

again

Speaker:

you have to know where you're going you

Speaker:

have to get a map you have to kind of

Speaker:

plot out the the graves like even for

Speaker:

Garrett Morgan I remember we have his

Speaker:

section and lot number but we had to

Speaker:

walk around there for a little bit we

Speaker:

had to look around for a little while um

Speaker:

we go to Salisbury so I was gonna ask

Speaker:

was that where Salisbury so this is like

Speaker:

the Salisbury steak guy so if you walk

Speaker:

over if you go and watch our video and

Speaker:

the video link will be in the podcast

Speaker:

you know notes description here

Speaker:

um you know I kind of show like a quick

Speaker:

picture of like hey what's a salisbury

Speaker:

steak again yeah you know if you're not

Speaker:

if you're not a big meat eater or

Speaker:

whatever right but this is the guy that

Speaker:

came up with the Salisbury Salisbury or

Speaker:

this is you know it was named after him

Speaker:

it was named after him so he comes he's

Speaker:

a doctor who starts to see the benefits

Speaker:

of a meat-centered diet so basically

Speaker:

sees the benefits of high protein right

Speaker:

and so the Salisbury steak is named

Speaker:

after him was he wasn't he Scottish or

Speaker:

something like that I think so but it's

Speaker:

basically just a steak with gravy

Speaker:

basically back in the day when steaks

Speaker:

were really dry because you can imagine

Speaker:

just cooking them over like kind of spit

Speaker:

or something to wait to make them edible

Speaker:

was probably to put some kind of gravy

Speaker:

on them to eat them so thank you put

Speaker:

some of the extra juices on yeah but no

Speaker:

one of the bigger Graves we saw was of

Speaker:

course

Speaker:

John D Rockville yeah yeah his grave was

Speaker:

huge it's huge he has a huge Obelisk

Speaker:

yeah and he's buried I think it's so

Speaker:

funny he's buried beside his mother yeah

Speaker:

and his wife yeah shocker right between

Speaker:

us yeah oh my gosh well and you know

Speaker:

what I didn't know that you taught me

Speaker:

while we were there is people there was

Speaker:

all this money laying around money and

Speaker:

I'm like not just not just pennies yeah

Speaker:

it's like dollar bills

Speaker:

yeah people leave money on his grave and

Speaker:

they do that because

Speaker:

there's a Superstition that if you leave

Speaker:

money on rockefeller's grave your your

Speaker:

personal money will multiply the way

Speaker:

Rockefellers money multiplied but

Speaker:

Rockefeller I mean he made his money in

Speaker:

a way that I I'd say this on the video

Speaker:

you can't make your money today he

Speaker:

monopolized Standard Oil yeah he cut out

Speaker:

all middlemen he overpriced so middlemen

Speaker:

couldn't afford transportation and then

Speaker:

once he owned all the oil he could jack

Speaker:

up the prices yeah and so and again I

Speaker:

didn't really understand this until I

Speaker:

started making making the video when

Speaker:

when Jen says monopolize the oil

Speaker:

industry it was a true and legitimate

Speaker:

Monopoly if so I do I show a picture of

Speaker:

because the U.S government eventually

Speaker:

they broke up Standard Oil they won't

Speaker:

let you do that anymore yeah because

Speaker:

it's not fair to and so there there's a

Speaker:

tree so there's a picture right there's

Speaker:

a picture kind of showing like when

Speaker:

Standard Oil was broken up into three or

Speaker:

four things and then three or four

Speaker:

things from each of those was in all the

Speaker:

big name companies Exxon Mobile all

Speaker:

those they all were born from standard

Speaker:

standard oil if you look at that video

Speaker:

pause it on that section and just look

Speaker:

at what standard oil was everything that

Speaker:

came from it and you'll see all the big

Speaker:

name oil oil companies today you're like

Speaker:

oh my gosh he he basically owned like

Speaker:

the entire world Supply yes you know and

Speaker:

supplied oil to the entire world at the

Speaker:

time yes he did and it doesn't support

Speaker:

free market it doesn't know so not at

Speaker:

all that's a smidge of a monopoly yeah

Speaker:

but he so he tries to make good right so

Speaker:

Rockefeller goes oh buy this uh these 22

Speaker:

acres in Manhattan and I'll build all

Speaker:

these buildings and I'll make it so I'm

Speaker:

doing something good for society and you

Speaker:

know we'll build uh Rockefeller Center

Speaker:

and we'll build 30 Rock and we'll build

Speaker:

a bunch of different things in that show

Speaker:

