Cemitério Green-Wood (Portuguese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Cemitério Green-Wood" in Portuguese language version.

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books.google.com

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green-wood.com

nps.gov

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  • «Green-Wood Cemetery». National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. 14 de setembro de 2007. Consultado em 8 de maio de 2016. Arquivado do original em 24 de dezembro de 2007 

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  • Collins, Glenn (1 de abril de 2004). «Ground as Hallowed as Cooperstown; Green-Wood Cemetery, Home to 200 Baseball Pioneers». The New York Times. Consultado em 8 de maio de 2016. Before A-Rod and Jeter, there were J-Creigh and Woodward. That would be James Creighton, Jr., the world's first true baseball star, and John B. Woodward, an outfielder who became a Union general in the Civil War. Both played for the Excelsior Club – sort of the Yankees of the early 1860s – and now both reside in the Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. ... Mr. Nash discovered some monuments, like that of Duncan Curry, by sheer chance, while walking through the cemetery. Curry, first president of the Knickerbocker Baseball Club, is immortalized with a monument that proudly dubs him Father of Baseball because he headed the club that scholars say first codified many of the game's rules. ... Another Green-Wood resident, DeWolf Hopper, a thespian, delivered a rendition of the Ernest Thayer poem, Casey at the Bat, shortly after it was published in 1888, and proceeded to perform it more than 10,000 times over the next half-century. One of his six marriages was to a Hollywood socialite who took his name: Hedda Hopper. At Tulip Hill, the imposing granite vault of the three Patchen brothers – Sam Patchen (shortstop), Joe Patchen (right field) and Edward Patchen (infielder) – is the only crypt of early baseball players, the Alou brothers of their time. ... A happier story is that of Charles J. Smith, one of the great players of the 1860s, Mr. Richman said. He was buried in a seemingly unmarked grave at Green-Wood. But investigation by a grounds crew discovered his monument last year, a few feet underground, where it had sunk. It has now been restored. 

nytimes.com

  • Daniel B. Schneider (24 de maio de 1998). «F.Y.I.». New York Times. Consultado em 11 de agosto de 2011 

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pqarchiver.com

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web.archive.org

  • «Green-Wood Cemetery». National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. 14 de setembro de 2007. Consultado em 8 de maio de 2016. Arquivado do original em 24 de dezembro de 2007