If
you’ve been a taphophile for a while, you have probably developed a special
fondness for certain gravestones, those that just seem to draw you to
them. My current favorites are the
white bronze, headstone photos, and trees stones.
I am amazed but not surprised by the number of people who love the tree stones. I remember the first time I found one. There, amid a mixture of short stones, flat stones, intricate sculpture and obelisks, set an unassuming limestone tree stump. Touching, yet solid and dependable, maybe a true adaptation of the person resting below.
There
is something peaceful and heartening about the natural rustic look of a tree
stone. – Life has ended but as a part of nature, we go on….
Tree
stones were popular from the 1880’s to 1920’s. They are called tree stump stones, tree trunk stones and
tree stones. Joseph Cullen Root was the founder of Modern Woodmen of America (1883) and also of Woodmen of the
World (1890,) both fraternal insurance benefit societies. Both became well known for using tree gravestones for their members. Root decided on the woodmen name after hearing a
minister describe his congregation as ‘trees in God’s forest.”
However,
from 1890 to 1900, Woodmen of the World’s (WOW) life insurance policies did
have a proviso that provided for the grave markers, free of charge, for
members. From 1900 to the mid-
1920’s, members purchased a $100 rider to cover the cost of the monument. By the mid-20’s, the organization had
discontinued the grave marker benefit due to the increased cost of the stones.
As the tree gravestones became more popular, the Sears and Roebuck catalogue and Montgomery Wards catalogue offered them for sale to the general public. A tree stone marker does not necessarily mean that person was a member of MWA or WOW. Only if the organizations initials or symbols are located on the stone does it indicate that the deceased was a member of one of these organizations.
Tree stones vary in size and height from tiny children’s stones, just a few inches high, to soaring 10 to 12 feet high tree trunks. All have intricately carved detailing at the base, and many ties around the trunk. You could request certain elements be added to a stone to better tell the story of the deceased. Many local stone makers could incorporate these carvings on the tree stone, making them very individualistic.
Symbols found on the tree stones include axes, mauls, wedges, any type of tool used in woodworking, flowers, vines, animals, chairs, buckets – anything that helped tell the story of the person buried there.
Tree
stones also vary according to the area they were carved in and the type of
cemetery. Many local stone carvers
left their personal mark on a stone. This
carver in Illinois put mushrooms on all of his tree stones.
The
tree stones found in B'nai Abraham-Zion Cemetery in Chicago may feature an inscription in Hebrew, and photos – an extra bonus for the
Tombstone Traveler.
Wow... I certainly learned something today. Thanks for sharing. :)
ReplyDeleteI have come across a handful of these monuments in rural Indiana and Michigan. Thanks for the article!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, but sadly I haven't come across any where I live. Mainly angels here.
ReplyDeleteBeneath Thy Feet
Thanks everyone!
ReplyDeleteBuck, if you ever get a chance to go to Green Hill Cemetery in Bedford, Indiana - check out the tree stones and other carvings there. Local stone carvers did an amazing job on the stones.
My great-grandparents have a very large, rectangular monument made of granite. The top is slightly sloped, and it is there - in the middle of the top of the stone - that I found the emblem for the Modern Woodmen of America. Though not a "tree" their tombstone having that emblem led me to some wonderful people at the MWA who were very helpful in providing information on my great-grandparents. If you should find that one of your ancestors has a MWA marker, or tree, be sure to contact MWA (Google it.) They are wonderful about working with family and actually have employees whose job is to handle genealogical requests! They also provide speakers for your society or organizations.
ReplyDeleteBTW: My g-grandparents are buried in a small, village cemetery in north central Minnesota. The upper mid-west - Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa, have many cemeteries with Woodman Trees! Great blog, Joy!
Thanks Kate! You're right - there are some MWA and WOW stones that are not tree stones, but they do have the fraternity's emblam on them. Glad to hear that MWA was helpful! Nice to know that they have a group dedicated to genealogical requests!
DeleteThanks Kate! You're right - there are some MWA and WOW stones that are not tree stones, but they do have the fraternity's emblam on them. Glad to hear that MWA was helpful! Nice to know that they have a group dedicated to genealogical requests!
DeleteMy friends think I am weird as well, but I love to visit grave sites and look around. There is just something intriguing about them.
