At a certain point everyone will taste the certainty of death. And while the majority of people who die and are buried in the great state of Ohio aren’t famous, there are some who buck that trend. Here’s a list of the most famous/historically significant people buried in Ohio. May we remember them fondly.
Alan Freed
Lakeview Cemetery
Though Freed was not the first DJ to play rock ‘n’ roll on the radio, he is known for popularizing the genre and also for organizing the first rock ‘n’ roll concert. He became a kind of scapegoat for the 1959 payola scandal and tragically ended up drinking himself to death.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsAnnie Oakley
Brock Cemetery, Greenville
America’s most infamous sharpshooter was born, lived, and died in Ohio. Inbetween, she showed the world what women are capable of.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsArthur B. McBride
Holy Cross Cemetery, Brook Park
The founder of the Cleveland Browns in 1944, McBride also arranged for the team to join the NFL in 1950.
Photo via WikipediaRutherford B. Hayes
Spiegel Grove, Fremont
Our 19th president, Hayes was also a lawyer and abolitionist who defended fugitive slaves in court in the antebellum years. He was also responsible for officially ending the Reconstruction Era through the Compromise of 1877.
Photo via Wikimedia Commons”Chef Boyardee”
All Souls Cemetery, Chardon
Hector Boiardi, known as Chef Boyardee, emigrated from Italy to New York City and then to Cleveland, where he founded his food franchise.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsCarl B. Stokes
Lakeview Cemetery
Stokes was the first black mayor of a major American city (Cleveland). He was elected in 1967 and remained in office until 1971.
Photo via Cleveland Memory ProjectCarolyn Keene
Toledo Memorial Park, Sylvania
The ghostwriter of the Nancy Drew series was born Mildred Wirt Benson and earned a master’s in journalism from the University of Iowa. She moved to Toledo and worked at the Toledo Blade for more than 50 years.
Photo via National Museum of America/FlickrCCRaymond Johnson Chapman
Lakeview Cemetery
The only Major League Baseball player who died from being hit by a pitch, played for the Indians.
Photo via MamaGeek/Wikimedia CommonsDave Thomas
Union Cemetery, Columbus
Thomas is best known as the founder of the fast-food burger gem Wendy’s. He appeared in almost every advertisement for the chain from 1989 until his death in 2002.
Photo via John Matthew Smith/Wikimedia CommonsHarvey Samuel Firestone
Columbiana Cemetery, Columbiana
You guessed it — Firestone was the inventor of pneumatic tires and the founder of the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company in Akron.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsWarren G. Harding
Harding Tomb, Marion
Our 29th president, Harding was popular until scandals like the Teapot Dome Scandal came to light after he died. He is now considered one of our worst presidents.
Photo via Mike Sharp/Wikimedia CommonsJames A. Garfield
Lakeview Cemetery
Our 20th president, known best for dying after only six and a half months in office.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsFrankie Yankovic
Calvary Cemetery
Yankovic grew up and learned to play the accordion in Collinwood. He went on to win the title of “America’s Polka King” in a contest in Milwaukee, WI and starred in TV shows in Chicago and Buffalo centered around that identity.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsWilliam Henry Harrison
William Henry Harrison Memorial, North Bend
Harrison was the 9th president of the United States and the grandfather of the 23rd. He became the first U.S. president to die in office when he died of typhoid 31 days into his first term.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsWilliam McKinley
McKinley Memorial Park, Canton
The 25th president of the United States, assassinated six months into his second term. He was succeeded by his vice president, Theodore Roosevelt.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsEliot Ness
Lakeview Cemetery
Ness was the Public Safety Director for Cleveland from 1935-1942, but he’s better known for helping to catch Al Capone in Chicago.
Photo via Michelle Belanger/Wikimedia CommonsJohn D. Rockefeller
Lakeview Cemetery
Yes, the oil tycoon himself is buried in Cleveland. Apparently when he died in 1937 at the age of 98, he requested to be interred in the city where his business career began.
Photo by Arnold Genthe, via Wikimedia CommonsSara Lucy Bagby Johnson
Woodland Cemetery
Sara Lucy Bagby Johnson was a runaway slave and the last to face charges under the Fugitive Slave Act. However, she was freed with the help of Union soldiers in 1862. She then settled in Cleveland. Sara Lucy died in 1906 and was buried in an unmarked grave until 2011.
Photo via FlickrCreativeCommonsChief Tarhe
Chief Tarhe Monument, Upper Sandusky
Chief Tarhe was born to the Porcupine Clan of the Wyandot people. Out of 13 chiefs to fight at the Battle of Fallen Timbers, he was the only one to survive, losing the use of one of his arms. In July 1975 he signed the Treaty of Greenville as the representative of the Wyandots. Above is not his memorial but a sign commemorating the last of the Wyandots.
Photo via Daniel X. O’Neil/FlickrCCOrville and Wilbur Wright
Woodland Cemetery, Dayton
The inventors of modern aircraft and the reasons Ohio is called “The Birthplace of Aviation,” are buried in a family plot in Dayton.
Photo via Wikimedia CommonsAdella P. Hughes
Lakeview Cemetery
Founder of the Cleveland Orchestra, Hughes was also a talented pianist in her own right.
Photo via STNTCO4/Wikimedia Commons