Sunday, 31 October 2010
Cemetery Tours: Monuments to Die For: Visiting the Final Resting Places of the Rich and Famous
CBS News reports and asks are you tired of the same old tourist hot spots?
Rita Braver walks us through one New York tourist attraction that's truly at the end of the line: The Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y., conjures up frightening images, like the fearsome Headless Horsemen, pursuing poor Ichabod Crane.
We must disclose that rumors persist that this place is STILL HAUNTED. And among the spirits here is that of Washington Irving, the man who made the place famous by writing the "Legend of Sleepy Hollow," as guide Linda Ford explains:
"He was a brilliant satirist," Ford said. "I think if he were alive today, he'd be writing for 'SNL.'"
We joined some brave souls who dared to venture into the spooky world of CEMETERY TOURISM! "I just think they're wonderful places," said Doug Keister.
"They're full of history, and they're full of architecture." "And full of dead people!" said Braver.
"They're full of dead people, but they don't mind!" he laughed. If there's a chief Tombstone Tourist, it has to be photographer Doug Keister, who's visited hundreds of cemeteries, and published four books. He says it's a great way to see how the rich and famous end up . . . folks like steel manufacturer Andrew Carnegie.
One of the wealthiest men in America ended up with a very simple monument. Even simpler, according to the cemetery's historian Jim Logan, is the virtually unmarked gravesite of Darling Leo, a Cocker Spaniel interred in 1892 by a wealthy tobacco heiress who visited every day: "She would hire local schoolchildren to accompany her, and she paid them a sliding scale; the more tears they shed, the higher the wages," Logan laughed.
Turns out, you can learn a lot about human nature by visiting a cemetery. No surprise that hotel magnate Leona Helmsley, notorious for her personal extravagance, would shell out millions for a tomb for herself, her beloved husband Harry, and her even more beloved Maltese, Trouble.
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