A Detroit Cigar Baron's Mausoleum Was Stripped by Thieves, But No One Ever Told the Family
The mausoleum built for Susan Burns' grandfather, Oscar Rosenberger, owner of the once-famous San Telmo Cigar Company in Detroit, was ransacked at Woodmere Cemetery. The thieves stole the ornate copper doors and a stained-glass window, leaving the family landmark designed by architect Albert Kahn damaged and exposed.
Burns found out about the theft while browsing online and is devastated. "I just found out about this, and I'm devastated," she says. "They desecrated a sacred landmark, and I'm the only one left to find out about this." The theft occurred in late 2012 as part of a broader wave of graveyard crimes at Woodmere Cemetery.
Thirteen years later, on Tuesday, I visited Woodmere Cemetery and discovered that the damage had not been fully sealed. The front of the Rosenberger mausoleum, where the copper doors once stood, had been boarded up. However, a rear opening where the stained-glass window had been removed was still open to the elements.
Theft at Woodmere Cemetery is part of a broader trend of vandalism targeting century-old mausoleums and other metal memorials. A year earlier, vandals toppled headstones and destroyed statues across the cemetery. The 250-acre cemetery in southwest Detroit is also home to the resting place of mayors, senators, judges, authors, lumber barons, and Civil War soldiers who were moved there after Fort Wayne was razed.
Burns, who lives in Florida, says she is incensed that no one from the cemetery notified her. "It's disgusting, and they did nothing," she says. "I can't believe this. How dare they?" Burns contacted me after coming across a story I wrote about the theft in January 2013.
Everstory Partners, a Florida-based company that purchased Woodmere in October 2023, declined to discuss specific incidents or family issues publicly. However, Alan Byrd, a spokesman for Everstory Partners, says the company is working hard to improve conditions at Woodmere.
"This is unacceptable," Burns says. "They need to fix that mausoleum." The damage caused by the theft will be difficult to repair and the loss of the stained-glass window is irreplaceable. Burns is now looking for a lawyer to file a lawsuit against the cemetery owners, arguing they should have tried to locate surviving relatives and alert them to the theft.
The situation highlights issues with the management of cemeteries in Detroit. Everstory Partners has faced criticism from families at other cemeteries across the country. In Charlotte, N.C., a family filed a lawsuit against Everstory over conditions at York Memorial Park, while a couple sued the company in Virginia due to "extremely disrespectful" conditions at Roosevelt Memorial Park.
The situation is another example of how broken promises and lack of communication can lead to devastating consequences for families who entrust cemeteries with their loved ones' final resting place.
The mausoleum built for Susan Burns' grandfather, Oscar Rosenberger, owner of the once-famous San Telmo Cigar Company in Detroit, was ransacked at Woodmere Cemetery. The thieves stole the ornate copper doors and a stained-glass window, leaving the family landmark designed by architect Albert Kahn damaged and exposed.
Burns found out about the theft while browsing online and is devastated. "I just found out about this, and I'm devastated," she says. "They desecrated a sacred landmark, and I'm the only one left to find out about this." The theft occurred in late 2012 as part of a broader wave of graveyard crimes at Woodmere Cemetery.
Thirteen years later, on Tuesday, I visited Woodmere Cemetery and discovered that the damage had not been fully sealed. The front of the Rosenberger mausoleum, where the copper doors once stood, had been boarded up. However, a rear opening where the stained-glass window had been removed was still open to the elements.
Theft at Woodmere Cemetery is part of a broader trend of vandalism targeting century-old mausoleums and other metal memorials. A year earlier, vandals toppled headstones and destroyed statues across the cemetery. The 250-acre cemetery in southwest Detroit is also home to the resting place of mayors, senators, judges, authors, lumber barons, and Civil War soldiers who were moved there after Fort Wayne was razed.
Burns, who lives in Florida, says she is incensed that no one from the cemetery notified her. "It's disgusting, and they did nothing," she says. "I can't believe this. How dare they?" Burns contacted me after coming across a story I wrote about the theft in January 2013.
Everstory Partners, a Florida-based company that purchased Woodmere in October 2023, declined to discuss specific incidents or family issues publicly. However, Alan Byrd, a spokesman for Everstory Partners, says the company is working hard to improve conditions at Woodmere.
"This is unacceptable," Burns says. "They need to fix that mausoleum." The damage caused by the theft will be difficult to repair and the loss of the stained-glass window is irreplaceable. Burns is now looking for a lawyer to file a lawsuit against the cemetery owners, arguing they should have tried to locate surviving relatives and alert them to the theft.
The situation highlights issues with the management of cemeteries in Detroit. Everstory Partners has faced criticism from families at other cemeteries across the country. In Charlotte, N.C., a family filed a lawsuit against Everstory over conditions at York Memorial Park, while a couple sued the company in Virginia due to "extremely disrespectful" conditions at Roosevelt Memorial Park.
The situation is another example of how broken promises and lack of communication can lead to devastating consequences for families who entrust cemeteries with their loved ones' final resting place.