March 10: Charles Schieren

March 10: On this date in 1915, Charles Schieren, who had served as mayor of the City of Brooklyn, died. On the next day, his wife Mary, who had been nursing him, also died. A bronze sculpture, by Solon Borglum, “The Angel of Death,” was erected at their graves.

March 9: Do-Hum-Me

March 9: Do-Hum-Me, daughter of a chief of the Sac tribe, became the toast of New York City but was soon struck down by disease and died on this date in 1843. P.T. Barnum paid for her gravestone.

March 8: Henry Ward Beecher

March 8: “The Great Divine,” Rev. Henry Ward Beecher of Plymouth Church in Brooklyn Heights, who, according the the Pulitizer Prize-winning biography had been “The Most Famous Man in America” only to be diminished by scandal, died on this date in 1887.

March 6: Louis Comfort Tiffany

March 6: On this date in 1957, fire destroyed Louis Comfort Tiffany‘s magnificent mansion, Laurelton Hall, in Oyster Bay on Long Island; much of his art there was destroyed, but a good deal of it was salvaged.

March 3: “Boss” Tweed

March 3: “Boss” Tweed, who in a long career made his name synonymous with corruption and theft from the public coffers on a massive scale, was born on this date in 1823.

March 1: Leopold Von Gilsa

March 1: Civil War Colonel Leopold Von Gilsa, a Prussian soldier who came to America and fought for the Union, then sold pianos after the war, died on this date in 1870.