Santa Barbara Cemetery | |
---|---|
Details | |
Established | July 10, 1867 |
Location | |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 34°25′08″N 119°39′22″W / 34.419°N 119.656°W |
Type | Nonsectarian |
Find a Grave | Santa Barbara Cemetery |
Santa Barbara Cemetery is a cemetery located at 901 Channel Drive in Santa Barbara, California. Founded in 1867, it serves as a nonsectarian cemetery.[1]
Notable interments
- Heather Angel (1909–1986), actress
- Peter J. Barber (1830–1905), architect
- Christopher Bernau (1940–1989), actor
- Scott Cordelle Bone (1860–1936), politician
- Stephen W. Burns (1954–1990), actor
- Walter Capps (1934–1997), politician
- Sabin Carr (1904–1983), pole vaulter
- Curtis H. Castle (1848–1928), politician
- Virginia Cherrill (1908–1996), actress
- Eric Christmas (1916–2000), actor
- Ronald Colman (1891–1958), actor[2]
- Jeanne Crain (1925–2003), actress
- Bradford Dillman (1930–2018), actor
- Leslie Fenton (1902–1978), actor and director
- Norman Gimbel (1927–2018), songwriter
- Al Gionfriddo (1922–2003), baseball player
- Pierpont M. Hamilton (1898–1982), U.S. Air Force general
- Haji (1946–2013), actress
- Domino Harvey (1969–2005), bounty hunter and model[3]
- Laurence Harvey (1928–1973), actor
- Byron Haskin (1899–1984), director
- William Welles Hollister (1818–1886), rancher and entrepreneur
- Tab Hunter (1931–2018), actor
- John Ireland (1914–1992), actor
- Murray Kinnell (1889–1954), actor
- George Owen Knapp (1855–1945), industrialist and philanthropist
- William Lassiter (1867–1959), U.S. Army major general[4]
- Walter F. Lineberger (1883–1943), politician
- Katherine MacDonald (1891–1956), silent-film actress and producer
- Eddie Mathews (1931–2001), baseball player
- John McLiam (1918–1994), actor
- Charles A. Ott Jr. (1920–2006) U.S. Army major general
- Fess Parker (1924–2010), actor[5]
- Suzy Parker (1932–2003), model and actress
- Donald C. Peattie (1898–1964), scientist
- Herb Peterson (1919–2008), American Inventor
- Vera Ralston (1923–2003), figure skater and actress
- Peggy Rea (1921–2011), actress[6]
- Jheri Redding (1907–1998), hairdresser and chemist
- Ivan Reitman (1946–2022), film director
- Mark L. Requa (1866–1937), mining engineer and conservationist[7]
- Kenneth Rexroth (1905–1982), poet
- Marguerite Roberts (1905–1989), screenwriter
- George Rowe (1894–1975), actor
- John Sanford (1904–2003), author and screenwriter
- George Washington Smith (1876–1930), architect and painter
- Thomas M. Storke (1876–1971), politician[8]
- Alan Thicke (1947–2016), singer and actor[9]
- Norma Varden (1898–1989), actress
References
- ↑ History
- ↑ Walking Tour of Santa Barbara Cemetery to Give Peek at ‘Best Last Place’
- ↑ Touring the Santa Barbara Cemetery
- ↑ "French Croix de Guerre Recipients: Surnames L through R". 32d 'Red Arrow' Division During World War I. 32d 'Red Arrow' Veterans Association. April 9, 2016. Retrieved October 21, 2020.
- ↑ Walking Tour of Santa Barbara Cemetery to Give Peek at ‘Best Last Place’
- ↑ Peggy Rea Obituary
- ↑ "Mark Requa Laid to Rest". Los Angeles Times. 1937-03-10. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ Walking Tour of Santa Barbara Cemetery to Give Peek at ‘Best Last Place’
- ↑ Alan Thicke died after aorta artery tore, then ruptured
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.