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Compiled and displayed is a non-inclusive list of notable burials at Queen of Heaven Catholic Cemetery, please scroll down to read some of the biographical information compiled about each individual. Information for this area will be updated periodically as additional information is compiled or updated.
PETER J. FLAHERTY
BIRTH: Jun. 24, 1924
DEATH: Apr. 18, 2005
HOME TOWN: Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh Mayor. Served as Mayor of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1970 to 1977 when he resigned to become Deputy Attorney General in the Carter administration. Later served 12 years as Allegheny County commissioner. Was a maverick mayor who distanced himself from the powerful Pittsburgh Democratic party that had ruled the city since the Great Depression. Lost twice in runs for the United States Senate and once running for Pennsylvania governor.
JOSEPH RICHARD GASPARELLA
BIRTH: Feb. 5, 1927
DEATH: Nov. 21, 2000
HOME TOWN: Apollo
Professional football player. He lettered in basketball and football at Vandergrift High School. He displayed an interest in drawing as a young man, but it was football that captured his attention most forcefully early on. At Notre Dame he started as a physical education major but switched to architecture. He attended classes from 1944 to 1946 and went to the Army for a year. He was selected to the All-Service Team in 1947. In 1948 he was drafted in the 4th round by the Pittsburgh Steelers. Standing 6 feet, 4 inches and weighing 220 pounds, he was plenty big, but not a starter. He played nine games as quarterback that year, returned in 1950, and in 1951 he switched to the blocking back position. He also played briefly with the Chicago Cardinals for a few games in 1951. Around 1950, he traveled on a Fulbright scholarship to Italy, the home of his parents. He spoke Italian fluently and attended the Polytechnical Institute of Milan and University of Perugia. Later, he took graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1963, he came to what was then the Carnegie Institute of Technology as an architecture professor and the head football coach, staying until 1975. He also served as campus architect for Carnegie Mellon from 1975 to 1977. Maintaining a link between athletics and architecture, he oversaw a number of sports-related architecture projects, including the design of Notre Dame's Hall of Fame and the renovation of the Steelers' offices, locker rooms and training facilities at Three Rivers Stadium. He also was integrally involved in coordinating the building of the bronze statue of Steelers' founder Arthur J. Rooney Sr., which went up at Three Rivers in 1990. After working on his own and with Martin Chetlin & Associates in Pittsburgh, Gasparella founded his own firm with several partners in 1987. He retired in 1998, two years after an Ohio-based firm, Fanning/Howey Associates, merged with his business.
BOB PURKEY
BIRTH: Jul. 14, 1929
DEATH: Mar. 16, 2008
HOME TOWN: Pittsburgh
Major League Baseball Player. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he was a pitcher for thirteen seasons (1954 to 1966) with the Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Cardinals. He was a member of the 1961 National League Pennant-winning Reds and appeared in 2 games with a 1.64 ERA during the World Series. His other notable career highlights include three-time selection to the National League All-Star Team (1958, 1961 to 1962) and recording 23 wins during the 1962 season. He was inducted into the Reds Hall of Fame in 1974. In 386 regular season games, Purkey won 129 and lost 115 with a lifetime 3.79 ERA.
* information contributed from Find A Grave and various additional sources