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CHAPTER TEN
GRANITE, METAL AND LATER MOTIFS
I. THE PERMANENCE OF GRANITE AND THE TRANSITION
Granite replaced marble as the choice for
gravestones because it conformed to the late nineteenth century ideal of
permanence and strength. No longer did poetry and weeping seem necessary.
Instead, the family as a unit desired a monument reflecting their earthly
status. Granite offered the chance to be commemorated forever with
an igneous stone usually quarried in Vermont although the color might vary.
During the 1890's, the idea of perpetual care (endowment) funds for cemeteries
sprang into existence as well. With an endowment, the care of the
graves was relieved from family responsibility (where favoritism or neglect
could be evident) to professionals hired to keep the burial grounds in
manicured condition. The monuments assume even greater mass and height.
Railroads delivered these gravestones to the most remote town or hamlet
and the gradual death of the generation of monument men who were carving
in marble meant that the market shifted to monument companies which merely
sold the gravestone and erected it, but it was carved elsewhere.
The purse became the controlling factor in gravestone selection, rather
than the creative and artistic ability of a local sculptor.
The transition from marble to granite or other
extremely hard stone was gradual, like any transition. But it was
steady and eventually marble was no longer used. One of the most
popular transition gravestones features a draped column with a closed Bible
on top (Illustration 207). These gravestones dot the Boonslick landscape
in the late 1880's and 1890's. Sometimes two, closed books were placed
on top and the fringe size varied, but the basics remained the same.
Christian iconography continued in gravestones
carved in high relief. Excellent examples that illustrate not only
this iconography, but also the transition from locally carved to mass produced,
are two gravestones in New Hope Baptist Church Graveyard (H17) in Howard
County. The 1900 gravestone to Mary Feland (Illustration
208)
features
an open gate with a raised curtain withdrawn into a proscenium arch capped
by a keystone Composite columns hold this arch in position.
A cross and crown occupy center stage. The top of the gravestone
is draped. A tiled floor leads the viewer's eye through the open
gate. The poem underneath contains traditional terminology and reads:
"Like a star of the morning in its route
Like a sun in the Bible to my soul,
Shining clear on the way of love and duty
As I hasten on my Journey to the goal."
The 1906 gravestone to Susie Quinly is identical except for the pictorial
area, showing that these were standard gravestones that were ordered with
different reliefs (Illustration
209). Once again, the arch, keystone,
and columns reveal a rising curtain while in center stage a young woman
clings to a cross while standing upon a cloud. With blowing hair
and billowing skirts, she matches the description from the popular hymn,
Rock of Ages, which states:
" Nothing in my hand I bring, Simply to thy
cross I
cling; Naked, come to thee for dress; Helpless
look to
thee for grace; Foul, I to the fountain
fly, Wash me,
Savior, or I die."1
The word "Rock of Ages" is inscribed beneath the relief and "Life,
Joy, Truth" are inscribed in the column bases and keystone. In the
six years between the gravestones, the poem has disappeared.
Other transitional, granite gravestones contain
this religious theme, but are not carved in relief, being inscribed instead.
An excellent example of this motif is found at Dripping Springs (Disciples
of Christ) Christian Church Graveyard (B22) in Boone County (Illustration
210). Here the gravestone to Lucy Pearl Alspaw, 1904, shows the composite
columns, the arch is now a floral garland wreath in place of a keystone,
and the open gate with a plain banner in center stage. Centered in
the gravestone, the tiled floor assumes a position of importance lacking
in the gravestones discussed above. The final phase of this design
can be seen at Mt. Pisgah Graveyard (B7), which is actually in Audrain
County, but which was the major burial ground for the northern Boone County
residents of Sturgeon during the nineteenth and early twentieth century.
Here in 1916, Mayme Keith was buried (Illustration
211). The front
of this granite block has been smoothed while the rest remains rough hewn.
The composite columns now extend the entire length of the sides and hold
up a small arched top which is fancifully decorated. Gone is the
central gate and floor. Instead, the vital statistics of the deceased
are carved in the area.
For those people who preferred a monument
with classical roots, the monument companies offered a vast array.
Rectangular pedestals with draped, Grecian urns in granite instead of marble,
were naturally popular because only the medium was different. However,
these newer gravestones lacked the marble poetry, reflecting their hardness.
The double gravestone to Adam and Isabella Hendrix (Illustration
212) in
the Fayette Cemetery (H64), in Howard County shows this motif complete
with a granite sarcophagus lid with acroteria. Adam Hendrix was a
Fayette banker and Isabella Hendrix was a noted Methodist church volunteer.
Their son became a Methodist bishop and their home is now the Alumni Building
for Central Methodist College. This is mentioned because for this
couple their life was wrapped up in their religious faith; yet they saw
nothing amiss with this classical type of gravestone.
Many family gravestones were centered on the
lot by the turn of the century and then smaller gravestones were placed
at the head of the individual graves. These large monuments often
combined different themes as can be seen in the Finks gravestone (Illustration
213) in Roanoke Cemetery (H5) in Howard County. Here a rough hewn
gravestone features a central scroll with a Masonic emblem, a composite
Corinthian column to the right and a ribboned palm branch to the left.
The palm branches were popular during Puritan days and symbolized the palm
of Victory.2 On Puritan gravestones usually the hand of God could
be seen holding the palm. Here a ribbon serves the function.
Other gravestones of this era might contain IOOF chains or flowers or some
other fraternity or sorority symbol. The gravestone might be an unusual
color. The gravestone to the Nixon family (Illustration
214) in Pilot
Grove Cemetery (C37) in Cooper County is a shade of dark, jade green.
For limited budgets, the Victorian world offered
several standard gravestones which were repeatedly placed throughout the
Boonslick (Illustration
215). A typical example is the gravestone
to W. P. and Martha S. Delano in Pilot Grove Municipal Cemetery (C37) in
Cooper County. Martha died in 1889 and W. P. lived until 1914; the
gravestone was obviously erected after Martha died as the death date for
W. P. is carved differently. A square column, the top is capped with
a bell like object upon which sits another abstracted Grecian urn.
Another common gravestone featured a round globe sitting upon a cupped
depression (Illustration
216). This motif was used in the marble
gravestone to Leona Havter (Illustration 156
and
IIlustration 157) in Boonsboro (Disciples
of Christ) Christian Church Graveyard dating from 1863, but in these gravestones
the globes or balls become the decoration in themselves.
II. THE URGE TO AGGRANDIZE
Victorians were excessive. Their homes
were large and rambling, their funerals were splendid but their years of
mourning were unending, and even their gravestones became monuments to
money. The results could be restrained (Illustration
217) as shown
in the gravestone to the Hulz family in Columbia Cemetery (B38) in Boone
County or as eclectic as the bulbous and ponderous gravestone to James
and Sarah Turner (Illustration
218) in Mt. Pisgah Cemetery (B7).
Here a ponderous gazebo overpowers a square pedestal, a relic carried forward
from the marble columns of the past. Not all of this type were so
ponderous. Three gravestones to the Lowry family (Illustration
219)
show how the same style could feature some restraint. These were
made by E. Farley of Columbia which may account for their appearance because
he was classically trained.
For those who desired height, the granite
column to James and Mary Estill (Illustration
220) in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery
(H71) near New Franklin serves as an excellent example. Capped with
the standard, draped Grecian urn, the column is about twice the height
of marble columns of the same style. Granite columns and obelisks
of this type can be found over the entire Boonslick region. All share
the same sense of height and the urge to aggrandize since they are usually
placed prominently upon a lot close to the road.
For those who sought uniqueness and had the
necessary funds, several options were available. The gravestone could
be as simple as the 1912 gravestone (Illustration
221) to James O. Finks
in Washington Cemetery (H47) in Glasgow in Howard County. Here a
laurel wreath rests upon ferns with a festooned ribbon. The 1882
gravestone (Illustration
222) to Martha Gordon Clinkscales in Columbia
Cemetery (B38) in Boone County, is a large capped Grecian urn placed upon
a rock pile with floral wreaths, scrolls, and drapery. The Richardsonian
Romanesque impulse in the rock pile contrasts with the delicate arrangement
of the floral wreath and the other flowers festooning the monument.
The daughter of an old Columbia family and the wife of another successful
Columbia citizen, Martha's gravestone reveals a shift from purely classical
to a varied format.
Emphasis upon the Classical returns in 1912
in the twenty foot tall monument erected to Laura Speed Elliott (Illustration
223), in Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) in Boonville in Cooper County.
A Roman sarcophagus rests upon four Doric columns with Greek meanders underneath,
garlands, and a large Ionic volute at the top. The junior high school
in Boonville is named for this Cooper County women who came from the family
that settled the village of Speed. Thus, money was easily available
to purchase the type of gravestone desired.
III. GRAVESTONE MOTIFS
These motifs are numbered as found in Table
3 in
Chapter 6
where the different motifs of gravestones are discussed
and categorized.
17. FEMALE FIGURES
As shown in Table 3, around the turn of the
century, female figures appear on gravestones in the Boonslick region.
Prior to this time, two marble statues had already been erected (Illustration
39
and
Illustration154).
Chapter 7
discusses the possible Bingham connection
to one of these monuments. These later, mass produced female figures
are carved in a much harder stone than the monuments of Bingham's time.
The 1896 monument to the Massie family (Illustration
224) in Washington
Cemetery (H47) in Glasgow in Howard County is typical. A woman dressed
in ancient Grecian clothing with sandals and long hair, sits upon a bench.
Her left hand is placed on her cheek in the pose of the Thinker by Rodin.
In the right hand she holds the traditional floral, funeral wreath.
She is not crying, but is reflecting. Larger than lifesize, the placement
of this gravestone on top of the hill immediately inside and to the left
of the front gate gives double visibility and this placement was no doubt
chosen with the urge to aggrandize in mind.
Three young women in the Boonslick were immortalized
by their parents and husband with statues of a young female placed upon
their graves. The best example (Illustration
225) is the gravestone
to Magdalene Chinn in Rocheport Cemetery (B34) in Boone County. She
died in 1912; the gravestone sits upon a rusticated base with her name
and vital statistics underneath the actual sculpture. A young woman
stands in front of a rocky craig, wearing loose flowing clothing.
Body form is clearly delineated as her knee and leg are visible.
She looks downward and carries a bouquet in her right hand. A headband
around her forehead accents her hair. She is barefooted and carefully
steps upon the rocks.
In Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) in Boonville
in Cooper County, three female figures stand on three adjacent lots (Illustration
226). These statues were used in an essay written by Marie Bell McCoy
who grew up nearby.
"They are still the living quarters for the most
mournful of mourning doves. Across all the years, the
cry of the mourning dove, no matter where I heard it,
it took me instantly to a spot beneath those trees and
I looked upon an almost Greek landscape. For there was
'statuary' in abundance in our graveyard,--of the
whitest marble and of really good workmanship.
This is against the green yard under the cypress trees
and was pretty close to ancient History, in that
forbidding black volume with its innumerable
illustrations of sculpture of antiquity. I think
nothing of any consequence was omitted from that
book with the exception of Leda and the Swan...."3
The final two, female figures are also found
in Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) (Illustration 227
and
Illustration 228). These
were erected by two sisters, Nadine Nelson Leonard and Margaret Nelson Stephens Johnston. Their ancestors included the Wyan and Gibson,
as well as the Nelson, Stephens and Leonard families, who were instrumental
in the establishment of cemeteries in Boonville. Nadine built Ravenswood,
an extravagant mansion twelve miles south of Boonville in Cooper County
while Margaret married Lon V. Stephens and became First Lady of Missouri
around 1900. Both women outlived their spouses and were in charge
of the construction of these monuments featuring female figures.
Nadine Nelson Leonard had a mausoleum placed underground with the section
above ground featuring a young woman pensively leaning against the monument
tablet. In 1923, Margaret Nelson Stephens erected only a large gravestone
at the head of the grave. She chose a granite monument with the inscription
written on the east side. The gravestone sits upon a granite base
that features steps. On top of the gravestone sits a woman in antique
dress with her hands quietly folded in her lap. Her hair is rolled
up into a headband and is not long like the other female figures in the
Boonslick. The writing underneath her states, "Weeping may endure
for a night. But joy cometh in the morning." The emphasis is
rapidly turning to the twentieth century ideal of invisible death.
No longer is the message one of grief for years, with all the attendant
rites of mourning; instead, the message proclaimed is that joy will shortly
return. For Margaret this was true. Shortly after erecting
this gravestone, she married a man thirty years her junior and moved to
Florida where she already spent the winters. Two years later, she
died and was buried in Walnut Grove Cemetery.4 In keeping with the
standards of family unity and appearance still desired in the Boonslick
in 1929, Margaret's last name from her second marriage was omitted from
the gravestone and is only written in the office records; it does not show
in the cemetery.
The use of female figures on these gravestones
follows the trend of using female figures as allegories. This was
a well established custom; the differences came in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth century use of these female figures as allegories of
purity and virtue. As defined by the Victorian world view, the role
of women in the late nineteenth century was restricted to reproduction
and family life. Young women were especially adulated since they
contained the greatest potential for reproduction. The Gibson girl
was a popular female figure, always young and virtuous, even if flirtatious.
Ironically, the more limited the world became for women, the more they
were allegorized as ethereal creatures.5 The decade of the 1920's
changed this perspective and the last female figure in the Boonslick dates
from 1923 and was erected by an older widow, Margaret Nelson Stephens who
then promptly remarried. This last female figure is a mature woman,
not a young female.
18. METAL MONUMENTS (GRAVESTONES)
Twelve monuments (gravestones) made of metal
were bought in the three county Boonslick area in the period 1888 through
1912. Each county contains monuments made of metal. Barbara
Rotundo has written an excellent article, "Monumental Bronze: A Representative
American Company," which is in the newly published Cemeteries and Gravemarkers:
Voices of American Culture, edited by Richard Meyer. Rotundo explains
that the common term for these gravestones is "white bronze", but that
they are actually pure zinc.6 Salesmen filled orders and each order
was custom made by putting together several mass produced pieces, identical
in concept to pattern book houses and marble columned gravestones.
Only the medium was metal. The disadvantage was that people could
only look at a catalogue unless there was already a monument of this type
nearby.
But to many citizens, this metal monument
represented progress and an improvement over Nature, the opposite of Romanticism.
This belief was so prevalent that it is even discussed in the popular turn
of the century novel, Laddie, by Gene Stratton-Porter. This book
was especially recommended for young women to read and shows the importance
placed upon cemeteries as part of the female role. The gravestone
discussion follows:
"Mother was using the fine comb, when she looked
up, and there stood Mrs. Freshett. We could see at a
glance that she was out of breath, too. From the way
she panted she might have been chasing ducks herself.
'Have I beat them?' she cried.
'Whom are you trying to beat?' asked mother as she
told May to set a chair for Mrs. Freshett and bring her
a drink.
'The grave-kiver men,' she said. 'I wanted to get
to you first.'
'Well, you have,' said mother. 'Rest a while and
then tell me.'
But Mrs. Freshett was so excited she couldn't
rest....
'It's two men sellin' a patent iron kiver for to
protect the graves of your dead from the sun an' the
rain.'
'Who wants the graves of their dead protected from
the sun and rain?' demanded my mother sharply. 'Do
they carry a sample?'
'Jest the length and width of a grave. They got
from baby to six-footers sizes. They are cast iron
like the bottom of a cook stove on the under side, but
atop they are polished so they shine somethin'
beautiful.'"
The discussion continues and Mrs. Freshett reveals that she desires to purchase one for her dead son, Henry, if everybody else in the neighborhood does so Henry will have the same respect as the others in the cemetery. She had been saving money to buy her living daughter an organ, but she could use it for a metal grave cover if needed. The Mother solves the dilemma by saying,:
'What good would the cover do?' asked mother. 'The
sun shining on the iron would make it so hot it would
burn any flower you tried to plant in the opening; the
water couldn't reach the roots, all that fell on the
slab would run off and make it that much wetter at the
edges. The iron would rust and grow dreadfully ugly
lying under winter snow. There is nothing at all in
it, save a method to work on the feelings of the
living, and get them to pay their money for something
that wouldn't affect their dead a particle. I wouldn't
think of such a thing. Save your money for an
organ."7
The mother is definitely practical, but the novel points up the social
status seeking of the late nineteenth cemeteries.
Yet, the styles offered in the catalogues
from the monument companies were always conservative and ranged from plain
tablets, to inverted torches discussed earlier, to Bibles. Of the
twelve monuments in the Boonslick, seven are of standard full size of at
least six feet in height while five are smaller. The Western White
Monument Company, Des Moines, Iowa, which was the source for all the signed,
white bronze monuments in the Boonslick began production in 1886.8
Table 4 shows these unusual grave markers.
| TABLE 4
METAL MONUMENTS |
||
| Cemetery | Person Commemorated | Date* |
| Union Graveyard (B3) | Charlie & Bessie Tatum (brother & sister) |
1890 |
| Mt. Pisgah Graveyard (B7) | John Rucker | 1889 |
| Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) | Perry and Kueckelhan
families 3 metal markers |
1890* |
| New Salem Baptist Church
Graveyard (B60) |
Martin family | 1900* |
| Lamine Graveyard (C6) | Minnie Harris | 1889 |
| Boonville Catholic Cemetery
(C11) |
John & Mary Foley | 1889 |
| Washington Cemetery (H47) | Thomas & Ann Morehead | 1902 |
| Richland (Disciples of Christ)
Christian Church Graveyard (H51) |
John Wells | 1897 |
| Locust Grove Baptist Graveyard (B10) | Plaque Removed | No Date |
| Mt. Pleasant Cemetery (H71)
|
Our Darling | |
*Date is approximate since the plaques could be inserted into the metal
marker as needed and thus several probably were added at a later date.
The largest of these white bronze monuments is designed
for Major John Fleming Rucker (Illustration
229)
and can be found in Mt.
Pisgah Graveyard (B7). This metal obelisk features a different panel
on each of the four sides. The panels contain an anchor, flowers,
Grecian women, and the Masonic emblem. Plus, there is tasseled drapery,
a rusticated base, abstracted foliage, and Rucker's name in high relief
formed to look like wooden sticks. Not to be outdone, the poem at
the bottom reads:
"Tis hard to break the tender cord
When love has bound the heart
Tis hard, so hard, to speak the words
Must we forever part?Dearest one, we have laid thee,
In the peaceful grave's embrace.
But thy memory will be cherished,
Till we see thy heavenly face."
The Kueckelhan family, which was one of the
three founding families of Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) in Cooper County,
also had a white bronze monument. A monument made by Western White
Bronze Co. of Des Moines, Iowa, graces the grave in Lamine Graveyard (C6)
of Minnie Lee Harris who died in 1889 (Illustration
230). This particular
monument is eight feet tall and more refined than the monument to Major
John Rucker. A traditional obelisk capped by an urn rises from a
square pedestal, only in metal instead of marble. A metal rusticated
base is at the bottom and throughout arabesque scrolling provides accents.
In the Catholic Cemetery and Boonville Reformatory Burial Ground (C11)
in Cooper County, a six foot metal monument done in the traditions of those
above is topped with a cross, showing that white bronze could be adapted
to any religious group.
The smaller, metal monuments mark the graves
of both adults and children. One says simply, "Our Darling," and
nothing else. One three foot monument to the Tatum children in Union
Graveyard (B3) in Boone County is almost identical to the monument to Minnie
Lee Harris, only three feet in height, rather than eight feet. Some
illness must have killed Charlie D. and Bessie E. Tatum in August 1890.
Teen aged brother and sister, their grieving family erected a double metal
monument to them with a long song of praise:
"Yet again we hope to meet thee,
When the day of life is fled,
Then in Heaven with Joy to greet thee,
Where no farewell tear is shed.Dearest children, thous hast left us
Now thy loss we deeply feel
But tis God who hath berefit us
He can all our sorrows heal."
At Richland (Disciples of Christ) Christian
Church Graveyard (H51), the monument to John Wells (Figure #212) is also
three feet tall and much squatter. The entire surface of this monument
looks like a large, rough hewn stone block, an interesting Victorian use
of metal to replicate stone. In Washington Cemetery (H47) in Glasgow
in Howard County, Thomas and Ann Morehead have a white bronze, three foot
tall, metal monument with rounded windows containing the vital statistics
with an abstracted snowflake above (Illustration
231). This metal
monument shows how the individual plates were screwed into position as
seen by the screws above the names. This has proven to be one of
the worst problems with this type of monument because often there is rusting
or moisture around the screws.
Just as gravestones featured female figures,
white bronze, metal monuments did not want to be outdone. The 1912
monument to the Martin family
(Illustration 232) in New Salem Baptist Church
Graveyard (B60) in Boone County reveals a white bronze monument shaped
like a granite, Roman sarcophagus with composite columns, rusticated base,
stick lettering for the name, and a raised sarcophagus lid. On top
of the lid, a winged angel kneels with her hands folded in prayer and her
right elbow on her upraised, right knee. Even the feathers of her
wings are clearly delineated. She rests upon a pile of rocks, probably
another reference to the Rock of Ages theme which was so popular during
this time period (Illustration
233).
19. THE AGRARIAN IDEAL: WOODMEN OF THE WORLD
As the world of the late nineteenth century
shifted more and more from an agrarian base before the War Between the
States to an industrial nation by World War I, the country began to idealize
a world already slipping from grasp. Naturally, farmers were particularly
distressed by this change and sought ways to idealize rural life.
Fitting well into this climate of idealization was Joseph Cullen Root of
Lyons, Iowa, who organized the fraternity, the Modern Woodmen of the World.
Root was a small businessman and a lawyer who had devoted his energies
to fraternalism throughout his career. He designed an initiation
with scenes set in a forest and a Roman court. By chance, he heard
a sermon about a man clearing a forest, and from it he named his new group.
Being liberal in theology, he intended to found a fraternity that would
bind together Protestant, Catholic and Jew. In 1883, he began his
crusade with a limited solicitation to the twelve "healthiest" states of
the union (healthiest was defined by Root as those with the strongest agrarian
culture): Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Michigan,
Kansas, North and South Dakota, Missouri, Indiana and Ohio. Because
he believed that physically fit members could be found only in small towns
and on farms (in keeping with the idealization of rural life already in
progress around the country), Root refused membership to men in cities
such as Chicago or St. Louis even though their states had chapters.
Membership was limited to white males between 18 and 45, and the membership
list specifically excluded men who followed certain professions, including
saloon bartender, professional football player, railway engineer, and a
soldier in the regular army in times of war. One of the main benefits
of this organization was the life insurance policy available to members.
By 1889, 40,000 people had purchased this option.
The Modern Woodmen of the World fraternity
underwent an internal fight and in 1890 Root was deposed. He moved
to Omaha where he set up a group known as Woodmen of the World.
This group also sold life insurance and gravestones.9
"The membership creed of both fraternities
supported the concept of a right to the dignity of a marked grave.
A policyholder could, therefore, arrange to have a monument engraved with
the Woodmen of the World logo erected on his grave, the cost covered by
a modest rider on the holder's insurance policy."10
In the Boonslick, the two competing fraternities
joined together and had prosperous camps, as local chapters were called,
in the Boonslick region. Pictures show the members enjoying picnics
near Gooch's Mill in Cooper County (Illustration
234). Like the fraternity,
the gravestones epitomized the virtues of a naturally growing, rural world,
ironically covering the graves of the very segment of the society rapidly
plowing up every piece of uncultivated land.
Because of the symbolism of the fraternity,
the gravestones featured the theme of trees and Nature. The earliest
gravestone is a cenotaph to four members of the Rollins family (Illustration
235) in Columbia Cemetery (B38) in Boone County. The earliest member
died in 1842 and the last in 1886, the apparent year the gravestone was
erected. There is no Woodmen of the World or Modern Woodmen of the
World logo, but these early gravestones do not features such symbols.
The tree trunk alone denotes the fraternal organization. A cut stump
rests upon a pile of
rocks upon which ferns are growing. Centered
in the middle of the base of each of the four sides of these rocks are
medallions filled with information about the four members of the Rollins
family. Climbing up the tree stump are vines while lilies sprout
at the base of the tree. Throughout the trunk, branches have been
loped off. The idea of branches being loped off was popular in the
literature of the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Lovers
in novels and magazine articles often talked about parting from each other
for a set period of time with the statement that they were "loping off
the branches" in order to have better fruit in the future.11
This concept is continued in the 1889 memorial
gravestone to Agnes Green Walker at Pleasant Green United Methodist Church
Graveyard (C49) in Cooper County (Illustration
236). Here the tree
trunk is compressed into a gravestone only two feet tall and one and one
half feet wide at the base, a very small size. The trunk is devoid
of foliage, but does have vines with no greenery roped around the tree.
The rock base has regular vines.
By the end of the 1880's, the concept of vines,
trees and a quasi-religious theme led to some extremely unusual combinations.
One of these stands in Pilot Grove Municipal Cemetery (C37) in Cooper County (Illustration
237). An identical gravestone marks two graves in Union
Cemetery in Lee County, Illinois, 100 miles west of Chicago and dates from
the same decade showing the universality of this theme. The one in
Illinois marks the grave of a minister and his wife who were married over
fifty years, while the one in Pilot Grove marks the graves of two youthful
brothers, Willie and Harry Day. In both gravestones, a large book
representing a Bible is open and laid on the tree trunk which forms a reading
stand. Inscribed into the open leaves (which even contain a tuck
in the page at the upper right corner) are the vital statistics.
Vines run up the trunk and branches have been loped off. The base
of the trunk is uneven and not completely circular, realistically replicating
a tree trunk.
