Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Help Haiti, Win A Trip To Ireland

Connemara, Ireland
So a couple posts ago I wrote about a fundraiser to help Haiti build wells and bring clean, safe water to some communities in need there through the aid of Water.org. The fundraiser is held by a network of travel bloggers coming together under the awesome name Passports With Purpose.  

Basically, Passports With Purpose (PwP) is an annual fundraiser held by dozens of travel bloggers that aims to give back to the places that travelers visit. PwP has been around since 2008, each year raising money for a good cause and topping its goal from year to year. This year PwP's goal is to raise $100,000 for Water.org, an organization working to make clean and safe water available to all countries and populations around the world. In the wake of the earthquake that devastated Haiti in 2010--and the damage done all over again to the country during Hurricane Sandy only a few weeks ago--Water.org will be using the money raised from Passports With Purpose for building much-needed wells in two communities in Haiti.

Now there are lots of good reasons why you should consider donating to Passports With Purpose and helping out Haiti and Water.org. First, here are a few facts about water resources in the world:

  • Nearly 1 billion people lack access to safe water.
  • Two and a half billion lack access to improved sanitation.
  • More people in the world have a mobile phone than a toilet.
  • Every 20 seconds a child dies from a water-related illness--mostly children in developing countries. 
  • Because of lack of safe water and adequate sanitation, an estimated 200 million work hours are spent each day in the world collecting water...almost entirely by women. That's enough woman-power to build 28 Empire State Buildings per day.
Those are the sobering reasons to donate. But if you're a traveler, there are even more reasons. For just $10 donation to Passports With Purpose, along with helping out Haiti, you'll be automatically entered to win a travel-related prize donated by all kinds of travel companies...including the one that hosts this blog, Wayfaring Women Tours.

Wayfaring Women Tours is donating a trip to Ireland on our women's tour*** in the fall of 2013 to the Passports With Purpose project. Think of that folks--donate $10 between now and December 11th, spend next autumn in the Emerald Isle drinking Guinness, looking out at the country's 40 shades of green, munching on warm scones and wild salmon, listening to great tunes in charming old pubs...I could go on and on.

Kylemore Abbey in County Galway



Window in Quiet Man pub in Cong, Connemara, Ireland

 Here is what you win from Wayfaring Women Tours: 


Free Trip for One (1) Woman*** on the Best of the West & South Ireland Tour for Women: August 29-September 6, 2013
(9 days/8 nights)
Tour Includes
  • Nine days of touring covering Counties Galway, Clare, Kerry, and Cork
  • Accommodation for 8 nights in comfortable hotels and guesthouses, located in Galway City, Lisdoonvarna, Inis Oirr (the Aran Islands), Dingle, and Shanagarry (outside Cork City)
  • Walking tour of Galway City to see its historic pubs and churches, the Spanish Arch and Lynch’s Castle, and the home of Nora Barnacle (the woman who would become Mrs. James Joyce and inspire Bloomsday)
  • Visit to Brigit’s Garden in Moycullen with tour of gardens, tea break, and special workshop on the Brigit tradition in Celtic folklore and culture
  • Tour of Connemara, including the charming village of Clifden and picture-perfect Kylemore Abbey
  • Free night in Galway City for you to enjoy the pubs, sit in on a traditional Irish music session, stroll along the bay, venture out to nearby Salthill, whatever you fancy
  • Tour of the Burren with a relaxed walk led by Tony Kirby, Burren guide and author
  • Visit to the Cliffs of Moher, with plenty of time to take in the amazing views
  • Two nights of music, dancing, and all-around merrymaking at the world-famous annual Matchmaking Festival in Lisdoonvarna
  • Optional excursion day to Lahinch, a seaside town noted for it beaches, with opportunity to sign up for a fun surfing lesson
  • Trip to Inis Oirr, the smallest and loveliest of the Aran Islands, with ferry transport from Doolin
  • Overnight stay on Inis Oirr, with walking tour of the island led by Eoghan Poil of Aran Islands Walks and easy, engaging Irish language lesson led by Bríd Ní Chualáin of FEICIM
  • Tour of the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry and its many archaeological sites
  • Afternoon cookery course at the famous Ballymaloe Cookery School in County Cork, focusing on scone, jam, and bread making
  • Visit to Blarney Castle and opportunity to kiss the Blarney Stone for the gift of eloquence as well as shop ‘til you drop at Blarney Woolen Mills
  • Plus: All breakfasts (8) included (full Irish), welcome dinner on first night in Galway City and farewell dinner on last night at Ballymaloe House, transportation in a roomy, comfortable coach with reclining seats, professional driver and guide, and transfers from Shannon Airport to Galway City on first day of tour and to Shannon from County Cork on last day (for guests arriving in/leaving from Shannon). Meals included: All breakfasts (8), four (4) dinners, one (1) tea break, plus tea and generous tastings during afternoon cookery course. Some drinks and all alcoholic beverages are not included and factored into price of tour.

