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EARLY
TRADITIONS -
Since the earliest beginnings of man on this planet, other
humans have buried bodies of dead humans.
Archeologists have found shallow graves dug by hand or
crude tools. In later dated graves, they have found flowers
carefully placed on the body of the deceased.
In more recent human history, they have found ancient
graves into which tools, hunting weapons and food baskets have
been carefully placed. For
thousands of years, humans have believed that a dead human body
deserves decent and respectful treatment.
In
the 17th century in Europe care of the deceased was
undertaken by the family. They
washed and dressed the body, laid-out the body of a period of
time in the home, dug the grave, conducted a service
acknowledging the life that had been lived by the deceased, and
finally, they buried their loved one. Bodies were not embalmed.
This European tradition came to America with the original
Pilgrims and became the foundation for the American funeral
tradition.
THE
WAKE –
Methods of confirming death were crude. Stories of burying life
persons were not uncommon.
In an attempt to prevent premature burial, families would
sit by the body for several hours or a few days watching to see
if the person awakened. This
became known as the “wake”.
In the Jewish tradition, this became a religious ritual
known as the “watching”.
They even have special benches used exclusively for this
ritual purpose. During
the wake or watching, families would be joined by friends.
Today, this tradition is carried on in the form of the
“viewing” or “visitation”.
OUTSIDE
SERVICES -
In the late 18th century the care of the dead began
to be handed over to persons outside the family: cabinetmakers,
church sextons and owners of livery services.
Each professional had something special to offer.
The cabinetmakers crafted coffins.
Furniture stores sold coffins and related funeral
merchandise. The church sextons laid-out and managed graveyards
next to the church, and the livery operators had wagons in which
to carry the deceased to the graveyard.
It is from these four professions that most family owned
funeral service businesses began in the United States.
Embalming was rarely utilized.
EMBALMING
- Dr. Gannal of France introduced a method of embalming using
the arterial system of the body and a concoction of chemicals
that provided some form of preservation.
Although not widely accepted or used, the idea caught the
attention of enough practitioners that it was kept alive until
the Civil War.
During
the Civil War Thomas Holmes, an entrepreneur, advanced the
concept of arterial embalming and improved the preserving
chemicals to the point where embalming could be employed on a
wide scale at a reasonable cost.
He approached the U.S. Government and obtained exclusive
rights to embalm Union soldiers so they could be shipped home
for burial in their home communities.
Not one to miss an opportunity to make money, Holmes
employed salesmen to canvas homes in both the North and the
South to sell coupons for embalming to the families who had sons
fighting in the war.
As
armies gathered for the typical huge Civil War battles, Holmes
and his crew would set-up camp nearby overlooking the
battlefield. At the
conclusion of the battle his men would search the thousands of
dead bodies for embalming coupons.
Those found with coupons would be carried to the nearby
embalming tents for preparation and shipment back home to their
families. Thus
began the tradition of embalming in the United States.
Although
available, many families did not take advantage of embalming,
and there were no laws or regulations requiring it before
burial. That
changed with the sanitation movement that swept through America.
Following epidemics in large communities – often due to
water supplies contaminated by unembalmed bodies buried in a
nearby churchyard, communities and states began to pass laws
requiring embalming before burial.
Virginia passed the first embalming laws in 1894. In many
communities, the burial grounds were moved to the edge of the
community and away from the water supply as an additional
precaution.
UNDERTAKERS
- In the mid-19th century those persons selling
funeral merchandise began to undertake additional services –
they became known as “undertakers”.
Beyond merchandise (coffins, etc.) they provided laying
out services, coffining, funeral direction and transportation.
Coffins were made of wood in the shape of a human body
– wide at the shoulders, narrowing toward the feet.
Few coffins had any external hardware.
Today we provide caskets, a rectangular box made of metal
or wood with a cloth interior and exterior hardware.
FUNERAL
HOME ORIGINS
- Although families were most often responsible for the care and
burial of their family members, they needed a source of funeral
merchandise. Most
often, they would go to town to the local furniture store and
purchase a wood coffin. At
that time, coffins were considered another piece of furniture or
cabinetry. If you
examine a photo of the inside of 19th century
furniture store you will often see coffins standing on end at
the back of the furniture store ready for purchase just like a
piece of furniture. As
time passed, these stores expanded their funeral offerings to
include door badges, rental chairs etc.
This is why many of the nation’s funeral businesses
began as furniture stores.
Moore Funeral Home began as Moore & Fergerson
Furniture & Undertaking next to the Lark Theatre on Main
Street in Brazil in 1885.
Another
common origin for funeral business is the livery service.
Throughout America liveries provided assistance with
funerals by offering transportation.
It was an obvious extension of their existing business
utilizing their teams of horses and buggies.
By adding a horse drawn hearse, they found themselves in
the funeral business.
Miller and Sons Funeral Home began as Miller Livery on S.
Franklin Street in Brazil in 1898.
Wakes
and funerals continued to be conducted in the family home.
FUNERAL
PARLORS/HOMES
– Immigrants arriving in America took up residence in the
large cities and lived in small apartments.
When those families experienced the death of a family
member, they had no parlor in which to hold the wake.