30 Rock 30 Rockefeller Center yeah it's

Speaker:

him yeah it's him

Speaker:

so it's very interesting he lives to be

Speaker:

a very old too he lives to be 98 years

Speaker:

old so I mean talk about just a guy who

Speaker:

just won't quit in every single way

Speaker:

he was the first billionaire in the U.S

Speaker:

and then um of course we go to

Speaker:

[Music]

Speaker:

Garfield

Speaker:

yeah that was cool James Garfield 20th

Speaker:

president of the United States

Speaker:

assassinated he was shot in the train

Speaker:

station in Washington DC on September 18

Speaker:

1881 and he

Speaker:

um

Speaker:

no actually I'm sorry he shot July 2nd

Speaker:

1881 he dies September 18 1881 yeah and

Speaker:

we now remind me that was his was the

Speaker:

mausoleum we didn't get to go inside yes

Speaker:

because of covet you couldn't go inside

Speaker:

it's a large I mean it's it's a huge

Speaker:

Monument I would love to go back and get

Speaker:

a chance to go inside I mean at the time

Speaker:

it was like 100 135 000 it took nine

Speaker:

years to build so he dies in 1881

Speaker:

like most presidents he lays in state at

Speaker:

the rotundra and the capital then he

Speaker:

goes on again like a a funeral train

Speaker:

tour same thing they did with Lincoln

Speaker:

yeah and he brought back to Cleveland

Speaker:

and then he's put he's he's at Lakeview

Speaker:

in a vault and he's kept there for nine

Speaker:

years until they build this Mausoleum

Speaker:

and it's it's huge we saw it's beautiful

Speaker:

yeah stained glass windows gorgeous from

Speaker:

the outside we weren't allowed to go

Speaker:

inside and there's a big 12-foot marble

Speaker:

statue of him inside and he's buried

Speaker:

there beside his wife or they're not

Speaker:

even Barry they're in tombs yeah so

Speaker:

their coffins are visible with their um

Speaker:

with the American flag and in the video

Speaker:

I show some some pictures right that are

Speaker:

that are publicly available online yeah

Speaker:

so if you walk again if you watch the

Speaker:

video you can kind of see what it looks

Speaker:

like inside if you ever want to go visit

Speaker:

for yourself I'd go back just to visit

Speaker:

yeah it's really neat um

Speaker:

but here's a he's a an interesting

Speaker:

president because he's basically killed

Speaker:

more or less by his doctors yeah that's

Speaker:

right because he they keep this is

Speaker:

before washing your hands this is if

Speaker:

we're using gloves this is for

Speaker:

sterilizing instruments so because he's

Speaker:

shot in the back and it goes into his

Speaker:

abdomen doctors keep trying to check for

Speaker:

the bullet because he never got it out

Speaker:

they never got it out and they keep

Speaker:

trying to get it out and they can't

Speaker:

quite find it and they keep sticking

Speaker:

dirty instruments and dirty fingers he

Speaker:

dies of blood poisoning gangrene and so

Speaker:

his the defense of his assassin is that

Speaker:

I shot him but I didn't kill him that's

Speaker:

right that's right so that's what he

Speaker:

says and he was actually and I didn't

Speaker:

realize that he was actually a pretty

Speaker:

popular president elected like he was he

Speaker:

was very popular so he was a general in

Speaker:

the Civil War he's a great orator what a

Speaker:

amazing speaker and he was well educated

Speaker:

he was taught at um college and that's a

Speaker:

that's what some of the murals on the

Speaker:

side of the mausoleum have him to being

Speaker:

a teacher being a professor so and he

Speaker:

was very well liked and that's at the

Speaker:

time the two sides couldn't decide on a

Speaker:

president and they both kind of dug in

Speaker:

their heels and then someone said well

Speaker:

what about Garfield I was like yeah yeah

Speaker:

so that's basically how he won the

Speaker:

presidency they called in the Dark Horse

Speaker:

because no one expected him to win and

Speaker:

then he won yeah he was like the one

Speaker:

person that everybody could agree with

Speaker:

mom like yeah actually I think he'd be

Speaker:

pretty good like we really don't like

Speaker:

these other two but he'd be pretty good

Speaker:

pretty good yeah so that's how he won

Speaker:

yeah

Speaker:

um so that was that was neat and I

Speaker:

wanted to see that so that was very

Speaker:

important and

Speaker:

this was the first time that we had

Speaker:

brought the kids with us and

Speaker:

um my middle son really took an interest

Speaker:

because we had spoken about a school

Speaker:

tragedy yeah that's right that was a

Speaker:

monument that's right 169 children were

Speaker:

killed in a fire in 1908 at a school in

Speaker:

Cleveland and there was a

Speaker:

a monument to them so I was talking

Speaker:

about that and my middle son was very

Speaker:

interested in that well and I didn't

Speaker:

realize that that particular event again

Speaker:

that happened in Ohio yes but it was the

Speaker:

reason that they changed a lot of safety

Speaker:

codes

Speaker:

and part of what happened was that all

Speaker:

the kids were trying to rush out of this

Speaker:

cafeteria and the the doors swung

Speaker:

inwards yes and not outwards and

Speaker:

obviously they were panicking they

Speaker:

didn't realize this and so now

Speaker:

if you ever go into a a space like that

Speaker:

all doors in large auditoriums like that

Speaker:

they all swing out and that was that was

Speaker:

because of this tragedy yeah and it's

Speaker:

yeah it was very you know of course a

Speaker:

lot of safety protocols born of tragedy

Speaker:

you know and that was one of them and it

Speaker:

was there's a lot of children you know

Speaker:

so it was a pretty sad thing and of

Speaker:

course my son took interest in that and

Speaker:

so we had a we had to talk about that of

Speaker:

course but um

Speaker:

I think one of the other Graves we see

Speaker:

here is Devereaux

Speaker:

oh yes so that's just something that

Speaker:

always stuck out in my mind as those

Speaker:

three characters walking home from the

Speaker:

American Revolution there's a famous

Speaker:

painting and I just had always seen it

Speaker:

recreated yeah right so so again most

Speaker:

people listening to this because I had

Speaker:

no idea sure right and I'm not sure you

Speaker:

even did I mean you may have because

Speaker:

you're super smart but most folks won't

Speaker:

know Devereaux they won't yeah even

Speaker:

trying to describe the painting of the

Speaker:

three men walking kind of across a

Speaker:

battlefield one kind of drumming one

Speaker:

carrying the American flag carrying the

Speaker:

Americans and one kind of injured

Speaker:

playing the flute right and it's been

Speaker:

recreated it's been recreated like

Speaker:

Mickey Donald and Goofy recreated it I

Speaker:

think they recreated a lot like in just

Speaker:

cartoons and stuff and again we show the

Speaker:

pictures on the video but it was just so

Speaker:

neat so Deborah was one of the models

Speaker:

one of the models for the painting yeah

Speaker:

yeah the original paintings just kind of

Speaker:

again such a random aside for such a a

Speaker:

pretty famous painting yeah right again

Speaker:

it's been recreated and reacted and you

Speaker:

know across cartoons and all sorts of

Speaker:

stuff if you look it up online or if you

Speaker:

watch our video

Speaker:

you'll recognize you'd be like oh yeah

Speaker:

I've seen that before well yeah again

Speaker:

this was this was such a fun

Speaker:

one to do because it was unexpectedly

Speaker:

just a nice afternoon

Speaker:

um

Speaker:

this was the first time that I thought

Speaker:

of local cemeteries as places to visit

Speaker:

and the first time outside of Arlington

Speaker:

National Cemetery that I viewed a city

Speaker:

cemetery as more of an afternoon

Speaker:

destination on a nice day

Speaker:

because you never know who might be

Speaker:

resting right in your hometown

Speaker:

so again thank you to those lists for

Speaker:

thank you for listening to the talk with

Speaker:

History Podcast and please reach out to

Speaker:

us at our website talk with history.com

Speaker:

that's talk with history.com but more

Speaker:

importantly if you know someone else

Speaker:

that might enjoy this podcast please

Speaker:

share this with them especially if you

Speaker:

think today's topic would be interesting

Speaker:

shoot them a text tell them look it up

Speaker:

talk with history podcasts are better

Speaker:

yet just send them a direct link to

Speaker:

today's episode because we rely on you

Speaker:

our community to grow and reappreciate

Speaker:

you all we will talk to you next time

Speaker:

thank you

Speaker:

[Music]

Speaker:

foreign

Speaker:

[Music]

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube