March 17: William Hayes and the Ship “Rainbow”

March 17: On this date in 1848 the speedy clipper ship Rainbow set sail, captained by William Hayes on what he planned to be his last voyage before his retirement, bound for Valparaiso and China. The ship, captain, and crew were never seen or heard from again. Hayes’s cenotaph is at Green-Wood.

March 15: Caroline Weldon

March 15

On this date in 1921, Catherine Weldon, advocate for American Indian rights, who befriended Chief Sitting Bull and became his confidante and private secretary, died.

Bronzes On Display

The Green-Wood Historic Fund recently lent a magnificent bronze of Civil War Brigadier General Thomas Sweeny to the exhibition, “American Heroes in Bronze: The Artwork of James E. Kelly,” at Macculloch Hall Historical Museum in Morristown, New Jersey. You will find more on Sweeny’s fascinating story, from an earlier blog post, here. As the museum … Read more

March 12: William M. Tweed

March 12: William M. Tweed, the “Boss,” died in this date in 1878 at the Ludlow Street Jail, where he was being held on a civil judgment arising from his massive theft of public funds.

March 11: Henry Bergh

March 11: The Great Blizzard of 1888 hit New York City on this date; Henry Bergh, the founder of the ASPCA, the first humane organization in the Americas, was already ill, but when a doctor was summoned he could not reach Bergh because the roads were impassable; Bergh died the next day.