In response to that need, businessmen in the large cities
opened funeral parlors that families could rent for their wake
and funeral. In the
outlying communities like ours, the tradition of home based
wakes and funerals continued until the early 1900’s when
undertakers began offering their homes for wakes and funerals
– so came the American funeral home.
TRANSPORTATION
– Earliest American funerals utilized family and friends
acting as pallbearers to carry the coffin to the graveyard.
Then came the use of simple wagons – soon replaced by
fancy carved wood horse drawn hearses – black for adults and
white for children. Here
in Clay County the Moore family sent one of their horse drawn
hearses to Whitestown, Indiana, where the hearse box was removed
from the buggy frame, attached to a motorcar and returned to
Brazil for use as Clay County’s first motorized hearse.
My grandfather told me that we had to keep the horse
drawn hearse for a few more years because some families objected
to having their deceased family member carried to the cemetery
in one of those new motor machines.
CLAY
COUNTY FUNERAL SERVICES
– Like most communities, Clay County experienced an explosion
of undertaking business – most often in existing furniture,
cabinetry or livery businesses.
Currently there are five funeral homes in Clay County
with only Moore Funeral Home remaining under the ownership and
management of the original founding family.
·
Sherfey & Kidd furniture
and undertaking opened in 1868
·
Jessie Decker undertaking - where Gasway sporting goods
bldg. is located
·
Philip Woolf (from Center Point)/Mr. Stigler on National
Ave. & Sherfey St.
1889 to 1890
·
Daughtery & Leavitt livery & undertaking on S.
Meridian St.
·
Moore
& Son Funeral Home
- Wm. W. Moore & George B. Fergerson Furniture &
Undertaking
established 1885 next to Lark Theatre on Main St.
·
Moved to 118 National Ave. between Clay Co. Historical
Museum and Eagles
Lodge
in 1916 –
·
Moore Funeral Home moved to Smith family Victorian home
at 142 N.
Washington
St. in 1946 – existing building doubled in size in 2001
·
Four generations of ownership and management – Wm. W.
Moore Sr., Wm. W.
Moore
Jr., Robert (Bob) T. Moore and currently Robert (Rob) D. Moore
·
George R. Schultz 1896 livery and undertaking –
·
Charles R. Schultz and Richard A. Lawson in 1901
·
Lawson & Miller in old M&M Restaurant bldg. in
1902
·
Emanuel Miller Livery & Undertaking on S. Franklin in
1898
·
Lawson & Miller separated in 1906
·
Miller & Son Funeral Home / Emanuel Miller and sons
Harlan and Nick in 1906
·
Millers moved to W. E. Carpenter home in 1942 -- closed
in 1985
·
French’s reopen Miller & Sons Funeral Home as French
Funeral Home in 1995
·
Miller
Memorial Chapel
opened by Bob Miller & Tom Miller in 1980
·
Lawson and Son Funeral Home
1926
·
Richard A. Lawson and son George R. Lawson
·
Lawson
– Slack Funeral Home
when Phil Slack became owner
·
Betty Slack continued as owner following Phil Slack’s
death
·
French’s purchased Lawson-Slack Funeral Home in 2000
·
Carbon
- Siner and Woods
Siner bought out James Woods – until 1902 - Siner &
Pell
(Wm.
H. Pell) – until 1911 - Wm. H. Pell & son Robert Pell
furniture & undertaking –
until 1949 --
closed
·
Harmony
- John Thomas or Thomas Thomas south of National Road near Odd
Fellows
Building.
·
Poland
- Ben Shopenhorst and Orval Spelbring – Hardware, furniture
& undertaking
·
Cory
- Allie Glick
- bought out by Bill Fox
·
Bowling
Green -
William Tapy Furniture & Undertaking
1862
·
Harry Moon and Beamer
1913 - Charles Rentschler bought them out in 1923
·
Andrew Miller late 1800’s
·
Philip Woolf started in CP Woolf Bros. Furniture &
Undertaking then moved to Brazil
1889
– 1890
·
Center
Point -
Charles Rentschler bought
out Woolf Bros. and changed name to
Rentschler
Funeral Home 1905-1934 -
Brent Rentschler
1934 – 1961 - Fred Rentschler
1961
– 1969 - Bought out by Phil Slack & closed
·
Clay
City -
Charles Hurst - sold to Brent Rentschler - sold to Ben
Shopenhorst and changed
name
to Shopenhorst Funeral
Home - sold to
Max Pierce - sold to Phil Slack (Betty
Slack)
and renamed Lawson-Slack Clay City Chapel - sold to French’s
in 2000 and
renamed
Shopenhorst Funeral Home.
The
Modern Funeral Home
-- Today’s funeral home bears little resemblance to the early
“funeral parlors”. The
modern funeral home incorporates new facilities in compliance
with state and federal regulations, and while the traditional
funeral services and merchandise continue to be provided, the
modern funeral home offers many additional services – before,
during and after the funeral.
Examples include pre-planned funerals, funeral trusts and
continuing care through bereavement care programs.
Our
family believes that a funeral is not a great financial
investment; it is a sad moment in a family’s history.
It is not a hedge against inflation; it is a rite of
passage. It is not
a retail sales event; it is an effort to make sense of our
mortality. It has
less to do with accounting profits and much more to do with
actual losses. It
is not an exercise in salesmanship; it is an exercise in
humanity.
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