    Dingle Peninsula, County Kerry

    Not included in price of tour: Transportation (airfare) to Ireland; airport transfers not specifically stated in itinerary (only airport transfers to/from Shannon Airport on the dates of Aug. 29 and Sept. 6 are included in price); local transportation expenses during free time on tour (i.e., taxi fares); travel insurance; meals where not stated in itinerary; personal items/shopping expenses; fees such as room service, laundry service, telephone calls, Internet use in hotels or elsewhere, etc.; entrance fees or expenses for any activities engaged during free time on tour, including optional excursions; any expenses incurred for tour members spending additional time in Ireland before or beyond tour’s start and end; tips for tour leader, driver, and local guides; passport/visa fees (for tour members arriving from outside Ireland). No refunds will be given for any unused portion of a tour by a tour member.
    This tour is for passengers age 16 and over. 
    Prize is only good for this tour, scheduled August 29-September 6, 2013.  
    ****This is a women-only tour. Should a man win this prize, he is free to gift the prize to a woman. It would certainly be a great gift!
       
So that's what you can win from us at Wayfaring Women Tours and Writing and Wayfaring if you donate. Now here's how to donate. Just go to this link, or click on the Passports With Purpose widget at the upper-right hand side of this blog. Donate $10 or more--and you're in! There are tons of great prizes on offer--and who knows, we might see you winning our prize and joining us on our women's tour of one of the most beautiful countries on earth.

A big thanks to all at Passports With Purpose allowing us to participate. And a big Thank you to PwP's 2012 Sponsors:
Now get donating!! 

Friday, November 16, 2012

Put Your Passport To Good Use

Hello readers, friends, and wayfarers. Notice anything new or different about the blog? Here's a hint...look to your right. See that widget--that long, tall, sally of a thing under the words Passports With Purpose? That's what's new here! So what's this widget doing on my blog?

First things first. Passports With Purpose is an annual fundraiser held by dozens of travel bloggers that aims to give back to the places that travelers visit. Since 2008, Passports With Purpose (PwP) has been recruiting bloggers and travel sponsors to raise money for a different charity each year. In its first year, PwP raised $7400 for Heifer International, a worldwide non-profit devoted to ending hunger and poverty and promoting self-reliance and sustainability. To give you an idea of how successful PwP's mission has become, in 2011, only its 4th year of fundraising, PwP raised $90,000 to build two libraries in Zambia in partnership with Room To Read.

This year Passports With Purpose has upped its goal to $100,000 for Water.org, an organization working to make clean and safe water available to all countries and populations around the world. The money raised for Water.org will go specifically for building much-needed wells in two communities in Haiti.

Chances are if you're reading this, you come from a country or part of the world where you don't have to worry much about water--like where it comes from, if there's enough to go around in your community, if it's safe to drink. If so, consider yourself very fortunate. Here are some facts about water in the world according to Water.org, the World Health Organization, and UNICEF:

Nearly 1 billion people lack access to safe water. Two and a half billion lack access to improved sanitation. Picture this--more people have a mobile phone than a toilet. And every 20 seconds, a child dies from a water-related illness, mostly children in developing countries.

In Haiti only one in five people have access to a toilet, and half the country lacks access to clean and safe water. Haiti's water crisis goes back to before the catastrophic earthquake that hit the country in January 2010. The earthquake only worsened the situation. Meanwhile Hurricane Sandy has re-devastated the country.

