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Mount Auburn Cemetery

Historic cemetery in Massachusetts

Mount Auburn Cemetery

Summary

Historic cemetery in Massachusetts

FieldValue
nameMount Auburn Cemetery
nrhp_typenhld
nocatyes
imageMount Auburn Cemetery - June 2005.jpg
captionThe cemetery in 2005
coordinates
location580 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
locmapinMassachusetts#USA
mapframeyes
mapframe-markerbuilding
mapframe-zoom12
mapframe-captionInteractive map showing the location for Mount Auburn Cemetery
built1831
architectAlexander Wadsworth and Jacob Bigelow
architectureExotic Revival, Other, Gothic Revival
designated_nrhp_typeMay 27, 2003
addedApril 21, 1975
refnum75000254

| mapframe-marker = building | mapframe-zoom = 12 | mapframe-caption = Interactive map showing the location for Mount Auburn Cemetery

Mount Auburn Cemetery, located in Cambridge and Watertown, Massachusetts, is the first rural or garden cemetery in the United States. It is the burial site of many prominent Boston Brahmins, and is a National Historic Landmark.

Dedicated in 1831 and set with classical monuments in a rolling landscaped terrain,

Mount Auburn Cemetery can be considered a link between Capability Brown's 18th century English landscape gardens and Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux's Central Park in New York (1857-1876).

The 174 acre cemetery is important both for its historical aspects and for its role as an arboretum. It is Watertown's largest contiguous open space and extends into Cambridge to the east, adjacent to the Cambridge City Cemetery and Sand Banks Cemetery. It was designated a National Historic Landmark District in 2003 for its pioneering role in 19th-century cemetery development.

History

''Guide Through Mount Auburn'', published in 1854

The land that became Mount Auburn Cemetery was originally named Stone's Farm, though locals referred to it as "Sweet Auburn" after the 1770 poem "The Deserted Village" by Oliver Goldsmith. Mount Auburn Cemetery was inspired by Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris and was itself an inspiration to cemetery designers, most notably at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn (1838), Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia, and Abney Park in London. Mount Auburn Cemetery was designed largely by Henry Alexander Scammell Dearborn with assistance from Jacob Bigelow and Alexander Wadsworth.

Bigelow came up with the idea for Mount Auburn as early as 1825, though a site was not acquired until five years later. – Mount Auburn Cemetery was founded on 70 acre of land authorized by the Massachusetts Legislature for use as a garden or rural cemetery. The original land cost $6,000; it was later extended to 170 acre. The main gate was built in the Egyptian Revival style and cost .

dedicationThe first president of the Mount Auburn Association, Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story, dedicated the cemetery on September 24, 1831. he described the cemetery as a spititual landscape poised between heaven and earth, within which people could learn from the past by directly encountering the deeds of the great, thus connecting the present to the past in the face of dangerous change. Historian Leo Marx describes this as a "middle landscape," which historian Mark S. Schantz calls "a kind of pastoral ideal situated somewhere between the howling forces of raw nature and the corrupting taint of refined civilization." A visit to a rural cemetery, writes Schantz, was designed to be "mystical, emotional, and pleasurable", with the goal, in Story's words, to "cultivate feelings and sentiments more worthy of ourselves, and more worthy of christianity." In this way rural cemeteries contributed to an ordered and well-regulated Christian republic of laws.

Story's speech set the model for many more such addresses in the following three decades. Garry Wills focuses on it as an important precursor to President Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address.

The Mount Auburn Cemetery is credited as the beginning of the American public parks and gardens movement. It set the style for other suburban American cemeteries such as Laurel Hill Cemetery (Philadelphia, 1836), Mount Hope Cemetery (Bangor, Maine, 1834), the country's second oldest garden cemetery; Green-Wood Cemetery (Brooklyn, 1838), Green Mount Cemetery (Baltimore, Maryland, 1839) Mount Hope Cemetery (Rochester, NY, 1838), Lowell Cemetery (Lowell, Massachusetts, 1841), Allegheny Cemetery (Pittsburgh, 1844), Albany Rural Cemetery (Menands, New York, 1844), Swan Point Cemetery (Providence, Rhode Island 1846), Spring Grove Cemetery (Cincinnati, 1844), Forest Hills Cemetery (Jamaica Plain, 1848) and Oakwood Cemetery (Syracuse, New York, 1859), plus others in Cave Hill, Kentucky, Savannah, Georgia, and Little Rock, Arkansas. By the close of the 1850s, one contemporary observer noted that there was "hardly a city or town of any size in the union which does not possess its rural cemetery."

Mount Auburn was established at a time when Americans had a sentimental interest in rural cemeteries. It is still well known for its tranquil atmosphere and accepting attitude toward death. Many of the more traditional monuments feature poppy flowers, symbols of blissful sleep. In the late 1830s, its first unofficial guide, Picturesque Pocket Companion and Visitor's Guide Through Mt. Auburn, was published and featured descriptions of some of the more interesting monuments as well as a collection of prose and poetry about death by writers including Nathaniel Hawthorne and Willis Gaylord Clark.

Because of the number of visitors, the cemetery's developers carefully regulated the grounds: they had a policy to remove "offensive and improper" monuments and only "proprietors" (i.e., plot owners) could have vehicles on the grounds and were allowed within the gates on Sundays and holidays.

In the 1840s, Mount Auburn was considered one of the most popular tourist destinations in the nation, along with Niagara Falls and Mount Vernon. A 16-year-old Emily Dickinson wrote about her visit to Mount Auburn in a letter in 1846. 60,000 people visited the cemetery in 1848 alone.

