Although the Capitol Hill cemetery belongs to an Episcopalian church, Congress gave it the name Congressional—inscribed across its arched iron gate—in honor of the many early members of Congress who are buried there. Fourteen senators and 42 representatives are interred in Congressional Cemetery, together with Vice President Elbridge Gerry; the designer of the Capitol, William Thornton; and various congressional staff members, diplomats, journalists, and American Indian chiefs who died while in Washington. From 1820 to 1870, Congress erected stubby-looking sandstone cenotaphs (empty tombs) in Congressional Cemetery in memory of deceased members who were not buried there. The practice ended after Senator George F. Hoar (Republican-Massachusetts) complained that the cenotaphs were so ugly that they added a new terror to death. Establishment of Arlington National Cemetery during the Civil War made Congressional Cemetery less fashionable, and over time it became one of the least known and least visited historical sites in Washington. Congressional Cemetery is located at Potomac Avenue and E Street in Southeast Washington.


