Knollwood Cemetery

Knollwood Cemetery is a cemetery located at 1678 SOM Center Road in Mayfield Heights, Ohio. Established in 1908, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Cuyahoga County. A mausoleum was completed in 1926, and an expansion finished in 1959. The cemetery's mausoleum, the largest in the state, boasts a number of windows by Tiffany & Co.

Creating the cemetery
Knollwood Cemetery was incorporated on September 9, 1908, by C.F. Heinig, Francis P. Newcome, and H.L. Ebbert. A five-member board of directors was established, and Benjamin Ottman elected its first president. A few weeks after its incorporation, the cemetery purchased 200 acre of land from the Pennington-Quilling Co. for $40,000 ($0 in dollars). The land had previously been the farm of Robert Lowe. In June 1909, the cemetery purchased another 10 acre of land for $100 ($0 in dollars) from James Watters, and 22.6 acre of land from J.W. Thorman for $100. Another 27.4 acre were acquired from other sources.

Ground was broken on the new cemetery on June 26, 1909. Paul Heinze, an architect from Detroit, Michigan, who had designed several cemeteries in the Midwestern United States, laid out Knollwood as a "park" cemetery. Twenty work crews began preparing burial vaults, grading roads, and landscaping 170 acre of the site in preparation for a July 15 dedication. Work included the creation of a man-made lake. The cemetery's roads were paved with macadam, while the county began work on grading and laying asphalt on Mayfield Road to upgrade it in time for the burial ground's opening. Other work at the site included the emplacement of stormwater sewers about 7 ft belowground, and the construction of a front entrance consisting of wrought iron gates supported by several granite pillars. A.T. Russell sold 1150 acre of land to Knollwood in September 1909.

The first interments at Knollwood were about 300 bodies removed from the old Erie Street Cemetery in downtown Cleveland. Hiram Brott became the first contemporary person to be interred at Knollwood when he was buried there on April 27, 1910. Interments were relatively few in number until 1912. Demand for burial space was strong enough that by 1916 25 acre of the cemetery had been cleared, landscaped, and plots laid out. Fully 16 acre of this acreage was near the entrance of the cemetery, and consisted of a park-like garden cemetery. The remaining 9 acre were more like a lawn cemetery. Another 45 acre of the property had been cleared of underbrush and sodded, while 45 acre remained heavily forested. The cemetery association also sold about 33 acre of land, and spent $25,000 ($0 in dollars) constructing a caretaker's residence (which included a small chapel) and maintenance buildings.

By the mid-1920s, Knollwood Cemetery was effectively a large land-holding company. In 1925, Knollwood sought to become a nonprofit organization. Under Ohio law, this meant the cemetery had to divest itself of most of its investments, which meant selling off land. This included the sale of 100 acre of land to the new Acacia Park Cemetery, adjacent to Knollwood.

By the end of 1927, Knollwood Cemetery held more than 2,300 remains.

Mausoleum
In 1923, Knollwood Cemetery announced it had hired noted funerary architect Sidney Lovell to design a large, above-ground mausoleum for the cemetery. Plans called for the structure to be a mixture of Gothic Revival and Egyptian Revival, and for it to include two chapels and about 50 "private rooms" off the main corridor. It was completed about 1926.

To decorate the mausoleum, the cemetery commissioned a number of large stained glass windows from Tiffany & Co., most of which were vaguely secular in nature. Other Tiffany windows were commissioned by individuals who owned crypts in the mausoleum. All of the windows were finished in the late 1920s and early 1930s, toward the end of Louis Comfort Tiffany life, making it unclear how much work Tiffany himself put into their design. As of 2006, there were 17 windows in the mausoleum attributed to Tiffany.

In 1928, Knollwood Cemetery officials determined the mausoleum should be expanded. Hubbell & Benes, a Cleveland architectural firm, designed the addition, which was constructed by the Craig-Curtiss Co. The $175,000 ($0 in dollars) addition was finished in December 1928. Seven more additions were made between 1930 and 1959. A 4842 sqft addition was added in 1997.

Operational history
In 1930, the Memorial Construction Company of Lansing, Michigan, purchased Knollwood Cemetery. Knollwood Cemetery was sold to Gibraltar Mausoleum Corp. in 1994, and in June 1995 Gibraltar was purchased by Service Corporation International.

Knollwood was sued over the mishandling of remains in 1983. In 1929, Katherine G. Mallison was buried in a family plot at Knollwood. Her granddaughter, Dorothy Mallison Carney, died in 1982. While digging the Carney grave, cemetery workers discovered that it was already occupied by a wooden burial vault containing Mallison's coffin. Cemetery workers used a backhoe to remove Mallison's burial vault and remains, which they dumped at a refuse site on the cemetery grounds. Carney's burial occurred a few hours later. In March 1983, a Cleveland television station broadcast news about the mishandling of remains at the cemetery. After an investigation revealed the remains were Mallinson's, Carney's children sued the cemetery and were awarded $56,000. Knollwood Cemetery appealed, but the Ohio Eighth District Courts of Appeals upheld the verdict in 1986.

In 1988, Knollwood Cemetery workers buried Ruth Pistillo in the wrong grave. The family discovered the error only when no headstone was placed on the grave Pistillo had purchased. Even after the error was discovered, Knollwood remained unsure as to who was buried in the wrong grave. Pistillo had to be disinterred and one of her family members had to identify the body. Her heirs received $101,000 in damages.

In 2002, Knollwood Cemetery sought permission from the city of Mayfield Heights to permit the drilling and operation of a natural gas well on its property by Bass Energy. Knollwood said the proposed wells would be in an area about 300 yd from any graves, an area which would not be used for burials for at least 25 to 30 years. Knollwood said the wells would provide it with free natural gas for heating of its mausoleum and other buildings, and would give the cemetery much-needed revenue of about $50,000 a year for 10 years to help meet its $350,000-a-year operating costs. The city denied the permit. The conflict led to the introduction of legislation in the Ohio Legislature to strip localities and counties of their authority to regulate oil and gas wells. This law passed in September 2004. Subsequently, three natural gas wells were drilled and began operation on the Knollwood property. The new law was challenged in court. As the lawsuit progressed, a Court of Common Pleas allowed production to continue at existing wells at the Knollwood Cemetery. The Ohio Supreme Court upheld the new state law in February 2015.

In 2008, the Vitale family sued Knollwood cemetery for placing a natural gas well too close to their mausoleum on the cemetery's grounds. The family also accused Knollwood (which had erected the mausoleum) of constructing such a poorly-built structure that family members had to be disinterred and the mausoleum rebuilt. The case was dismissed with prejudice in May 2010.

Knollwood Cemetery had about 47,000 burials in 2007, and between 94 acre and 96 acre in 2008. Its mausoleum remained the largest in the state as of 2012.

Notable interments
A number of famous individuals are buried at Knollwood Cemetery. They include:


 * Frederick Henry Herbert Adler (1885-1959), poet.
 * Albert R. Bahr (1868-1939), founder, A.H. Bahr Lumber Co.
 * Ernest Barnard (1874-1931), president of the Cleveland Indians Major League Baseball team from 1922 to 1927.
 * Francis H. Beam (1900-1965), chairman of the board, National City Bank of Cleveland.
 * George H. Bender (1896-1961), Republican who served in the United States House of Representatives from 1939 to 1947 and again from 1951 to 1954, and in the United States Senate from 1954 to 1957.
 * Howard Simmons Booth (1891-1952), professor of chemistry at Western Reserve University.
 * Fred H. Chapin (1875-1958), president, National Acme Co.
 * Herb Conyers (1921-1964), first baseman for the Cleveland Indians from 1941 to 1942 and from 1946 to 1952.
 * Alwin C. Ernst (1881-1948), co-founder, Ernst & Ernst.
 * Billy Evans (1884-1956), Major League Baseball umpire; general manager, Cleveland Indians and Detroit Tigers; president, Southern Association league; and National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee.
 * Finley Melville Kendall Foster (1892-1953), scholar of English literature, Western Reserve University.
 * Sonny Geraci (1947-2017), lead singer of the rock music groups The Outsiders and Climax.
 * Reynold Hinsdale (1879-1934), architect.
 * Benjamin Franklin Hopkins (1876-1955), early automobile manufacturing executive.
 * Pete Johns (1888-1964), infielder for the Chicago White Sox and from St. Louis Browns.
 * Harvey Bryant Jordan (1895-1965), vice president of American Wire & Steel Co.
 * Edwin Arthur Kraft (1883-1962), organist.
 * George Miller (1898-1966), co-founder, Miller Drug Stores; president, Strong Cobb Arner pharmaceutical manufacturer; president, Distillata Co.
 * Mike Murphy (1946-2006), drummer for the bands Bee Gees, Chicago, and The Manhattan Transfer.
 * Newbell Niles Puckett (1897-1967), folklorist and professor of sociology, Western Reserve University.
 * Thomas E. Orr (1891-1952), engineer and president, Keystone Plastics Company and Plastray Ltd.
 * Mary Alice "Mell" Beistle Rothko (1922-1970), estranged wife of artist Mark Rothko.
 * Ellis Ryan (1904-1966), owner of the Cleveland Indians from 1949 to 1952.
 * Suzanne Schnitzer (1941-1984) Gates Mills resident from a prominent Gates Mills family, nurse, and patron of the arts.
 * Jimmy Scott (1925-2014), jazz vocalist.
 * Marilyn Reese Sheppard (1923-1954), murder victim and wife of Sam Sheppard. The fetus of her four-month-old unborn son was buried with her in 1955.
 * Sam Sheppard (1923-1970), physician, husband of Marilyn Sheppard, and accused murderer. Originally buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens in Columbus, Ohio, his remains were disinterred and cremated before being placed in his wife's crypt in 1997.
 * Thomas Sinito (1938-1997), caporegime in the Cleveland crime family.
 * Antanas Smetona (1874-1944), President of Lithuania from 1919 to 1920 and from 1926 to 1940. (His remains were moved to All Souls Cemetery in Chardon, Ohio in 1975.)
 * Feargus B. Squire (1850-1932), Standard Oil executive.
 * Floyd St. Clair (1871-1942), composer with the Sam Fox Publishing Co.
 * Jack R. Staples (1911-1990), investment banker and partner in Cascade Industries.
 * Gordon A. Stouffer (1905-1956), restaurateur, heir to Stouffer's fortune.
 * Terry Turner (1881-1960), infielder for the Cleveland Indians.
 * Edith Anisfield Wolf (1889-1963), poet and philanthropist.
 * D. Carl Yoder (1869-1963), Methodist minister and founder, World Religious News (a news service).
 * Charles X. Zimmerman (1865-1926), brigadier general in the U.S. Army and sports team owner.