This realism continues in an 1889 gravestone
where a potted lily is shooting upward against the right front part of
the tree trunk (Illustration
238). A member of the Page family is
buried at Richland (Disciples of Christ) Christian Church Graveyard (H51)
with this gravestone. Two branches have been loped off and the trunk
is scorched, an area stripped smooth of the bark appearance where the vital
statistics are written. The lily is reminiscent of the African stink
pot lily which was considered quite a curiosity and was grown by Victorian
gardeners as something exotic.10 Only a botanist could say if this
is truly a representation of such a plant, but it blends in with the known
provenance of horticulture at that time.
Joseph Hume died in 1894 and was buried in
a community cemetery (H49) in Howard County (Illustration
239). Erected
over his grave was a 5 1/2 foot tall tree trunk with vines and flowers
climbing upward from the base to the top and three loped branches.
The base is rusticated on the other three sides while the vital statistics
are on the smooth front. The flower is reminiscent of a pumpkin flower
or some sort of garden vegetable variety.
The most elaborate of these trees is the gravestone
to Waller and Nancy C. Prewitt Pattrick in the Harrisburg Cemetery (B15)
in Boone County. Nancy was the daughter of Frederick Moss and Nancy
Johnston Prewitt who had the Bingham connection. Naturally by the
time Waller and Nancy C. Prewitt Pattrick died in 1896 and 1899 respectively,
George Caleb Bingham had been dead for about twenty years since he died
in July 1879.13 But the Prewitt estate and the resultant bank connection
meant the couple had discretionary income to spend on such an elaborate
gravestone (Illustration
240). About ten to twelve feet in height,
the tree has several loped branches, but also contains one branch which
is wrapped around the trunk. The base has a stone bench attached
to the tree. On the bench are two closed books and a potted lily
identical to the one in the above example. A section of the front
trunk has been scorched as if peeled by lightening to reveal the vital
statistics of the couple (Illustration
241). On the lowest loped
branch on the right side, a stone woven basket filled with garden flowers
hangs from the cut branch. The top of the tree is uneven suggesting
it was struck by lightening and destroyed, a metaphor for a life ended.
At Locust Grove United Methodist Church Graveyard
(B36) in Boone County two Woodmen of the World gravestones for a husband
and wife, Jack and Nora Hays, are placed side by side to resemble a forest.
Scrolls are unrolled from loped off branches while the tops of the trees
are uneven, giving the appearance of being blasted by lightening.
Ferns grow at the bottom of the trunk and the base is larger than the top.
Although the Pattrick gravestone is the tallest,
a memorial cenotaph in the Boonsboro (Disciples of Christ) Christian Church
Graveyard (B54) in Howard County has the largest bulk (Illustration
242).
Erected in memory of Virgil Searcy who drowned in the 1903 flood of the
Missouri River and whose body was never recovered, this tree trunk is sawed
off evenly at the top and has the Woodman of the World seal directly in
the middle front. The tree trunk tapers downward, the opposite of
reality and rests upon four sawn logs, in front of which ferns grow, vines
trail and lilies bloom. In the lower front under the seal, a rectangular
smoothed area gives the vital statistics of the deceased. The tree
trunk appears much like an abstract human figure with arms reaching up
over his head. The seal approximates the head. Woodmen of the
World gravestones become more and more abstract from this time forward.
By 1912 the tree trunk had become a log with
small evenly spaced projections representing loped branches. The
Woodmen of the World seal dominated the front of the gravestone with medallions
containing the information about the deceased (Illustration
243).
Once again, the trunk sits upon a base of sawn logs with ferns and foliage.
By 1919 the final step of abstraction has occurred. Now the loped
branches remain two equal projections at the top of the tree trunk.
The seal is still centered in front but has brackets from which the scroll
unrolls (Illustration 244). The tree trunk no longer features realistic
bark, but has evenly spaced, rectangular chips which cover the entire trunk
surface, giving one of the strangest appearances in the three county gravestone
survey.
Meanwhile, some gravestones had granite bases
like the standard gravestones of the Boonslick region. The vital
statistics and seal would be inscribed on the front while the top of the
gravestone would feature a horizontal log covered with bark and inscribed
with the last name of the deceased. The chapter where the deceased
had his membership might also be inscribed (Illustration
245). In
the gravestone at Union Primitive Baptist Church Graveyard (B48) in Boone
County, the gravestone to James Adams says "Gooch's Mill Camp No. 87" and
contains the poem,
"A precious one from us has gone
A voice we love is stilled
A place is vacant in our home
Which never can be filled."
The final step in the progression of these
monuments can be seen in the family gravestone in Columbia Cemetery (B38)
in Boone County to the Richards Family (Illustration
246). Here a
granite rough hewn gravestone has a Woodmen of the World medallion centered
above the family name. No other symbolism is featured.
These gravestones disappear by the end of
World War I as the fraternal organization became a life insurance company
which is still in business. The rural people who belonged to Woodmen
of the World fraternities turned their attention to farm cooperatives as
the Roaring Twenties were anything but prosperous for farmers in the Boonslick.14
Out of this banding together for political strength and financial incentives
came groups such as the Mid-Continent Farmers Association (MFA) which is
still headquartered in Columbia in 1989. Far removed from the fraternalism
and gravestones of the Woodmen of the World organizations, these farm cooperatives
took the fraternal lessons of working cooperatively together seriously.15
By the late 1980's, few remembered the beginnings of this movement lost
in a world vanished forever while the farm organizations search for ways
to promote and protect the ever diminishing number of farmers.
20 and 21. LAMB OF GOD & THE DOVE
For the first time, differences become apparent
between gravestones for children and adults during the last quarter of
the nineteenth century. Victorian society assigned every person a
place. Men ran the business world with its attendant financial risks
while women controlled the home and the family, and were placed upon a
pedestal as being morally superior. Children were supposedly innocent
creatures who in dying remained unsullied.16 On top of this cultural
perception, changes in medical knowledge in the last quarter of the nineteenth
century meant people were gradually living longer as cleanliness and knowledge
of infectious diseases meant the number of people who lived after being
critically ill increased. People began to feel they ought to be able
to rear their children to adulthood; a far different concept from the previous
generation where it was assumed that half of a couple's children would
die. Unfortunately, the perception of "ought to raise" and "did raise"
were two totally different realms. Reality was not so kind and most
families still lost at least one child. But losing one child to death
versus losing three or four as their parents had experienced was a gain.
Thus, the loss of even one child meant a tragedy for the family which demanded
artistic representation unlike that of previous generations.