Now, Passports With Purpose is teaming up with Water.org to lend Haiti a helping hand. Passports With Purpose is already set up to accept donations that will go to Water.org. On November 28th it gets even better--PwP will begin offering the chance to win some great travel-related prizes to anyone donating as little as $10. Ten dollars, people. For ten dollars, not only can you help out people in Haiti, you might win yourself some cool travel gear or a vacation getaway in 2013. There's no reason not to participate.

So why am I telling you this? Well, I can't give it all away right now. All I can say is look out for another post from me on November 28th. I'll give you all the details on what you can win and what prize in particular this ol' blog will be sponsoring. That's right--Writing and Wayfaring will be hosting a prize. In just a couple weeks, I'll tell you all about it. So stay tuned...and in the meantime, click on the PwP widget if you want to find out more about the fundraiser!

Friday, November 9, 2012

The Last Four Years, For This American

About this time four years ago--on this same night, the Friday after Election Day in America--I was sitting in the Greyhound station in Chicago, waiting to get on the overnight bus to Memphis. I was nervous and tired and a little scared. The tired part was because I hadn't slept much the night before. I had stayed up late (and then couldn't sleep afterwards) looking up horror stories on the Internet about riding Greyhound buses around North America. See, I was planning on doing this for the next month. I had a 30-day pass for Greyhound, and this day, the Friday after Election Day, was day 1.

There were a few grisly stories out there about going Greyhound. But the truth is, there are grisly stories out there about pretty much anything. Most of the Greyhound horror stories just involved things like late buses, long rides next to undesirable seat neighbors, and engine breakdowns. They weren't anything different from what it'd been like riding the el and city buses in Chicago every day for the past few years. But as of Halloween that year, 2008, riding the CTA every day had become a thing of the past. My last day of work had been October 31st. I'd moved out of my apartment in the city only about a week before that. Now I was waiting in a long line to get on a bus heading south. My only explanation for all this was that I'd been through some trauma earlier in the year, and now I just wanted to get away from Chicago for awhile. A long while. You know how it goes...drastic times call for drastic measures and such. So that's how one day of trauma led to 30 days of traveling.

Only it wasn't only 30 days. After that month of traveling through Illinois, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California--before coming back through Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, and Iowa--I'd come back home in time for Christmas and then take off to Australia a couple weeks after the new year. Going to Australia--going anywhere after the Greyhound trip--hadn't been part of my plan originally. But I found I still needed to put distance between myself and Chicago--so I went to the complete other side of the world for a couple months. And I thought of something I had done while I had been working at that cubicle job for years. I worked in publishing, and I spent many days working on articles about countries all over the world. Some were places I hadn't known much about before working on the articles. As I learned the names and saw pictures of places all over the world, I began making a list of the countries and places I wanted to go to. I write the list on a yellow post-it, and kept it pinned to the wall of my cubicle--right in the spot I looked at directly whenever I lifted up my head from reading. I'd think about that list when I traveled, but more so whenever I came back from traveling. (I still have many names to cross off on that list--and I add places all the time.)

After coming back from Australia, I planned on settling in again, finding a new job, a new place to live in the city. Instead, I took off again within a few months, deciding I wanted to attempt a pilgrimage climb up a mountain in western Ireland on the big day of the year when everyone makes the climb, spend some time with old friends in the west, and then go on to France for a month, to see more of the country beyond Paris and to make another pilgrimage to the shrine at Lourdes in the south.

Coming back home in the fall, I made the decision to try and make travel my life, and in February the following year I headed to Mexico for a couple weeks to earn a certification as a tour manager--the first step in setting up a women-only tour business that I had in mind back when I still had an office job. A few months later, after spending some time setting up my business, I was off again, for 2 too-short weeks in Bolivia. Why Bolivia? Why not, man. Bolivia had been one of the places I had on my post-it note list back at the publishing job. I remember working on a bunch of short articles about places like Uyuni and Tupiza, and looking up pictures online to fact-check the articles. I remember being stunned by the pictures I saw, captivated by how much I didn't know about this extraordinary looking country. Now was as good a time to go as ever. All I regret is not being there longer.