ReplyDeleteSo True!!
DeleteLikewise fascinated by tree shaped tombstones. I blog on various topics but do a week of these from time to time. Just back from a road trip where I found some great ones in southern WI.
ReplyDeletehttp://detritusofempire.blogspot.com/
Tacitus
Have not been to Wisconsin yet, but would love to.
DeleteThe first grave monument I fell in love with is a tall tree trunk. Thanks for all your information on them!
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome! There is something so comforting about those tree stones ...
DeleteEvergreen Cemetery, Sinclairville, Chautauqua County, New York, USA has many Tree Stones. My ex-wife's family was from that area. Her great-uncle, a man named Frank Bloomer, was the crafter of many (if not all) of the Tree Stones in that cemetery. He was born in 1875 and died in 1962. Surprisingly his own marker is just an ordinary, run-of the-mill marker. Go figure. Some of them are very elaborate some less so but all remarkable none the less.
ReplyDeleteWOW! With all of his dedication and hard work, I wish he had carved his own tree stone. Wonder what he would have included? Thanks for sharing, Chazman.
ReplyDeleteI have seen tree stump headstones in two area cemetaries that are works of art but so old they are hard to read. I am sure that both men died in the 1880's, one was 37yrs 12 days old. I'm not sure what organization did these but they are amazing and I am really going to study them.
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear! Since the tree stones were crafted from limestone, which is a soft stone, erosion does occur and epitaphs become hard to read at times.
DeleteThere are some interesting points in time in this article. There is some validity but I will take hold opinion until I look into it further. Good article, thanks and I want more! Added to my Feed as well.
ReplyDeleteVery cool! I have found two of them so far. The first was a puzzler until somebody on facebook explained it. Thanks for the info!!!
ReplyDeleteTree stones are indeed cool! Thanks for reading, Ken!
ReplyDeleteWhile walking in Crown Hill Cemetery< Indianapolis In. I was fascinated by how many tree monuments I saw, some small piles of "logs" and crosses on "wood" stumps wrapped w ivy and other med to large trees, maybe 50-60 all with ivy and ferns, various floral motifs... wondered if these craftsmen were local, as we have many limestone quarrys in southern Indiana. All Dates were 1880's to around 1920. Would love to know more about the carvers, love the scrolls that have birth and death dates, they seem to be bark falling off the tree, several had anchors, birds in nests...Interested in any info you can give me about researching? Thanks
ReplyDeleteYou have discovered the perfect way to pass the time during this crisis - a walk through the cemetery! And Crown Hill is beautiful at this time of year. Many of those carvers were local/regional. Back in the mid-1800s, Italian carvers came to the Bedford Indiana area and set up business. If you're in the mood for a drive, head to Green Hill Cemetery in Bedford. Its relative small compared to Crown Hill but the carvings are magnificent. There are tons of tree stones but also other sculptures including the Baker Monument and the Monument to the Stone Carvers. Here's more info. https://agraveinterest.blogspot.com/search?q=green+hill+cemetery
ReplyDeleteHere's another post about Tree Stones and how they became so popular: https://agraveinterest.blogspot.com/2011/06/woodmen-of-world-and-tree-stone-grave.html And here is one more about the stones you could order from catalogues back in the day: https://agraveinterest.blogspot.com/2012/08/grave-markers-ordered-from-catalogs.html Hope those links inspire your research. Enjoy those cemetery jaunts and stay well! Joy
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ReplyDeleteOn a short trip to Aberdeenshire, Scotland, I visited four cemeteries and saw tree/log tombstones in two of them (Chapel of Garioch and Daviot). Northeast Scotland was full of master stone carvers, so it doesn't surprise me. My professor Warren Roberts at Indiana University wrote about tree-stump tombstones in Indiana. I don't know if he was aware how widespread a tradition it was.
ReplyDeleteI just reviewed all my 2015 photos and there is a log cross gravestone at St Machar’s in Aberdeen too. Also a very crumbly, mossy log gravestone at Old Logie Durno Burial Ground. So in reality, there were examples in every cemetery I visited in Aberdeenshire.
DeleteAmazing how far and wide this stone was used. Thanks for sharing your information.
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