Nothing seems more helpless and innocent than
a lamb, and lambs were the most popular motif for the gravestones of children.
No doubt part of the popularity was the rural location and the association
with actual sheep in the surrounding countryside or on the family farm.
The tail of the lamb featured on these gravestones was never docked (in
contrast to modern herd health practices) so sometimes this animal is incorrectly
referred to as a dog, due to tail length. Nothing is more defenseless
against predators than a lamb. Religious considerations included
the idea of the sacrificial nature of a lamb. Biblical quotations
discussed Jesus Christ as the Lamb of God who was sacrificed for the sins
of humanity.
As early as 1858, lambs appear on Boonslick
gravestones erected to children. In New Hope Baptist Graveyard (H17)
in Howard County, George Washington Dougherty died in 1858 at age 3 (Illustration
247). His marble gravestone features a lamb lying with his head outstretched
on the ground in front, the standard position of a dead sheep. A
shell motif behind gives emphasis to the figure. The neck of the
lamb is out of proportion to the rest of the body but otherwise the sheep
is anatomically correct. In 1874, this same basic motif is found
in the gravestone to Charlie Hornbeck who died at a year of age
(Illustration 248) and was buried at New Salem Graveyard (C26) in Cooper County.
Here the lamb is recumbent with an erect head inside the shell motif.
The Boonslick contains abundant numbers of
gravestones where lambs are sitting on the top of the gravestone.
A unique gravestone in the Lamine Graveyard (C6) in Cooper County, contains
this motif with a twist. Robert Levi Shemwell died at age one (Illustration
249) and is memorialized by this gravestone. Here the lamb is captured
in the midst of either sitting down or getting up. He realistically
has his rear portion lowered to the ground and is bending down upon his
front legs, the actual way sheep lie down. The opposite and the sheep
rises. He sits upon a rock pile which has the name of the child on
the front side. The other unusual gravestone with this motif is found
in Goshen Primitive Baptist Church Graveyard (B62) in Boone County (Illustration
250). On the flat top of this gravestone, a lamb reclines with his
head upon the ground; a floral garland spreads over his neck and down the
side of the gravestone. Erected in honor of Isom Hart who died at
age 5, even the ears of the lamb are clearly spread apart as if the little
sheep was listening intently.
Several gravestones contain a pair of lambs
and honor more than one child. One example of this (now headless)
is located in the Robinson family burial ground (H73) in Howard County
where two recumbent lambs face straight forward. In the Columbia
Cemetery (B38) in Boone County, two lambs face each other on a marble gravestone
that is now totally illegible (Illustration
251).
The Woodmen of the World gravestones featured
a version for children with a lamb that was extremely popular. The
gravestone was about three feet tall and had a square rock, hewn appearing
base with the vital statistics of the deceased written on a scroll draped
over the front of the base. A short, cut tree trunk with two loped
branches set atop the base pedestal while the area in front of the trunk
featured an animal (Illustration
252). Usually the lamb had an erect
head and folded legs. The top of the tree trunk featured tree growth
rings. One exception to this rule was found in Mt. Pisgah Graveyard
(B7) where the lamb is sleeping with head at ground level (Illustration
253). In this figure, the front legs of the lamb are correctly bent
backwards which occurs when sheep rest. Again the tail is long and
not docked. This gravestone features a short poem,
"Our darling one has gone before,
To greet us on the blessed shore."
Although lambs were by far the most popular
animal theme, several gravestones have birds flying or perched on them.
The bird theme dates back to antiquity where the dove was shown as one
of the animal consorts of the Magna Mater, the Great Mother.17 The
dove also has Biblical roots as the dove of the Holy Spirit who descended
upon Jesus after his baptism as he "came up out of the water."18
The Protestant sects in the Boonslick placed great emphasis upon baptism
by immersion and thus the dove was doubly important. Certainly, the
parents of eighteen year old Sarah Bell Bastin who died in 1870 were not
thinking about a fertility goddess when they selected a marble gravestone
for her grave in Richland (Disciples of Christ) Christian Church Graveyard
(H51) (Illustration 254). This four foot tall gravestone features
a dove flying to the left with a rosebud in its mouth and flowers underneath.
The rose bud signifies a life just beginning to blossom which was plucked
too soon as Sarah was just eighteen. One of the most popular books
for girls during this last half of the nineteenth century was the Louisa
May Alcott story, Rose In Bloom. This novel basically told the story
of a young girl from her eighteenth birthday to her marriage at age twenty.19
Three year old Lorna Ketchum rated a dead
dove atop her marble gravestone in Smith Chapel United Methodist Graveyard
(H87) in Howard County (Illustration
255). Here the bird is not only
dead, it is upside down with the breast up and thus the tenderest part
exposed. Almost identical is the 1904 gravestone to Stinson Truitt
in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery (H71) near New Franklin in Howard County (Illustration
256) which is also a Woodman of the World gravestone. Instead of
a lamb in front of the tree, a dead bird lays in front with an upright
wing against the tree.
Most gravestones featured live doves instead
of dead birds as can be seen by the gravestone in the Fayette Cemetery
(H64) in Howard County to Bonnie Howard Tolson who died at age one in 1877.
A dove has just landed on the top of this gravestone and even the bird's
wings are not yet totally folded into place (Illustration
257). In
the bird's talons is an anchor. An unrolled scroll with a strawberry
plant leaf at the bottom gives the vital statistics of this infant.
22. CHILDREN ASLEEP
Animals may be metaphors but nothing represents
innocence like a sleeping child. In the Columbia Cemetery (B38) in
Boone County there is a flat sarcophagus with the statue of a sleeping
baby on the top. Chubby with baby fat, the child reclines on a pillow
and wears a loose gown, exposing little, bare feet. The gravestone
is so weathered nothing is legible about name or date. A similar
theme of a small child can be found in Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) in Boonville
in Cooper County (Illustration
258). Here a small child sucks his
thumb while sitting on a flower strewn pile of rocks with a cross in the
background. Garbed in a loincloth cinched with a rose in full bloom,
the child leans upon a bench while sitting upon a pile of rocks.
The innocence of the child is reinforced by the thumb sucking.
