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Ingersoll Lockwood, at the age of 70. Ingersoll Lockwood (August 2, 1841 – September 30, 1918) was an American lawyer, diplomat and writer. He wrote children's novels, including the Baron Trump novels (1889/93), as well as the dystopian novel, 1900: or; The Last President, a play, and several non-fiction works.
The funeral space in the chapel was dedicated to Huntington in 1902 with the placement of a bronze tablet there. [40] The Mortuary Chapel was designed to be a place where funerals could be held. Over time, few funerals were held there. Instead, the public began using the chapel as a meditative space, and requesting to be buried inside it. [32]
While preservation efforts, special events and preservation-focused fund raising continue, the Abbey is once again accepting interments. In 2019, the Columbus Cemetery Association, business owner of Green Lawn Abbey, entered an agreement with Memorial Properties, manager of the Green Lawn Cemetery, a nearby though unrelated business, to promote the mausoleum and oversee new sales.
Greenwood Cemetery is a registered historic district in Hamilton, Ohio, listed in the National Register of Historic Places on July 22, 1994. It contains 5 contributing buildings. Greenwood is designed in the style of a landscaped park and garden with mortuary art and statues among the graves.
Later that year, the family settled in Marion, Illinois, where Robert and his brother Ebon Clarke Ingersoll were admitted to the bar in 1854. A county historian writing 22 years later noted that local residents considered the Ingersolls as a "very intellectual family; but, being Abolitionists, and the boys being deists, rendered obnoxious to our people in that respect."
Ralph Ingersoll Lockwood (1798 Greenwich – 1855 New York City) [1] was an American political writer, lawyer and novelist. [2] Lockwood was one of 136 signatories to an 1838 petition to Congress on the matter of copyright and intellectual property. [ 3 ]
Ralph M. Ingersoll was an American newspaper publisher. In the 1950s, his father, Ralph Ingersoll , acquired and managed several newspapers. His company, Ingersoll Publications , founded in 1957, [ 1 ] was taken over by his son Ralph M. Ingersoll Jr. in 1982 after he had bought his father out in a deal that left them no longer on speaking terms.
In 1979, Jenkins was convicted in Greenwood, South Carolina, of conspiracy to assault two men and of plotting the arson of two homes. Jenkins was sentenced to 20 years in prison, with eight years suspended, for the incident. [4] In 1994, he was arrested for grand theft, but the charges were soon dropped when he agreed to pay restitution.