Lake View Cemetery is on the east side of Cleveland, Ohio, along the East Cleveland and Cleveland Heights borders. More than 104,000 people are buried at Lake View, with more than 700 burials each year. There are 70 acres (0.28 km2) remaining for future development. Known locally as "Cleveland's Outdoor Museum," Lake View Cemetery is home to the James A. Garfield Memorial, Wade Memorial Chapel, which features an interior designed by Louis Tiffany, as well as an 80,000,000-US-gallon (300,000,000 l) capacity concrete-filled dam.
Lake View Cemetery was founded in 1869 and sits on 285 acres (1.15 km2) of land. The cemetery is so named because it is partially located in the "heights" area of Greater Cleveland, with a view of Lake Erie to the north. It was modeled after the great garden cemeteries of Victorian-era England and France. The Italian stonemasons brought in to create the Cemetery founded the Cleveland neighborhood of Little Italy just to its southwest.
The James A. Garfield Memorial is the most prominent point of interest at Lake View Cemetery. The ornate interior features a large marble statue, stained glass, bas relief, and various historical relics from Garfield's life and presidency. The monument also serves as a scenic observation deck and picnic area. President and Mrs. Garfield are entombed in the lower level crypt, their coffins placed side by side and visible to cemetery visitors.
Another prominent structure in the cemetery is the Wade Chapel. A small but magnificent chapel with Tiffany windows and elaborate Biblically-inspired mosaics on the walls, the edifice is still used for small weddings and located north and down the hill from the Garfield monument. Behind the chapel is a large pond. A smaller and very well-known memorial, the Angel of Death Victorious at the gravesite of the Haserot family, was created by sculptor Herman Matzen.
The cemetery is among those profiled in the 2005 PBS documentary A Cemetery Special.
Scenes of the film, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, were filmed at the cemetery.
Newton D. Baker (1871-1937), Mayor of Cleveland and U.S. Secretary of War during World War I
Ernest Ball (1878-1927), composer of the music for the song "When Irish Eyes are Smiling"
Frances Payne Bolton (1885-1977), United States House of Representatives
Charles Francis Brush (1849-1929), inventor and businessman
William B. Castle, last Mayor of Ohio City, Mayor of Cleveland
Ray Chapman, baseball player for the Cleveland Indians, one of only two Major League Baseball players to die of injuries sustained on the playing field during a game
Charles W. Chesnutt, African-American attorney and author
Henry D. Coffinberry, industrialist, founder of the Cleveland Shipbuilding Company, builder of the Onoko: the first iron-hulled laker
Collinwood school (Lake View School) fire victims of 1908
George Washington Crile, co-founder of the Cleveland Clinic and the first surgeon to successfully perform a direct blood transfusion
Harvey Cushing, pioneer brain surgeon
John A. Ellsler, actor and theatre manager
Alan Freed, radio disc jockey who popularized the term "rock and roll" (previously interred at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)
James A. Garfield, 20th President of the United States
Lucretia Garfield, former First Lady of the United States
Marcus A. Hanna, U.S. Senator and Republican Party boss
Gertrude Harrison, golf professional
Stephen V. Harkness, investor and founding partner of Standard Oil along with John D. Rockefeller
John Hay, former United States Secretary of State and aide to President Abraham Lincoln (Hay's monument was created by sculptor James Earle Fraser.)
Myron Herrick, former Governor of Ohio, US ambassador to France
Edwin Converse Higbee, founder of Higbee's, the first department store in Cleveland
Adella Prentiss Hughes, founder of the Cleveland Orchestra
Effie Hinckley Ober Kline, founder of the Boston Ideal Opera Company, second wife of Virgil P. Kline
Virgil P. Kline, abolitionist publisher and anti-trust attorney, later house counsel to John D. Rockefeller
Mortimer Dormer Leggett, lawyer, educator, Union Army Major General, Commissioner of Patents
Al Lerner, former owner of the Cleveland Browns
Garrett Morgan, inventor of the gas mask and the three-colored traffic light
Eliot Ness, detective, investigator and Cleveland safety director best known member of The Untouchables (Ness's ashes and those of his wife Elizabeth and son Robert were scattered over a pond in the cemetery. A memorial marker stands nearby.)
Andrew Novick, leading urologist and researcher, pioneer of nephron-sparing surgery in kidney cancer, established the Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute at the Cleveland Clinic
Peggy Parratt, professional football player who threw the first legal forward pass in a professional game
Harvey Pekar, comic book writer, known for his groundbreaking series American Splendor. Ashes scattered here.
John D. Rockefeller, billionaire oil tycoon and philanthropist
James Salisbury, inventor of the Salisbury steak
Viktor Schreckengost, noted American industrial designer and teacher, sculptor, and artist who taught industrial design at the Cleveland Institute of Art for more than 50 years and was a professor emeritus until his death.
Henry Alden Sherwin (1842–1916) was one of the two founders of the Sherwin-Williams Company in 1866. The company was created in part by both Sherwin and Edward Porter Williams.
Rufus P. Spalding, abolitionist, judge of the Supreme Court of Ohio, member of the U.S. House of Representatives
Anthony J. Stastny, composer, founder and president of Tin Pan Alley music publisher, A. J. Stasny Music Co.
Louis Stokes, (1925-2015) United States Congressman Cleveland, Ohio, first African American elected to US Congress from Ohio. Stokes argued Terry v Ohio Stop and Frisk
Carl B. Stokes, Mayor of Cleveland, United States ambassador, first African American elected mayor of a major American city
Amasa Stone. industrialist and philanthropist
Worthy S. Streator, physician, railroad baron, founder of Streator, Illinois, Ohio State Senator, first mayor of East Cleveland, Ohio
William R. Van Aken, Ohio State Representative
Mantis James Van Sweringen, railroad baron, financier and co-founder of Shaker Heights, Ohio
Oris Paxton Van Sweringen, railroad baron, financier and co-founder of Shaker Heights, Ohio
Jeptha Homer Wade (1811-1890), founder of Western Union Telegraph company