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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
November 6, 2009
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Friday, November 6, 2009
Funeral of Pietro Viani Held on City Island in the Town of Pelham in
1875
Yesterday I posted to the Historic Pelham Blog a sad account of the
gunshot suicide of a promising young man during his recitation of a scene
from Phaedra in front of a large crowd on City Island in 1875. See:
Thursday, November 5, 2009:
A Shocking Suicide During a Performance on City Island in 1875.
Today's posting provides an account of the funeral of the young man who
was buried on City Island. The account is followed by a citation to its
source.
"FUNERAL OF THE ITALIAN SUICIDE.
SERVICES AT CITY ISLAND YESTERDAY - SERMON BY REV. MR. MONSELLI - BURIAL
ON THE ISLAND.
The funeral of Pietro Viani, the young Italian artist who committed
suicide at the Congressional picnic on Tuesday last, took place at City
Island yesterday afternoon at 1 o'clock. Among those present were the
Italian Consul, Ferdinand De Lucca, Dr. R. Ogden Doremus and family, and
other friends of the deceased. The remains were inclosed in a plain
rosewood coffin, with the inscription:
PIETRO VIANI.
Died August 31st, 1875.
Upon the casket was a rich and varied display of floral offerings
contributed by friends of the deceased and residents of the island. It
had been the wish of those having the funeral in charge that the services
should be performed by a Roman Catholic priest, the Viani family belonging
to that Church, but although repeated applications were made to several of
the Catholic clergy in this City, the latter in every case either refused
or evaded the request. The duty thereupon devolved upon Rev. Mr. Monselli,
a Protestant Episcopal clergy resident on the island, who read the prayers
appointed by the Episcopal liturgy, and in conclusion offered a few
remarks upon the nature of the act by which the deceased had terminated
his life. The reverend gentleman though that there could be no reasonable
foundation for the assumption that the dead man had knowingly and, with a
full sense of its sinfulness, committed the rash deed which hurried him
into eternity. Everything went to show that he was at the time suffering
from a sufficient amount of monomania to place his death out of the
category of ordinary suicides. The case was, in many of its aspects, a
remarkable parallel to that of Hugh Miller, the great Scottish geologist.
In both instances the so-called suicides, while preserving an outward show
of reason, were laboring under the delusion that enemies were seeking
their lives and were thus led, for purposes of self-defense, to provide
themselves with the weapons which were afterward so fatally used against
themselves. The speaker alluded in a feeling manner to the high talents
and bright prospects of the deceased, and added his own eulogium upon the
good qualities of the departed which had come under his personal
observation during the period preceding the fatal event. The body was
interred in the cemetery on the island, where it awaits the disposition of
the family, who have already been notified by telegraph."
Source: Funeral of the Italian Suicide, N.Y. Times, Sep. 4, 1875,
p. 5.
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Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:38 AM
Comment
Click Here to View the Blog Posting for November 6, 2009.
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