From Bolivia, it was off to the strange and twisty-turny world of small business start-up--a place you could say I'm still trying to navigate. And then, in 2011, I found myself making short trips to New York City (for the first time, believe it or not), to Austin and San Antonio, Texas, to nearby, little Galena, Illinois, and then a very long trip to Ireland and Spain, for a very long walk starting in the south of France and ending on the northwestern coast of Celtic Spain, Galicia, in the holy city of Santiago de Compostela that marks the end of the 500-mile pilgrimage walk known as the Camino de Santiago, the Way of St. James.

Would you believe that on that day 4 years ago today, when I boarded the bus to Memphis, I had no idea whatsoever about the Camino de Santiago. I had no inkling I'd take a month-long walk across Spain, only about 3 years after taking a month-long ride across my own country. Santiago de Compostela had definitely not be on my post-it note list pinned to the cubicle wall. But somewhere in the interim I'd picked up word of it--I think while planning my pilgrimage up Croagh Patrick in Ireland and to Lourdes in France--and then ended up doing it. And of course, all I regret is not being to do it all over again this year, to walk one of the other routes of the Camino in Spain, to take a long walk through beautiful countryside every year, at least once a year, for the rest of my life.

Now this year, leading up to this 4th anniversary tonight, has been much more quiet. I went to Iowa for a family reunion. Later I went to Michigan with my sisters. I enjoyed the trips--even wrote about 'em--but I can't honestly say I don't mind that I didn't get to a few more exotic or far-away locales as well these past months. I hope next year will be different, will have some more adventures. I truly miss them and live for them.

I only got to thinking about the fact that 4 years had passed since the Greyhound adventure, since I left my old life behind, with the election coming up. The last presidential election, in 2008, had been a historic one of course, and I heard the echoes and felt the reverberations of it in the weeks I was traveling around America, and even while visiting Australia and Ireland and France the following year...and while walking the Camino just last autumn. In the weeks leading up to this election of 2012, many people began tossing around the question of whether you, we, America, was better off now than 4 years ago. Some folks think you should vote on the basis of how you answer that question.

It's a good question. It's not necessarily the question I ask when I vote, but I think it's a valid one for voters to ask and think about. When I thought about it, I immediately remembered not so much where I had been the night Barack Obama was elected (no, I wasn't in downtown Chicago in Grant Park like my sisters and a lot of other friends of mine--I was at home with my mom watching Jon Stewart, while my dad and eldest brother had yet to come back from the polls where they were working as election judges). Instead what I remembered was where I was going to--that I was gearing up for a long cross-country trip...first stop, Memphis, Tennessee, the city where a man who went a long way in making it possible for Barack Obama to become president, Martin Luther King, Jr., had been killed. I visited the site where King was murdered in Memphis, a motel that has been transformed into the National Civil Rights Museum. As I walked through the museum and studied the exhibits, I couldn't stop thinking about what had just happened back in my hometown a few days before--the first African American president of the U.S. had just been elected. It was both hopeful and poignant to be walking through the Civil Rights Museum, a monument to black people's long struggle to be recognized as fully human, fully free, fully American, and fully important to the fabric of American society, in the days right after a black man had been chosen by Americans to lead their country. It made me proud that we had come so far, and sad that it had taken so long.

Four years later, I'm glad Obama has been given another four years to lead us. I think we still have a long way to go in this country--for black Americans, for women, for gay people, for poor people, for Hispanic and Latino Americans, and for so many others--and I think Obama is the one most likely to get us a little closer to a better, fairer, and stronger country, one that better represents people like me, a female American, and many of the people I met while traveling across America and around the world.

Economically am I better of now than I was 4 years ago? Yeah. I am. I don't have a steady paycheck, and I'm still not sure if my business is going to break even someday much less be successful. That's all part of the gamble I took 4 years ago. But do you have any idea how much richer I feel for all the places I've seen and the people I've met? Do you have any idea how it feels to travel abroad and have folks in those countries actually speak favorably of your president, maybe even of your own country and culture? Do you have any idea how valuable the contact with all these people and places of the last 4 years of my life has been to me--regardless of what they think or know about where I come from in the world? There's no number large enough I could put on it in dollars or any other currency. I think I'm so wealthy in memories of adventure, so lucky in my experiences.

