Restvale Cemetery
Cemetery in Alsip, Cook County, Illinois, US
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Restvale Cemetery is in Alsip, Illinois, United States, a suburb southwest of the city of Chicago. A number of Chicago blues musicians, educators, and notable people are buried there.
Established1927
Location
11700 S. Laramie Ave, Alsip, Illinois
CountryUnited States
TypeHistorically Black
Restvale and Burr Oak were the last two historically black cemeteries to open in the area; both had their first burials in 1927.
The cemetery is owned by Willie Carter, who through the company Cemecare also co-owns the Burr Oak and the Cedar Park cemeteries.[1]
Notable interments
- John Henry Barbee (1905–1964), blues singer, guitarist[2]
- David Barksdale (1947–1974), leader of the Black Disciples street gang
- Doctor Clayton (1898–1947), blues songwriter and singer
- Nathaniel "Sweetwater" Clifton (1926–1990), professional basketball player
- Lee Cooper (1925–1966), blues guitarist[3]
- Kermit Dial (1908–1982), professional Negro League baseball player
- William Ezell (1892–1963), blues, jazz, ragtime and boogie-woogie pianist and occasional singer[4]
- Jazz Gillum (1904–1966), blues harmonica player[5]
- Arvella Gray (1906–1980), blues, folk and gospel singer and guitarist[6]
- Hip Linkchain (1936–1989), Chicago blues guitarist, singer and songwriter[7]
- Earl Hooker (1929–1970), blues guitarist[8]
- Big Walter "Shakey" Horton (1918–1981), blues harmonica player
- J.B. Hutto (1926–1983), blues guitarist[9]
- Little Johnny Jones (1924–1964), blues pianist and singer
- Moody Jones (1908–1988), Chicago blues musician[10]
- Sammy Lawhorn (1935–1990), Chicago blues guitarist[11]
- Bonnie Lee (1931–2006), Chicago blues singer[12]
- Cripple Clarence Lofton (died 1957), boogie-woogie pianist and singer
- Willie James Lyons (1938–1980), blues guitarist, singer and songwriter[13]
- Samuel "Magic Sam" Maghett (1936–1969), blues musician
- Charles "Papa Charlie" McCoy (1909–1950), blues musician[14]
- Kansas Joe McCoy (1905–1950), blues musician[14]
- Romeo Nelson (1902–1974), boogie-woogie pianist
- James Burke "St. Louis Jimmy" Oden (1903–1977), blues musician, composer
- Archie Pate (1886–1936), professional Negro League baseball player
- Gary Primich (1958–2007), blues musician[15]
- Bobby Robinson (1903–2002), professional Negro League baseball player
- Buddy Scott (1935–1994), blues guitarist[16]
- Charlie Segar (dates unknown), blues pianist and singer, the first to record the blues standard, "Key to the Highway" (1940)[17]
- Pinetop Smith (1904–1929), boogie-woogie pianist
- Willie "Big Eyes" Smith (1936–2011), Grammy Award-winning musician and vocalist
- Freddie Spruell (1893–1956), Delta blues guitarist and singer
- Eddie Taylor (1923–1985), blues guitarist, songwriter
- Theodore Roosevelt "Hound Dog" Taylor (1915–1975), blues musician[18]
- George Washington Thomas (1883–1937), songwriter[19]
- Luther Tucker (1936–1993), blues guitarist[20]
- Washboard Doc 1911–1988), blues musician
- Muddy Waters (1913–1983), blues musician[21]
- Johnny "Daddy Stove Pipe" Watson (1867–1963), blues musician
- Valerie Wellington (1959–1993), actress, opera singer, blues singer
- Tom Williams (1894–1937) Negro leagues pitcher, Chicago American Giants