Buildings

The cemetery has three notable buildings on its grounds. Washington Tower was designed by Bigelow and built in 1852–54. Named for George Washington, the 62 ft tower was built of Quincy granite and provides excellent views of the area. Bigelow Chapel was built in the 1840s and rebuilt in the 1850s, also of Quincy granite, and was renovated in 1899 under the direction of architect Willard Sears to accommodate a crematorium. Its interior was again renovated in 1924 by Allen & Collens. Through all of these alterations, stained-glass windows by the Scottish firm of Allan & Ballantyne were preserved.

In 1870 the cemetery trustees, feeling the need for additional function space, purchased land across Mount Auburn Street and constructed a reception house. This building was supplanted in the 1890s by the construction of the Story Chapel and Administration Building, adjacent to the main gate. The first reception house was designed by Nathaniel J. Bradlee, and is (like the cemetery) listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The second building was designed by Willard Sears, and is built of Potsdam sandstone in what Sears characterized as "English Perpendicular Style". The chapel in this building was redecorated in 1929 by Allen & Collens to include stained-glass by New England artist Earl E. Sanborn.

Today

More than 93,000 people are buried in the cemetery as of 2003. A number of historically significant people have been interred there since its inception, particularly members of the Boston Brahmins and the Boston elite associated with Harvard University, as well as a number of prominent Unitarians.

The cemetery is nondenominational and continues to make space available for new plots. The area is well known for its beautiful environs and is a favorite location for bird-watchers; over 220 species of birds have been observed at the cemetery since 1958. Guided tours of the cemetery's historic, artistic, and horticultural points of interest are available.

Mount Auburn's collection of over 5,500 trees includes nearly 700 species and varieties. Thousands of very well-kept shrubs and herbaceous plants weave through the cemetery's hills, ponds, woodlands, and clearings. The cemetery contains more than 10 miles (17 km) of roads and many paths. Landscaping styles range from Victorian-era plantings to contemporary gardens, from natural woodlands to formal ornamental gardens, and from sweeping vistas through majestic trees to small enclosed spaces. Many trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants are tagged with botanic labels containing their scientific and common names.

The cemetery was among those profiled in the 2005 PBS documentary A Cemetery Special.

Notable burials

Bigelow Chapel

Main article: List of burials at Mount Auburn Cemetery

References

Notes

Further reading

  • Nathaniel Dearborn. A concise history of, and guide through Mount Auburn: with a catalogue of lots laid out in that cemetery; a map of the grounds, and terms of subscription, regulations concerning visitors, interments, &c., &c. Boston: N. Dearborn, 1843. 1857 ed.
  • Moses King. Mount Auburn cemetery: including also a brief history and description of Cambridge, Harvard University, and the Union Railway Company. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Moses King, 1883.
  • Aaron Sachs (historian). Arcadian America: The Death and Life of an Environmental Tradition. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013.

References

  1. (2001). "Heaven: A history". Yale University Press.
  2. "Mount Auburn Cemetery".
  3. 978-0-8014-3761-8
  4. In Story's dedication address,Story, Joseph (1831) [https://archive.org/details/anaddressdelive01storgoog "An Address Delivered on the Dedication of the Cemetery at Mount Auburn, September 24, 1831"] Boston: J. T. & Edward Buckingham
  5. Brophy, Alfred L. [https://ssrn.com/abstract=2304305 "'These Great and Beautiful Republics of the Dead': Public Constitutionalism and the Antebellum Cemetery"]
  6. [[Garry Wills]], ''[[Lincoln at Gettysburg: The Words that Remade America]]''
  7. (1857). "The Cincinnati Cemetery of Spring Grove, Report for 1857". C. F. Bradley, printers.
  8. Dupré, Judith. (2007). "Monuments: America's History in Art and Memory". [[Random House]].
  9. "The Cemetery That Was a 19th Century Tourist Attraction".
  10. "Reading 3: A Place for the Living--Leisure, Learning, and Mourning". National Park Service.
  11. ["NHL nomination for Mount Auburn Cemetery"]({{NHLS url). National Park Service.
  12. "MACRIS inventory record for Mount Auburn Cemetery Reception House (583 Mount Auburn Street)". Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
  13. eBird. 2012. eBird: An online database of bird distribution and abundance [web application]. eBird, Ithaca, New York. Available: http://www.ebird.org. (Accessed: May 16, 2014).
  14. Barth, Gunther. (1989). "The Park Cemetery: Its Western Migration in American Public Architecture: European Roots and Native Expressions". Penn State Press.
  15. Bunting, Bainbridge. (1973). "Old Cambridge". Cambridge Historical Commission.
  16. Carrott, Richard G.. (1978). "The Egyptian Revival: Its Sources, Monuments, and Meaning, 1808–1858". University of California Press.
  17. Douglas, Ann. (1977). "The Feminization of American Culture". Alfred A. Knopf.
  18. {{NRISref. 2007a
  19. Reps, John W.. (1992). "The Making of Urban America: A History of City Planning in the United States'". Princeton University Press.
  20. Rogak, Lisa. (2004). "Stones and Bones of New England: A Guide to Unusual, Historic, and Otherwise Notable Cemeteries". Globe Pequot.
  21. Wilson, Susan. (2000). "Literary Trail of Greater Boston". Houghton Mifflin Company.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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