Cardinal George to be buried next to his parents in All Saints Cemetery
By Angie Leventis Lourgos And Manya Brachear Pashman
Chicago Tribune
April 17, 2015
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-cardinal-george-funeral-arrangements-met-20150417-story.html
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Cardinal Francis George presides over the 100th anniversary Mass at St. Wenceslaus Parish in Chicago on Dec. 30, 2012. |
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Cardinal Francis George proceeds out of Holy Name Cathedral for the final time as Chicago's archbishop Nov. 16, 2014. |
Cardinal Francis George will be buried in the George family plot at All Saints Cemetery & Mausoleum in suburban Des Plaines, where his parents, Francis J. and Julia R. George, were laid to rest.
His funeral arrangements include a public visitation beginning at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Holy Name Cathedral, and a funeral at noon Thursday, which will require a ticket to attend, the archdiocese said.
A modest, light gray gravestone marks the burial site of George's parents and a third relative. Julia George died in 1983, her husband a year later.
All Saints, which was consecrated in 1923, lies west of the Des Plaines River and is divided by River Road south of Central Road. Cardinal George dedicated the cemetery's Immaculate Heart of Mary Garden Mausoleum on July 30, 2001.
According to the catholiccemeterieschicago.org, the oldest part of the cemetery, All Saints East, opened in 1923. All Saints West was opened in 1954, and in 1961 it became the site of the first interment chapel building in archdiocesan cemeteries. In July, a 30-foot-tall shrine honoring Our Lady of Guadalupe will be dedicated at the cemetery.The cemetery is also the final resting place of Hall of Fame baseball broadcaster Harry Caray, legendary DePaul University basketball coach Ray Meyer and Robert Edward Ringling, president of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Combined Circus, among other notables.George's immediate predecessor, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, is encrypted in Bishops' Mausoleum at Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Hillside along with many other late leaders of the archdiocese, including Cardinal John Cody; William Quarter, the first bishop of Chicago; and Patrick Feehan, the first archbishop.
Contact: eleventis@chicagotribune.com,mbrachear@chicagotrib
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