Baltimore's Green Mount Cemetery

Baltimore's Green Mount Cemetery These cemeteries were modeled after Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France.

Chartered by an Act of the Maryland General Assembly in 1838, Green Mount Cemetery was among the first "Garden Cemeteries" of the Rural Cemetery movement in the U.S.

Today, we placed a memorial to a Maryland native, Capt. George W. Morris, who was one of the last casualties of the War ...
01/08/2026

Today, we placed a memorial to a Maryland native, Capt. George W. Morris, who was one of the last casualties of the War in Vietnam, and remains today as offcially, "Missing in action."

- The Northern Chesapeake Heritage Foundation

Always satisfying to bring closure...
07/05/2025

Always satisfying to bring closure...

Born 16 Sep 1914, and raised in Giulianova Italy, Violist Anthony “Tony” Iovane immigrated to the United States in 1953. Having graduated from the Conservatory of Music Statale Pescara with further study at Rome’s Conservatory of Santa Cecilia, and a teaching gig in Bologna, Anthony felt America held a better promise for achieving his musical ambitions.

Landing first in the Bronx, in New York, he would soon travel to Indianapolis, IN and spend several years playing with the symphony orchestra in that city. By 1957, Baltimore called, and Anthony finally found a permanent home where he could fulfill his musical ambitions. For the next thirty years, he would perform with the BSO, teach at the Peabody Institute, and occasionally perform with other orchestras, including the Gettysburg Symphony Orchestra in Pennsylvania.

Capping his career, Iovane would travel and perform with the BSO’s "Harmonie" 1981 European Tour that would include East Germany; traveling again with the 1987 European Tour, he would retire following their return to Baltimore.

Anthony Iovane died of heart disease on the 28th of January 1996 at the St. Josephs Medical Center in Baltimore, leaving his wife of 42 years, the former Josephine Tringali. Josephine would pass away three years later in Charlotte, NC.

Several months ago, we received a call from the Dublin Methodist Church in northeast Harford County, regarding an urn of cremated remains left on the steps of the church. Inside was a tag identifying the crematory (Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore) and the name of the deceased, Anthony Iovane. Nothing else accompanied the “package,” no contact information for the individual who left it there, nothing. Adding further mystery to the discarded urn, the funeral home that had retrieved Anthony’s ashes nearly thirty years ago, had long shuttered its doors and Anthony lived in the northern Baltimore City community of Guilford, nowhere near Dublin.

The superintendent of Green Mount, also a board member of the Northern Chesapeake Heritage Foundation, traveled to Dublin to retrieve the urn and assured the church that we would provide a proper burial for Anthony.

What happened to that last request and why wasn’t it carried out? How did his urn end up in northeast Harford County, and who left it at the church? Those are questions that will most likely never be answered.

After several weeks searching for family members, Anthony and Josephine had no children, I finally identified a close relative who was shocked to receive a phone call regarding the discarded ashes of a relative. Adding to the mystery of Anthony’s “travels” was the revelation that his ashes were to be spread in the Atlantic Ocean between Maryland and his native Italy. Unfortunately, it seemed that Anthony had a bit of a temper, not unlike many “artists,” no insult intended, and was not the easiest person to live or work with. Not able to assist in our efforts to give Anthony a final place to rest, I assured the relative we would find a suitable home for him.

Regardless of his shortcomings, no man is without flaws, Anthony Iovane deserved dignity in death. With that in mind, we obtained permission from cemetery management to place Anthony in an unsold space in what has historically been known as “Strangers Row” in the cemetery. This area was reserved for travelers, ships captains and crew, wartime casualties, and others who died in Baltimore and could not be sent home for one reason or another. It is also the resting place for many infants and toddlers whose families would later move on from Baltimore.

Obtaining a suitable marble a headstone, we engaged a local monument maker to inscribe it for us, thus giving Anthony Iovane a final resting place and recognition he deserved as a worthy contributor Baltimore’s and America’s historical cultural landscape.

A long overdue honor for a Maryland Hero. His mortal remains lie in a grave known only by God, but he now has a place of...
05/26/2025

A long overdue honor for a Maryland Hero. His mortal remains lie in a grave known only by God, but he now has a place of honor among other Maryland Military Hero's who paid the ultimate sacrifice.

05/15/2025

UPDATE!!

We will be hosting a Book Signing event for Frank Gorman on Saturday the 21st of June, after the Baltimore Heritage Booth, Baltimore & Lincoln’s Assassination Tour.

Frank will have books onsite to sell or you can pick one up from Amazon.com prior to the event.

A Must Read!!

In Confronting Bad History -- How a Lost Cause and Fraudulent Book Caused the John Wilkes Booth Exhumation Trial, noted Baltimore Attorney Frank Gorman, who represented Green Mount Cemetery at trial, recounts the trial preparations and strategies, lining up expert witnesses, the historical testimony and evidence, and trial tactics.

Read more on our website and order Frank Gorman's book today, a must read for students and curious history buffs alike!

https://bit.ly/3FiwTWh

Green Mount Cemetery’s Chapel, designed by John Rudolph Niernsee and James Crawford Neilson, is in the classic Gothic Re...
05/07/2025

Green Mount Cemetery’s Chapel, designed by John Rudolph Niernsee and James Crawford Neilson, is in the classic Gothic Revival style, a widespread architectural movement in the first half of the 19th century, and was inspired by the Scottish Memorial to novelist, poet and historian, Sir Walter Scott, located in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Constructed of Connecticut sandstone, and completed in 1856, the chapel features a 102-foot spire, flying buttresses, pinnacles, a porte-cochere, and stained-glass windows. The interior of the Chapel contains a slate floor, stone columns and arches, cathedral ceilings, a stained-glass dome under the tower, and a wrought iron chandelier. It is believed that the chandelier was originally located in the St. Anne’s Church in Annapolis and that it was brought to Green Mount cemetery in the early 1920’s.

Today, the chapel sits behind protective metal fencing, as the ravages of time have left it much in need of restoration. Even as mother nature and time continue their assault, this majestic symbol of Maryland’s first “Garden Cemetery,” one of the early cemeteries of the 19th century’s “Rural Cemetery” movement, still stands tall, its presence defining Green Mount Cemetery, its legacy immortalized as an icon within Baltimore's greater historic landscape.

Address

1501 Greenmount Avenue
Baltimore, MD
21202

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 3:45pm
Tuesday 9am - 3:45pm
Wednesday 9am - 3:45pm
Thursday 9am - 3:45pm
Friday 9am - 3:45pm
Saturday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

+14105390641

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