Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn is full of fascinating history. Here are 5 weirdest burial sites in the cemetery, according to Jessica Ferri of Dearly Departed.
Beyond serving as the final resting place for some of the most famous New Yorkers, Green-Wood Cemetery has much to offer the living!
Uncover layers of New York City history by embarking on a scavenger hunt that will take you on an exciting quest all around the city with the Urban Archive app.
A project from Columbia University StudioLAB reimagines Madison Square Garden and Penn Station as a cemetery and lush public space for digital and physical memories.
Compositions of found objects, historic artifacts and photographs are now dispersed through Green-wood, as part of Among Trees and Stones: Walking Green-Wood.
Green-Wood Cemetery Chapel was criss-crossed with hundreds of fuschia parachute cords for a two week site-specific installation by Brooklyn artist Aaron Asis.
Three million people have been buried in the Calvary Cemetery since its establishment in 1848. It contains the largest number of burials of any U.S. cemetery.
Check out Woodlawn Cemetery and secret residents, architecture, and 10 facts about one of NYC's largest cemeteries and one of its national historic landmarks.
After 90 years, the former Naval Hospital Cemetery has reopened as the Naval Cemetery Landscape. The space was commissioned by the Brooklyn Greenway Initiative.
Hart Island is NYCs mass burial ground or potters field, home to over 1 million. Here are the secrets of this island in Long Island Sound off the Bronx.