Here's the thing. In the four years I've been traveling, I've met enough people to convince me it's a small world after all, small enough to give you the sense that you can never really escape who or what you're running from, no matter how far you go. And I've met enough people to convince me it's truly a great, wide world, impossible to summarize or categorize. It's as if even the strangest people and places in the world have something familiar about them, yet even the most familiar are ultimately unknowable. I was scared that first night I stepped onto a Greyhound bus--real scared. And I stayed scared through most of the trip--and through most of my travels anywhere. Traveling didn't take away my fears about the world. It made me come to terms with them.

Traveling is scary--especially for a woman on her own. Traveling is an adventure--because it's often scary and impossible to fully plan out or control. But fear is something you'll find in all parts of the globe, and in everybody's heart, no matter who they are, where they come, or where they're going to. Everyone is afraid. The point is to accept your fears...and keep on despite them. Accept and expect fear--but don't let it rule you. It's just one feeling you'll have--whether you're traveling or sitting at home. But if you can feel it, and all your other emotions, while visiting some really beautiful places, meeting interesting people, tasting different foods, hearing new kinds of music, standing under a sky with the same moon as back home but different constellations--if you can feel afraid doing all that, well why not just go ahead and do anything, go anywhere. When it comes to being human, a distant place is no different than a near one. You're gonna be who you are, suffer your limitations and worries and hopes and messy, complicated feelings, wherever you are. So might as well change up the scenery once in awhile if you can't change yourself.

I started traveling--and want to continue traveling--because it makes me feel free and closer to my full potential. Based on what I've seen and learned while traveling, it makes me feel calm. It makes me feel safe. I feel more at home in many places than just one spot. To me diversity is truth, and so traveling is truth. If the next four years go anything like the last four years, I think I'll be pretty happy and satisfied. I think I'll consider myself a pretty lucky person.

Me in Bisbee, Arizona, 2008, Greyhound trip, eyes wide shut

Friday, November 2, 2012

All Souls Rich And Poor: Chicago's Graceland Cemetery

Eternal Silence by Loredo Taft
Graveyard angel
Crematorium and headstone on All Souls Day
Today is All Souls Day. In the traditional calendar of the Catholic Church, this is the day set aside to remember and pray for the dead. In the U.S., we don't hear much about this day. As soon as midnight strikes on Halloween night, we forget celebrations of all things ghostly and ghoulish, without a moment's thought for our dearly departed, and turn our minds immediately to the next big American holiday--Thanksgiving. The contrast between the two celebrations of All Souls Day and Thanksgiving is striking and reveals a lot about the cultures that celebrate one over the other. If Thanksgiving is about giving thanks and praise for what you've got, All Souls Day is about giving thanks and praise for what you've lost. It's the difference between reflecting on what you have versus reflecting on what you've had that is now gone.

Grave of John Kinzie, first permanent settler of European descent in Chicago
Egyptian-inspired mausoleum of railroad magnate Darius Miller in Rosehill Cemtery in Chicago

Celtic cross marking burial site of A.C. McClurg, Civil War general and original publisher of the first Tarzan books
Americans don't like to dwell too much on death and loss. Our culture is a youth-worshipping one that puts the focus on what you can acquire, gain, and win in life, the pursuit of happiness or riches or power or, to be fair to many of my countrypeople, maybe just a decent roof over your head, a good education, a satisfying job, and three squares a day. In any case, it's a culture that doesn't like to think about what's missing and can never be had again.

In other cultures, it's just the opposite. In countries like Spain, Mexico, Haiti, Ireland, and many more with a strong Catholic history, the first days of November are given over to honoring those who came before us, all our departed friends and family and ancestors. Some of these countries celebrate with parties and fiestas, special masses, and visits to the local cemeteries to decorate or leave mementos at the graves. Depending upon the culture, it can be a surprisingly upbeat and colorful celebration or a more somber one. Either way, it's just a way to acknowledge and pay respect to the most inevitable fact of life--the end of it.    

Cemetery in Galicia in Spain, few days after All Souls Day

This year I planned to visit one of Chicago's most famous (and haunted) cemeteries on Halloween, snap a few pictures, write a post about it. Well, I didn't make it to the graveyard that day--and maybe it's for the best, since visiting a cemetery on Halloween is not exactly a very original idea. Valhalla knows how many other people I would've encountered there. Not to mention that the cemetery I'd planned on visiting--Graceland Cemetery, on Chicago's north side--usually has a few organized tours of the graveyard going for Halloween.

So I waited until today, All Souls Day, a quieter day since it's mainly a forgotten day in the American calendar. I went to Graceland and my parents came with me. None of us are new to Graceland Cemetery. My father's grandparents are buried there in fact, in graves with flat, almost sinking headstones in a far back corner of the vast cemetery grounds. They aren't next to each other for some reason, the graves of my great-grandfather Karl Ostberg and great-grandmother Anna Ostberg. And Karl's is backed up against a wall, above which the city's Red Line el train rumbles by all day and well into the night.

My great-grandfather Karl's grave in Graceland Cemetery, Chicago

Scraping fall leaves of Anna's grave in Graceland

My parents looking for Karl and Anna's graves, el train passing by above
The very humble graves of my great-grandparents (who immigrated to America from Norway) make a striking contrast to much of the rest of the graves in Graceland. Because along with poor, immigrant nobodies like my kin, Graceland is the resting site to industry and architecture bigwigs such as Marshall Field, Henry Harrison Getty, Potter Palmer, Louis Sullivan, and Daniel Burnham--to name just a few. The graves of these gentlemen and other powerhouses like them are both mighty and intricate in design--in a city known for its pioneering architecture, many of the graves and tombs at Graceland are architectural wonders in themselves. Thus, Halloween is not the only day when people gather for walking tours of this place, and my own family's familiarity with the cemetery extends beyond the forgotten corner where my great-grandparents lie.

I think there are two kinds of parents in this world: the kind of parents who take their kids to visit dead people for fun and the kind of parents who don't. Happily, I was raised by the former variety. Growing up (and to this day) I never did things like snorkeling or water skiing, and rarely did my family even visit amusement parks. Instead our family vacation activities have involved tracking down an old Irish immigrant ancestor's grave in unconsecrated ground in Iowa, the final resting places of Wild Bill Hickock and Calamity Jane in Deadwood, South Dakota, the monument to President Taft that no one bothers to even walk in the direction of in Arlington National Cemetery (where everyone is too busy paying their respects at the Kennedy gravesite, which, yes, we also visited), soldiers' graves at various Civil War battlefields throughout the former Union and Confederacy, dead poets' graves, dead pets' graves, Elvis's grave in that other Graceland, Abraham Lincoln's tomb in downstate Illinois, and the crumbling old headstones of long-gone patriots Paul Revere and Crispus Attucks. When we weren't grave hunting all over the USA, we were enjoying summer afternoons roaming around Graceland. I loved visiting Graceland Cemetery. Apart from the sense of pride that we actually had family buried at such a famous Chicago tourist attraction (which Graceland indeed is), my brothers and sisters and I liked to scare each other at the graveyard's spookier-looking tombs.

My sister Arla, me, and my brother Eric at the Pullman Memorial in Graceland, 1980s
My sister sitting on a headstone, Arlington National Cemetery, early 1970s
Havin' a good time in Graceland, Chicago, 1980s
Graceland Cemetery is a bit of a freaky place. When my dad was growing up (and going to nearby Lake View High School), he and other kids were able to climb over the cemetery walls in search of ghosts at night. These days, there's a barrier of barbed wire stretched all along the top of the wall to keep people from getting in after visiting hours. It keeps the riff-raff out, but only the living, human kind. Coyotes have been known to haunt Graceland (I saw one myself today--what kind of omen do you think it is to see a coyote in a graveyard on the day of the dead?), and of course ghosts.

The cheerful tomb of Ludwig Wolff

Wolff's tomb half-buried at Graceland Cemetery

Is that Ludwig Wolff's howling midnight guard...or just a city coyote?

Coyote (behind tree) in Graceland on All Souls Day
Two more canines, one headless, in Graceland
One of the creepiest graves is a tomb built partly underground that belongs to the very Grimm-ishly named Ludwig Wolff, a German coppersmith. Legend says a large, green-eyed wolf guards the tomb at night and has been heard howling during full moons. (Sure that wolf isn't just one of the Graceland coyotes, ghost hunters?) Competing with the Wolff tomb in creepiness is a statue at the other end of the cemetery of a tall, green, Grim Reaper-like figure, a sculpture called Eternal Silence by the artist Loredo Taft that marks the burial site of an early Chicago hotel owner named Dexter Graves. This statue is truly unsettling. It's a pity you can't go into the cemetery after dark to get the full freak-out experience of it. It used to be said that the statue was haunted in such a way that it couldn't be photographed or captured on film. Check the pics below to see how well that story holds up.

Statue at Dexter Graves's burial site--ghost in the reflection?
Me gettin' cozy with Death
I think the grave that affected me the most, that stayed in my thoughts for days after seeing it as a kid, was the one of a little girl named Inez Clarke who died at the age of 6 in 1880. Her grave is of a life-size marble statue of the girl, sitting with a little parasol inside a glass case. The glass case was prone to vandalism for a time--when I was young I remember seeing it broken by a bullet or BB hole. Why would someone shoot at the little girl in the glass box, I remember wondering when I was young. Was that how she died? In fact, it's not clear how Inez Clarke died--some say she died from tuberculosis, others say she was struck by lightning. It's said her statue sometimes goes missing from the case at night, especially during bad storms, only to be found in its proper place the next morning.

Statue of Inez Clarke, died age 6, at her grave

The little girl in the glass box

What she sees...when she's there
Apart from hauntings, many of Graceland's graves and tombs are quite imposing. Piano and organ man William Kimball's grave is a classical monument with giant columns and an angel--whose face is missing oddly enough, given the other details of the statue are largely still visible and unweathered. The grave of super-rich Potter Palmer, founder of the beautiful Palmer House hotel in downtown Chicago, one-ups Kimball's monument with a full classical-style temple with 16 Ionic columns and granite sarcophagi. Palmer's monument is located on the edge of a small lake in the cemetery that features a tiny island, reached by a wooden bridge, where the graves of Daniel Burnham and his family are found. Burnham is the man who essentially made Chicago into the stunning city it is today--an architect and urban planner who developed a plan for the city at the start of the 20th century that included an accessible lakefront (accessible to the city's people as a whole and not just privately available to the rich) and parklands and green space for every neighborhood. Burnham's island is a lovely spot, and a mecca for young architecture students and urban planners. Once while walking around the cemetery with my friend Shirese, we were coming back across the bridge from Burnham's island when we saw a car pull up and a young bride and groom, with their parents and a photographer, jump out of the car. The bride wore a white dress and sneakers, and she and her groom quickly crossed the bridge to get their picture taken at Burnham's grave. "Wow," my friend Shirese said once we were out of earshot of the little group. "Talk about 'til death do us part'."

Kimball Memorial in Graceland

Faceless angel at Kimball's grave

Potter Palmer's monument

View of Palmer monument from across lake in Graceland
Daniel Burnham's grave on an island on the lake in Graceland
The accessibility of Burnham's grave (and his vision of Chicago) stands in contrast to George Pullman's resting place. Pullman's monument looks like a stripped-down version of Kimball's, with no angels and only one column. But beneath this elegant memorial is Pullman's coffin covered in tar and asphalt, sunk in a giant concrete block, covered over with railroad ties and more concrete. His burial supposedly occurred at night under the protection of armed guards. Pullman was a pretty unpopular fellow. An industrialist who invented the railroad sleeping car (called the Pullman car), Pullman was notorious for mistreating his workers by demanding they live in his own company times at high rents with low pay that left them often penniless once their rents and food costs (bought at the company store) were deducted. His employees eventually went on a strike that pitted railroad workers against railroad magnates, the latter of whom were ultimately backed up by the federal government. Pullman died in 1897, only 3 years after the strike, and bitterness and hard feelings were still strong among his former employees (who'd all lost their jobs and were replaced by new workers forced to pledge not to join any union).

