<P> The cemetery is a non-profit, non-sectarian burying ground of about 90 acres (36 ha). It is contiguous with, but separate from, the churchyard of the Old Dutch Church, the colonial - era church that was a setting for "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow". The Rockefeller family estate (Kykuit), whose grounds abut Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, contains the private Rockefeller cemetery . </P> <P> Numerous notable people are interred at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, such as: </P> <Ul> <Li> Viola Allen (1867--1948), actress </Li> <Li> John Dustin Archbold (1848--1916), a director of the Standard Oil Company </Li> <Li> Elizabeth Arden (1878--1966), businesswoman who built a cosmetics empire </Li> <Li> Brooke Astor (1902--2007), philanthropist and socialite </Li> <Li> Vincent Astor (1891--1959), philanthropist; member of the Astor family </Li> <Li> Leo Baekeland (1863--1944), the father of plastic; Bakelite is named for him . The murder of his grandson's wife Barbara by his great - grandson, Tony, is told in the book Savage Grace </Li> <Li> Robert Livingston Beeckman (1866--1935), American politician and Governor of Rhode Island </Li> <Li> Holbrook Blinn (1872--1928), American actor </Li> <Li> Henry E. Bliss (1870--1955), devised the Bliss library classification system </Li> <Li> Artur Bodanzky (1877--1939), conductor at New York Metropolitan Opera </Li> <Li> Major Edward Bowes (1874--1946), early radio star, he hosted Major Bowes' Amateur Hour </Li> <Li> Alice Brady (1892--1939), American actress </Li> <Li> Andrew Carnegie (1835--1919), businessman and philanthropist; monument by Scots sculptor George Henry Paulin </Li> <Li> Louise Whitfield Carnegie (1857--1946), wife of Andrew Carnegie </Li> <Li> Walter Chrysler (1875--1940), businessman, commissioned the Chrysler Building and founded the Chrysler Corporation </Li> <Li> Francis Pharcellus Church (1839--1906), editor at The New York Sun who penned the editorial "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" </Li> <Li> William Conant Church (1836--1917), co-founder of Armed Forces Journal and the National Rifle Association </Li> <Li> Henry Sloane Coffin (1877--1954), teacher, minister, and author </Li> <Li> William Sloane Coffin, Sr. (1879--1933) </Li> <Li> Kent Cooper (1880--1965), influential head of the Associated Press from 1925 to 1948 </Li> <Li> Jasper Francis Cropsey (1823--1900), landscape painter and architect; designed the now - demolished New York City Sixth Avenue elevated railroad stations </Li> <Li> Floyd Crosby (1899--1985), Oscar - winning cinematographer, father of musician David Crosby </Li> <Li> Geraldine Rockefeller Dodge, heiress and patron of the arts </Li> <Li> William H. Douglas (1853--1944), U.S. Representative from New York </Li> <Li> Maud Earl (1864--1943), British - American painter of canines </Li> <Li> Parker Fennelly (1891--1988), American actor </Li> <Li> Malcolm Webster Ford (1862--1902), champion amateur athlete and journalist; brother of Paul, he took his own life after slaying his brother . </Li> <Li> Paul Leicester Ford (1865--1902), editor, bibliographer, novelist, and biographer; brother of Malcolm Webster Ford by whose hand he died </Li> <Li> Herman Frasch (1851--1914), engineer, the Sulphur King </Li> <Li> Samuel Gompers (1850--1924), founder of the American Federation of Labor </Li> <Li> Madison Grant (1865--1937), eugenicist and conservationist, author of The Passing of the Great Race </Li> <Li> Moses Hicks Grinnell (1803--1877), congressman and Central Park Commissioner </Li> <Li> Walter S. Gurnee (1805--1903), mayor of Chicago </Li> <Li> Angelica Hamilton (1784--1857), the older of two daughters of Alexander Hamilton </Li> <Li> James Alexander Hamilton (1788--1878), third son of Alexander Hamilton </Li> <Li> Robert Havell, Jr. (1793--1878), British - American engraver who printed and colored John James Audubon's monumental Birds of America series, also painter in the style of the Hudson River School </Li> <Li> Mark Hellinger (1903--1947), primarily known as a journalist of New York theatre . The Mark Hellinger Theatre in New York City