AL SMITH (1873-1944), is interred in Calvary Cemetery in Blissville, Queens. He was Governor of New York State for four two-year terms (elected in 1918, 1922, 1924 and 1926) and the unsuccessful Democratic standard bearer in the 1928 Presidential race (he lost to Herbert Hoover, but was the first Roman Catholic major-party candidate; two Catholic presidents have been elected to date). The “Happy Warrior” as FDR nicknamed him, championed laws governing workers’ compensation, women’s pensions, and children and women’s labor. He broke with Roosevelt after the latter’s election in 1932, disagreeing with FDR’s New Deal policies. A protegé of Smith’s was an assistant, Robert Moses, who began building NYC’s parks, parkways and expressways systems in the 1920s. After the 1928 election, Smith became president of Empire State Inc., the governing body in charge of constructing the King Of All Buildings.
In the mid-19th Century Manhattan was getting so crowded (by 1845 the island was fully built up south of about 42nd Street) that it was running out of cemetery space. The two largest cemeteries had been developed by Trinity Cemetery, in the churchyard adjacent to its ancient Broadway and Wall Street location, and uptown in the furthest reaches of civilized Manhattan territory, the wild north of 155th and Broadway.
By the 1840s Brooklyn’s largest cemeteries, Green-Wood and Most Holy Trinity, and Woodlawn in the Bronx were accepting interments; and in Staten Island there was Moravian, developed in the 1760s, and myriads of smaller cemeteries.
Queens, too, had dozens of tiny burial grounds scattered around, many dating to the mid-1600s. In 1847 the Rural Cemetery Act was passed, prohibiting any new burial grounds from being established on the island of Manhattan. Presciently anticipating the legislation, trustees of the old St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Mulberry Street in what is today known as Little Italy began buying up property in western Queens. Calvary Cemetery, named for the hill where Christ was crucified, opened in 1848. The original acreage had been nearly filled by the late 1860s, so additional surrounding acreage was later purchased to the east.
Other NYC and NYS politicians interred at Calvary include Hugh J. Grant, who became mayor of NYC at age 31, the youngest in history, serving from 1889-1892; and Robert F. Wagner, a longtime US Senator from1927 to 1949, Robert F. Wagner II, a longtime mayor of NYC from 1953 to 1965, and RFW III, a deputy mayor and President of the NYC Board of Education, among other positions, during the Koch and Giuliani administrations.
More gloaming roaming at Calvary
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10/16/23
7 comments
Calvary has the most, uh, residents of any cemetery in the US, with about three million.
The Rural Cemetery Act restricted an organization from having a cemetery that was larger than 250 acres in any one county. Finding a loophole, some organizations purchased property that straddled the Brooklyn and Queens border, using the combined allowances to open cemeteries that were much larger than 250 acres. This created the “Cemetery Belt” that straddles Jackie Robinson (old Interborough) Parkway. Additionally, others, like the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, added new “sections” to an existing cemetery, so that the combined four sections of Calvary Cemetery cover 365 acres, with each “section” being below the maximum of 250 acres..
Calvary Cemetery was the backdrop of a famous funeral scene in the iconic 1972 movie The Godfather, when fictional mobster boss Vito Corleone was buried there. Old Kosciuszko Bridge is clearly visible in the background.
The dead outnumber the living in Queens County.
Back in “The Old Days” that wasn’t necessarily so on Election Day!
Alfred E. Smith is thought of as having been like the quintessential NYC Irish pol of that era (early 20th C.), but his father’s family were Italians named “Ferraro,” which translates to English as “Smith” (as in “blacksmith”).
And I’ve wondered if “Alfred E. Neuman” somehow derives from the Happy Warrior’s full name?
From Wiki: “Al Smith served as vice chairman of the state commission appointed to investigate factory conditions after 146 workers died in the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Meeting the families of the deceased Triangle factory workers left a strong impression on him. Together with Frances Perkins and Robert F. Wagner, Smith crusaded against dangerous and unhealthy workplace conditions and championed corrective legislation.”