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	<title>graveyards.com &#187; expeditions</title>
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		<title>Dead Presidents Tour</title>
		<link>http://graveyards.com/blog/2005/07/3/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jul 2005 01:17:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve returned from a &#8220;Dead Presidents Tour&#8221;.
I wanted to visit some friends in Ohio; and as that state has more dead presidents than any other, I planned my route accordingly.
Friday, I drove through Indiana, stopping in Indianapolis for about five hours to see Crown Hill Cemetery, which includes President Benjamin Harrison; three Vice Presidents (and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve returned from a &#8220;Dead Presidents Tour&#8221;.</p>
<p>I wanted to visit some friends in Ohio; and as that state has more dead presidents than any other, I planned my route accordingly.</p>
<p>Friday, I drove through Indiana, stopping in Indianapolis for about five hours to see Crown Hill Cemetery, which includes President Benjamin Harrison; three Vice Presidents (and one failed candidate for that post); John Dillinger; and poet James Whitcomb Riley. A fine Victorian cemetery, I rate it at 4.5 stars (equal to Chicago&#8217;s Forest Home or Mt. Carmel).</p>
<p>After staying the night at a friend&#8217;s house in western Ohio, I visited the grave of Warren G. Harding in Marion. He is generally considered a poor president, but because he died in office has a magnificent monument &#8211; a circular structure about one hundred feet across, surrounded by columns fifty feet high, with his grave and that of his wife in a courtyard in the middle. The cemetery across the street has the receiving vault where the president&#8217;s body was temporarily stored.</p>
<p>All day Sunday I was in Cleveland. Lakeview Cemetery is magnificent, and I toured it the whole day, longer than I had planned. President Garfield&#8217;s monument dominates &#8211; it is a 160-foot brown stone tower, with a statue of the president on the main floor, and the burial chamber below. Surprisingly, the president and first lady&#8217;s coffins were exposed &#8211; not sealed behind or under any stone, the bronze coffins sat on pedestals in the open air, with only iron bars to keep the tourists from touching them. Lakeview is a &#8220;5-star&#8221; cemetery, my highest rating.</p>
<p>Monday I journeyed home, stopping first in Canton to see President McKinley &#8211; who has a large domed mausoleum on top of a hill &#8211; and explore the graveyard next door, with its wonderful hillside vaults.</p>
<p>I then drove most of the way across Ohio, stopping in the small town of Fremont to visit the Rutherford B. Hayes presidential center; the president&#8217;s estate, now converted into a library and museum. The president and his wife, their son and his wife are in a small graveyard on the grounds, with a comparitively humble monument.</p>
<p>I drove home on I-90 across northern Indiana. As I passed the town of Gary, a long stretch of chemical factories came into view &#8211; and at that same moment, the song &#8220;Black God&#8221; by My Dying Bride began on the CD player&#8230; that song is just about the bleakest, most mournful piece of music I know, and was perfect for the view out the window.</p>
<p>The total score: 1,980 photos.</p>
<p>(this post was copied from my previous blog, December 2008)</p>
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