Pullman's memorial--more complicated than it looks

Private eye Allan Pinkerton's obelisk

Epitaph on Pinkerton's grave

Headstone of Timothy Webster, a Pinkerton detective

Memorial to Pinkerton employees, some of whom spied on Pullman's workers
Other impressive graves include those of former Chicago Daily News publisher Victor Lawson, whose site features another sculpture by Loredo Taft, this time of a crusading knight; and the world's first ever private detective Allan Pinkerton, whose obelisk grave bears a touching (if maybe a bit overdone) dedication that begins "A Friend To Honesty, A Foe To Crime." (It should be noted that while Pinkerton was responsible for heroic feats such as uncovering an early plot to assassinate Abraham Lincoln, his detectives also became hated for working as spies later on for the likes of George Pullman against union workers and organizers.) Meanwhile one tomb in the cemetery, known as the Getty Tomb, which houses the bodies of lumber magnate Henry Harrison Getty and his wife, has been designated a city landmark. A big cube of a tomb with delicate ornamentation, it was designed by the great architect Louis Sullivan--who also rests in Graceland, originally (and ironically) in a poor man's grave. Despite his genius (and his later tremendous influence), Sullivan died penniless. Today his original grave is flanked by a still modest but much more fitting monument that, like Burnham's grave, attracts devoted architects, artists, designers, and urban planners, who leave coins on the headstone to show their appreciation for his pioneering work.

Loredo Taft's Crusader marking newspaper publisher Victor Lawson's grave

Crusader for the truth

The Getty Tomb, designed by Louis Sullivan

Louis Sullivan's pauper's grave

Monument built for Sullivan 5 years after his death

Tribute to the great architect
Coins left for Louis Sullivan; the design on the side of the monument is meant to evoke the skyscrapers common to Sullivan's 20th-century urban vision

Just as modest is the grave of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, another important architect whose grave--a plain slab of black granite--can easily be passed by unnoticed. The great boxer Jack Johnson, the first black fighter to win the heavyweight world championship, also lies beneath a simple headstone that doesn't even reveal his first name or birth and death dates. The only way a visitor can tell its Johnson's grave is by noticing the much smaller headstone of his first wife, Etta, whose marker reads "Beloved Wife Of Jack Johnson." Throughout his career, Jack Johnson was the target of intense racism, as were many of his fans who took pride in his achievements. Perhaps the most humble grave of anyone in Graceland with famous connections is...or was, that of English novelist Charles Dickens's younger brother Augustus. Augustus left England for America in the 1850s, abandoning a blind wife and arriving in Chicago with a pregnant girlfriend, the daughter of an Irish barrister. He had some success initially in various jobs, but he and his family were poverty-stricken by the time he died from tuberculosis in 1866. He was buried in a grave marked only with a small, flat round stone with a number on it--not even a name. That was his headstone, if you can even call it that, for over a century. Only in 2004 was a proper headstone erected bearing his name and those of his girlfriend and three of their children, paid for by his descendants and the Chicago Dickens Fellowship, a kind of Charles Dickens fan club.

Boxer Jack Johnson's monument with his wife Etta's headstone in foreground


Where Charles Dickens's brother lies

New headstone marking grave of Augustus Dickens, brother of Charles Dickens, The English Author
Augustus Dickens's spanking and spiffy new headstone got me thinking about the humble burial plots of my great-grandparents on the other side of the cemetery--up against the wall, disturbed by the rumble of the el all day, gradually sinking in the cemetery's soft earth. Perhaps I can get a Chicago Ostberg Fellowship going that can help fund nicer headstones for my ancestors? Why not? Dickens schmikens, I'm a writer too after all. Karl and Anna Ostberg, Great-Grandparents of René, The American Blogger...The Girl Traveler. I would indeed appreciate an appreciation club someday. Until then, I'm proud to have kin resting in such a beautiful graveyard, where my family hasn't forgotten them, All Souls Day or no All Souls Day. I think they even get more visitation than some of the bigwigs in Graceland do. Nobody leaves coins at their graves, but we put memories on paper and film, and I put these blog posts up, telling the stories of my amazing family.

Angel and sphinx marking tomb of a former beer baron

Pyramid tomb of the brewer

Honestly? This is the creepiest thing in the cemetery to me.

Headstones of German immigrants in Graceland

Headstone of the dancer Ruth Page, in Graceland

Poor Man's Grave?

That's another way of looking at death, I suppose. In Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago

Civil War soldiers' graves in Rosehill

Me at Ludwig Wolff's tomb, laughing at death but eyes shut with fear

Do

Too late for this guy