23. YOUNG MAIDENS
Several gravestones have realistic statues
of children on the top of the gravestones. The gravestone to Iza
Prewitt in the Columbia Cemetery (B38) in Boone County is a good example (Illustration
259). Iza died in 1876 at age 5 and was the granddaughter
of Frederick Moss and Nancy Johnston Prewitt whose large, artistic gravestone
and the Bingham connection have already been discussed. In this gravestone,
a girl about the age of the deceased is shown in the attitude of prayer
with folded hands, long hair and her face looking forward. The sculpture
has been broken at some unknown point and merely replaced upon the top
of the gravestone base. Examination of the remaining sections, show
the legs were delineated at least to the knees so the girl must have been
standing originally. At Lone Elm Lutheran (Missouri Synod) Church
Graveyard (C60) in Cooper County, the gravestone to George B. Kaiser who
died in 1906 features a young, barefoot girl wearing a loose gown to her
knees carrying a lily in her left hand and holding a lily petal in her
right hand. She stands upon a granite base (Illustration
260)
and
looks down at the lily petal in her hand. The young maiden stands upon
a pile of rocks, the standard base for these works.
24. STANDING ANGELS
From children to cherubs is a short jump.
Cherubs had been used since Puritan days, but at the end of the nineteenth
century, cherubs were used only for the graves of children and one young
man. The gravestone to Olive Genevieve Eppenhauer who died at age
six months in 1901 (Illustration
261) shows this move. Buried at
Mt. Pleasant Cemetery (H71) near New Franklin in Howard County, the pedestal
base is topped with a winged cherub clothed with a strategic ribbon.
With fluttering wings, the cherub is dashing away with upraised arms while
looking at the viewer of the gravestone. A pile of rocks again forms
the base and at the bottom the motto, "Our Angel Pet" is carved into the
gravestone. More realistic is the 1906 statue over the grave of Amelia
Stevinson (Illustration
262) in Red Top (Disciples of Christ) Christian
Church Graveyard (B20) in Boone County. Here a girl almost identical
to the girl on the gravestone to George Kaiser at Lone Elm Cemetery (C60)
in Cooper County (Illustration
260), only with wings holds flowers in her
left hand and flower petals in the downward right hand. With downcast
head, she appears to be spreading the petals along beside her. Poetry
continues with the verses,
"Oh, why our tears and broken hearts?
God called thee home in all thy
Pure, sweet innocence."
Once again in Lone Elm Lutheran (Missouri Synod) Church Graveyard (C60) in Cooper County, there is another granite based gravestone with a childish figure, this time an angel (Illustration 263). This cherub has her hands clasped in prayer while underneath the poetry continues, this time in German:
"Ich weis das mein erloser lebet und er wird hernach
aus der erde auf er wecken. Hiob. 19 25-26."
This trend toward cherubs (versus adult angels)
continues in the 1910 gravestone to Audrey Besgrove in the Fayette Cemetery
(H64) in Howard County (Illustration 264
and
Illustration 265). Set upon a concrete
base, the pile of rocks features a tree behind with climbing flowers, a
motif of the Woodman of the World. However, the presence of the cherub
places this gravestone in the children category. A winged cherub
with a pencil in the right hand traces the vital statistics inscribed on
the scroll unrolled in front of the tree trunk. Bare footed and with
hair parted down the middle, the loosely gowned angel sits upon vines clinging
to the rock pile and with her knees holds another scroll which proclaims,
"Asleep in Jesus." The detailing is so delineated that even the crocheted
shell pattern found along the edges of garments is clearly seen.
There is one gravestone to a child that features
a dignified angel whose emphasis is not sentimental (Illustration
266).
This gravestone covers the grave of Arthur Davis in the Fayette Cemetery
(H64) in Howard County. Unlike the other cherubs or angels, this
statue is metal rather than stone. The right arm has been broken
and the head and neck joint is rapidly loosening. The angel is fully
adult with classical features and stands upright with the left knee slightly
bent as seen through the tunic. The left foot is exposed around the
toe area with each toe nail clearly delineated (Illustration
267).
The sentiment and cuteness that fairly oozes from some of the other monuments
is absent in this gravestone.
IV. UNIQUE GRAVESTONES
In New Lebanon Cumberland Presbyterian Cemetery
(C51) in Cooper County, Samuel and Nancy Burke were buried in 1873 and
1880 in an enclosed plot the size of two graves (Illustration
268).
Gravestones were placed on the west end with a wrought iron gate at the
east end and the interior appears to have been planted with either flowers
or herbs. The graves have not been planted recently. The enclosure
fence is capped with a different color and kind of stone, adding a touch
of color and texture to the complex.
Frank B. Rollins was buried under a megalithic,
Grecian vase (Illustration
269)
in Columbia Cemetery (B38) in Boone County.
The gigantic, flower draped vase with Greek laurel wreaths contains a long
poem on the back and the short message,
"His dying was the only grief he
ever caused"
on the front.
Similar in scale are the two Doric columns
in the Columbia Cemetery (B38) to Herbert and Anna Martin who died in 1909
and 1915 respectively. Raised upon steps with the vital statistics
inscribed under each column, these columns are reminiscent of the gravestone
to Frederick Moss and Nancy Johnston Prewitt also in this cemetery. (Illustration
151). However, these columns are of the same height, unlike the Prewitt
gravestone. They are also spaced farther apart and are more closely
reminiscent of the columns on the Francis Quadrangle, approximately four
blocks to the east, than the Prewitt gravestone.
From megalithic to small, the granite gravestones
from this last quarter of the nineteenth century are held together by the
medium and the search for permanency. The gravestone to Virginia
Fox (Illustration 270) in Washington Cemetery (H47) in Glasgow in Howard
County continues this theme. This small gravestone is only three
feet tall and is inspired by the shell theme which has been repeatedly
used in European civilization. Roots for this shell motif can be
traced to Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of erotic love, who was born of
the foam of the sea and carried to shore on a shell. The shell theme
was a popular decorative device on the eastern coast during the eighteenth
century. It was also used during the Classical Revival and obviously
was never totally abandoned.
Continuing the Classical interest, in 1923
the Duncan family ordered an exact copy, but smaller in scale, of the Nike
of Samothrace for the grave of family member Mary E. Duncan Young (Illustration
271). The Duncan family owned a monument company about the turn of
the century and thus had access and interest above the average citizen.
After Mary E. Duncan Young was buried in Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) in
Boonville in 1914, her daughters paid $3,000.00 for this copy to be made
and shipped from Italy.20
Not all unique gravestones were classically
inspired. In the Columbia Cemetery (B38) in Boone County, the Jacobs
family erected a large central family monument (Illustration
272)
about
1916. Here, the large rock mass features Jesus praying with outstretched
arms at the door of a tomb. Bodily form is visible under the figure
who is authentically dressed. Above the head of Jesus lilies form
a cross and inscribed in a flat slab the words
"I am the Resurrection,
the truth and the light."