is named for him; produced The Naked City, a 1948 film noir </Li> <Li> Harry Helmsley (1909--1997), real estate mogul who built a company that became one of the biggest property holders in the United States, and his wife Leona Helmsley (1920--2007), in a mausoleum with a stained - glass panorama of the Manhattan skyline . Leona famously bequeathed $12 million to her dog . </Li> <Li> Eliza Hamilton Holly (1799--1859), younger daughter of Alexander Hamilton </Li> <Li> Raymond Mathewson Hood (1881--1934), architect </Li> <Li> William Howard Hoople (1868--1922), a leader of the nineteenth - century American Holiness movement; the co-founder of the Association of Pentecostal Churches of America, and one of the early leaders of the Church of the Nazarene </Li> <Li> Washington Irving (1783--1859), author of "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" and "Rip Van Winkle" </Li> <Li> William Irving (1766--1821), U.S. Congressman from New York </Li> <Li> George Jones (1811--1891), one of the founders of The New York Times </Li> <Li> Albert Lasker (1880--1952), pioneer of the American advertising industry, part owner of baseball team the Chicago Cubs, and wife Mary Lasker (1900--1994), an American health activist and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal </Li> <Li> Walter W. Law, Jr. (1871--1958), lawyer and politician, son of Briarcliff Manor founder Walter W. Law </Li> <Li> Lewis Edward Lawes (1883--1947), Reformist warden of Sing Sing prison </Li> <Li> William E. Le Roy (1818--1888), United States Navy rear admiral </Li> <Li> Ann Lohman (1812--1878), a.k.a. Madame Restell, 19th century purveyor of patent medicine and abortions </Li> <Li> Charles D. Millard (1873--1944), member of U.S. House of Representatives from New York </Li> <Li> Darius Ogden Mills (1825--1910), made a fortune during California's gold rush and expanded his wealth further through New York City real estate </Li> <Li> Belle Moskowitz (1877--1933), political advisor and social activist </Li> <Li> Robertson Kirtland Mygatt (1861--1919), noted American Landscape painter, part of the Tonalist movement in Impressionism </Li> <Li> N. Holmes Odell (1828--1904), U.S. Representative from New York </Li> <Li> William Orton (1826--1878), President of Western Union </Li> <Li> Whitelaw Reid (1837--1912), journalist and editor of the New - York Tribune, Vice Presidential candidate with Benjamin Harrison in 1892, defeated by Adlai E. Stevenson I; son - in - law of D.O. Mills </Li> <Li> William Rockefeller (1841--1922), New York head of the Standard Oil Company </Li> <Li> Edgar Evertson Saltus (1855--1921), American novelist </Li> <Li> Francis Saltus Saltus (1849--1889), American decadent poet & bohemian </Li> <Li> Carl Schurz (1820--1906), senator, secretary of the interior under Rutherford B. Hayes . Carl Schurz Park in New York City bears his name </Li> <Li> Charles Sheeler (1883--1965), painter and photographer, and his wife Musya (1908--1981), photographer, are buried together . </Li> <Li> William G. Stahlnecker (1849--1902), U.S. Representative from New York </Li> <Li> Egerton Swartwout (1870--1943), New York architect </Li> <Li> William Boyce Thompson (1869--1930), founder of Newmont Mining Corporation and financier </Li> <Li> Joseph Urban (1872--1933), architect and theatre set designer </Li> <Li> Henry Villard (1835--1900), railroad baron whose monument was created by Karl Bitter . </Li> <Li> Oswald Garrison Villard (1872--1949), son of Henry Villard and grandson of William Lloyd Garrison; one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People </Li> <Li> William A. Walker (1805--1861), U.S. Representative from New York </Li> <Li> Paul Warburg (1868--1932), German - American banker and early advocate of the U.S. Federal Reserve system . </Li> <Li> Worcester Reed Warner (1846--1929), mechanical engineer and manufacturer of telescopes </Li> <Li> Thomas J. Watson (1874--1956), transformed a small manufacturer of adding machines into IBM </Li> <Li> Hans Zinsser (1878--1940), microbiologist and a prolific author </Li> </Ul> <Li> Viola Allen (1867--1948), actress </Li>

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