
Old Mission Mausoleum
Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kansas, USA
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Get directions 3424 E. 21st Street N
Wichita, Kansas 67208 United StatesCoordinates: 37.72426, -97.29674 - Cemetery ID: 1911906
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The Old Mission Mausoleum was built over a 36-year time span and consists of four units, with Mr. Sidney Lovell, architect of Chicago in charge. Construction of Unit One began May 1919, with a cost set at $200,000. It was to be 128 feet long and 60 feet wide, with 500 crypts. The building was to be of the old Spanish architecture style.
Unit Two construction followed in 1929, with this unit being of the same general type as the main building and about half its size. Bedford limestone is the exterior covering used throughout, along with Vermont marble and bronze trim as interior materials, and upon completion will contain 300 crypts.
Unit Three was completed in 1939 and is a mirror image of Unit Two, being 30 x 120 feet and runs north and south, starting on the east side of Unit One, it contains 320 crypts.
During the 1950's, Mr. Saxton completed this long project with the start of the fourth and final unit of the complex. Unit Four is the largest of the units with 1114 crypts. Again the same materials and attention to detail were used in this final phase of construction. Viewing the mausoleum today, it gives the appearance of being constructed as one continuous project. The Bedford limestone has weathered evenly over the passing of time, and today if viewed from the air the building is a rectangle with a courtyard in the middle.
The Old Mission Mausoleum was built over a 36-year time span and consists of four units, with Mr. Sidney Lovell, architect of Chicago in charge. Construction of Unit One began May 1919, with a cost set at $200,000. It was to be 128 feet long and 60 feet wide, with 500 crypts. The building was to be of the old Spanish architecture style.
Unit Two construction followed in 1929, with this unit being of the same general type as the main building and about half its size. Bedford limestone is the exterior covering used throughout, along with Vermont marble and bronze trim as interior materials, and upon completion will contain 300 crypts.
Unit Three was completed in 1939 and is a mirror image of Unit Two, being 30 x 120 feet and runs north and south, starting on the east side of Unit One, it contains 320 crypts.
During the 1950's, Mr. Saxton completed this long project with the start of the fourth and final unit of the complex. Unit Four is the largest of the units with 1114 crypts. Again the same materials and attention to detail were used in this final phase of construction. Viewing the mausoleum today, it gives the appearance of being constructed as one continuous project. The Bedford limestone has weathered evenly over the passing of time, and today if viewed from the air the building is a rectangle with a courtyard in the middle.
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- Added: 18 Feb 2003
- Find a Grave Cemetery ID: 1911906
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