The rear of the gravestone is a rock pile
with a sculptured head of a dead Christ. Lilies rise at the extreme
left of the rock pile.
Not all gravestones were as solemn or as grand.
People always have had a sense of humor or made gravestones that commemorated
what mattered to them. In Walnut Grove Cemetery (C10) in Boonville
in Cooper County, Charles C. Bell erected a granite bell (Illustration
273) over the graves of his parents, an obvious pun. The gravestone
to Henry Kella (Illustration
274)
in Salt Fork Presbyterian Cemetery (C4)
in Cooper County, features a tied horse incised into the gravestone with
a vine and scrollwork to the left. The memorial poem states,
"A brother
from us has gone, a place is vacant in our home, the soul is safe in heaven."
The natural question that first pops into mind is why a horse was featured
on the gravestone. Perhaps Henry Kella was a horse trainer maybe
he owned lots of horses for pleasure or profit. Thoroughbreds were
in high demand in mid-Missouri with horse races at county fairs one of
the highlights of the social season.
A gravestone in New Providence Baptist Church Graveyard
(B32) in Boone County (Illustration
275) is unique. No connections
to any type of motif could be established for this stone pot. Inscribed
midway down the pot is the family name of "Statterfield" while underneath
that inscription are the names of the family members, Inman, Cora and Simple
Irene with the vital statistics of each. The pot is filled with dirt
and contained flowers this past summer. Only thirty inches in height,
the handles and the bulbous bottom are reminiscent of the lard kettles
that were found all over the Boonslick during this time period and were
used in hog butchering.
World War I permanently altered the lifestyle
of the United States and effectively ushered in the communication and transportation
age where gasoline powered pistons drove the country into the Roaring Twenties.
Not everybody came home from the war alive though. The memorial to
George Uthlaut in Mt. Pleasant Cemetery (H71) near New Franklin in Howard
County (Illustration 276), honors a deceased soldier. Two crossed
American flags are above a scroll which states the name, dates of birth
and death, and date of burial in the cemetery which was three years after
he died. A short poem asks,
"Peaceful be thy silent slumber, Peaceful
in thy grave so low." A picture of the young man in his uniform is
inset between the flags.
Just as in adult gravestones there is always
the search for the unique, this remains true in the gravestones designed
for children. In Mt. Pleasant Cemetery (H71) near New Franklin in
Howard County, a double gravestone to two sons of W.P. and Martha Kirkbride
who died in 1871 and 1872 features the older son (age four) with the taller
marker while the younger son (age three months) has the shorter one
(Illustration 277). The two motifs in the top sections of each gravestone are a
weeping willow tree and a dead bird. The 1906 death of 16 year old
Besse Berry (Illustration
278)
and her burial in Red Top (Disciples of
Christ) Christian Church Graveyard (B20) in Boone County once again features
the recurrent theme of the palm of victory and the anchor. However,
these were considered conservative themes by the time they were placed
in 1906, showing they were now considered proper for young maidens.
The chain on the end of the anchor even turns. In the Lamine Graveyard
(C6) in Cooper County a small, illegible crypt is positioned over what
must be a child's grave (Illustration 279). The inscription is totally
illegible but the size give the inference of a baby. Set upon a concrete
pad with a stone base the gravestone features a long unrolled scroll.
The most sentimental gravestone is the 1890
gravestone to Horace Melton Walker who died at age two (Illustrations 280
and 281). The gravestone is located in Wesley Chapel Cemetery (H3)
in Howard County and follows in every respect the Late Victorian attention
to sentiment and emotion. A pair of shoes and socks are carelessly
strewn over the draped top of the gravestone as if the boy had just left
them there in a pile, the typical unconcern of a two year old. The
poem at the bottom states,
"Sleep on, sweet Horace and take thy rest,
God called thee home. He knew best."
The emphasis upon innocence and beauty provoked comments about the statuary to both adults and children in cemeteries:
"Do they stay out here like that in the winter,
when it snows? he asks slowly, envisioning no doubt
how the snow would pile up on those bare shoulders
and arms. It's only marble, you silly, and you know
it.
I was just thinking--he trailed off. Take your
brother for a walk and talk low."21
Certainly, Victorian parents loved their children and underwent grief when they died all too soon. So had each previous generation of parents. But it is only the Victorian world that encases the innocence of a child with sentiment to form a spectacle. World War I erased innocence. By the 1920's and the continued rapid development of medical knowledge, death from disease in childhood became much more remote. Parents could at last count upon rearing all their offspring, baring an accident, a guarantee never before offered in the history of the country or the world.
ENDNOTES
1Sturgis, J. E., editor, Favorite Hymns (Cincinnati, Ohio: Standard Publishing Company, 1933), p. 211.
2Ludwig, Allan I., Graven Images, New England Stonecarving and its Symbols, 1650-1815 (Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press, 1975), p. 124.
3McCoy, Marie Bell, Unpublished Memoirs in the archives of the Friends of Histpric Boonville.
4Records of Walnut Grove Cemetery, Boonville, Mo,
5Green, Harvey, The Light of the Home (New York: Pantheon Books, 1983), p.117.
6Meyer, Richard, editor, Cemeteries and Gravemarkers, Voices of American Culture (Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1989), p. 263.
7Stratton-Porter, Gene, Laddie, A True Blue Story (New York: Doubleday, Page and Company, 1913), p. 55.
8Meyer, p. 272.
9Whalen, William J., Handbook of Secret Organizations (Milwaukee: Bruce Publishing Company, 1966), p. 159.
10Meyer, p. 118.
11Stratton-Porter, p. 200.
12Interview with Paul Rhodes Mossholder in 1980. Paul originally lived in Illinois and owned a collection of African stink pot lilies. When he moved to Arizona in 1970, no family would take the collection because of the lily smell and the Arizona heat was too intense for the lilies, so Paul disposed of his collection.
13Bloch, E. Maurice, The Paintings of George Caleb Bingham (Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1986), p. 4.
14Receipts from the 1920's in the possession of Don M. Harshbarger of Centralia, Missouri.
15Minutes of the Friendship Farm Club, 1918, in the possession of Don M. Harshbarger of Centralia, Missouri.
16Meyer, p. 11.
17Jordan, Terry, Texas Graveyards, A Cultural Legacy (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1982), p. 55.
18Matthew 3:16 of the New Testament.
19Alcott, Luisa May, Rose in Bloom, (New York: Harcourt, Brace,
and Jovanich, 1952), p.1
20 Records of Walnut Grove Cemetery, Boonville, Mo.
21McCoy, Marie Bell.
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