Friday, January 31, 2014

Cemetery Statues of Grief

According to the dictionary, grief is “a deep sadness, sharp sorrow, keen distress, or mental anguish, caused especially by someone’s death.”




Grieving Woman
Put another way, grief is a natural response to the emotional suffering when you experience the loss someone you love - The more meaningful the loss, the more deep the sorrow. It’s no wonder we find so many symbols of grief personified in the cemetery.



There are several famous statues depicting grief.

The Angel of Grief
William Wetmore Story
William Wetmore Story originally sculpted this statue, known asThe Angel of Grief”, for his and his wife’s graves in Italy. It has been re-carved countless times and appears on graves around the world.




Grief
Another well-known grieving statue is The Adams Memorial located in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, D.C. The statue was caved for the grave of Henry Adams wife. Augustus Saint-Gaudens was the sculptor and he called the bronze figure, “The Mystery of the Hereafter and The Peace of God that Passeth Understanding.” The public called it “Grief.”




Franklin Simmons
Peace Monument
The Peace Monument also known as the Naval Monument or the Civil War Sailors Monument in Washington, D.C. is often shown to depict grief and sorrow. Sculpted by Franklin Simmons, the two female statues represent Grief, who is weeping against the shoulder of History.




Here are a few more which symbolize the loss and mourning of those left behind.

Angels
Angels are often shown in poses of grief and sorrow. They are God’s messengers and intercede on behalf of humans. Angels can be found weeping, mourning, or scattering the petals of life.

Weeping Angels:


Mourning Angels:
























Scattering Life's Petals:















Cherubs
Another portent of sorrow are cherubs. Victorian and modern Cherubs have been humanized and blurred with Putto so they are now shown as pudgy babies, or toddlers with wings. They are usually placed at a child’s grave.










Children
The death of a child has always been heartbreaking. In the cemetery, children’s graves may be marked with lambs, dead doves, cherubs, or in some cases, the children themselves are shown mourning their loss of life.






Women in Mourning
Women are the mourners of the human race: the ones who are expected, and allowed, to express emotions. It is their presence in the cemetery that connotes sorrow and grief at the loss of a loved one.

Sitting Women Mourners:








 












Kneeling Women Mourners:











 Women Mourners Standing:



Draped Columns
Used mainly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a column symbolizes a nobly life. Draped material over the column represents the fabric draped over the coffin and signifies grief and mourning.



Grief in Bellefontaine Cemetery
But for all of the statues in mourning that can be found in a cemetery, there are also statues of that indicate confidence and courage. Next week, we will examine those Statues of Hope.

And, a special THANK YOU to all of you:
Tomorrow will mark the 3rd Anniversary of A Grave Interest. If you enjoy what you find here, please “Follow” on Blogger and Twitter, “Like” on Facebook, Share on Google+, and share with your friends.  Thanks for reading, and expect more cemetery marvels to come!


~Joy

Friday, January 24, 2014

Body Snatching – A Ghoulish Profession


"Resurrecting" a Body
They went by many names; resurrectionists, sack’em up men, resurrection men, body snatchers – all referring to the men who secretly disinterred bodies from a graveyard in order to sell them.

A Body Snatcher Gang

Body snatching was usually done at night when the chances of getting caught were minimal. It could take about an hour for a gang to remove a body from its grave. Those who worked as resurrectionists usually did so in order to sell the corpses for dissection in anatomy classes at medical schools. A fresh body could bring the bearer several pounds.

 


Medical Class Lecture
Body snatching was popular in Scotland and England from the early 1600’s to the early 1800’s. As medical schools began to expand throughout the UK, legally available cadavers were needed for use as  teaching tools in the classrooms, and they were in short supply. The only corpses legally available for dissection at that time were those of executed murderers.
Opened Grave



In order to supply the schools with cadavers, body snatching became a widespread profession. In order to try and stop such attempts, family and friends of the recently deceased had to keep watch over the body until burial, and then guard the grave to keep the body from being removed.



MortSafe
MortSafe
Several contraptions were built in an attempt to thwart the resurrectionists from gaining access to a newly buried body. Such devices included mortsafes; heavy iron cages that were padlocked together and placed over the grave with the intention of the cage remaining for 6 weeks – until the body had decomposed. A mortsafe could also be an iron or stone coffin that might or might not be buried.


Outer Door
Mort House
Mort houses or vaults were another option used to protect the bodies of the dead from thieves. Mort houses were usually circular granite buildings where bodies could be safely stored until they began to decompose – at about 6 weeks, although bodies could remain there for up to three month. The roofs were made of stone or slate, and the door was created in two sections, the outer made from oak and the inner crafted from iron. Mort houses fell into disuse after the passage of the Anatomy Act of 1832.


Coffin Collar
Coffin collars were another attempt to prevent corpses from being stolen. The collar was placed around the deceased’s neck and bolted to the coffin floor, thereby preventing the body from being dragged out of the end of the coffin.


Watch House
Watch houses were built in several Scottish and English cemeteries. These tall structures provided a good view of the graves so the guard could keep watch over the entire cemetery. Some watch houses had gaps where guns could be placed in order to shoot at anyone bothering a grave. Others also had a bell tower that could be used to raise an alarm for assistance.




Burke's Body List
The two most famous body snatchers/anatomy murderers in history were Hare and Burke.  William Hare and William Burke were involved in a series of at least 16 murders, which occurred within a ten-month period in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1828. Most of their victims were paupers, drunks or lodgers who stayed at William Hare’s lodging house. 


Dr. Robert Knox
Ad for Knox's Lecture
Hare and Burke killed their victims by smothering and compressing their chests. They would then sell their victims bodies to Doctor Robert Knox for dissection during his popular medical lectures. This method of killing people in order to sell their bodies became known as "burking."




William Hare
Hare and Burke were arrested, along with the two women who assisted them, Hare’s wife, Margaret Laird, and Burke’s mistress, Helen McDougal, in November 1828. William Hare (with his wife) was offered immunity if he would turn King’s evidence against Burke. It was thought that Burke was the smarter of the two men; therefore he must have been the instigator.


William Burke
Burke's Hanging
The trial was held on Christmas Eve, 1828 and lasted 24 hours. A guilty verdict was pronounced on Christmas Day for William Burke, and the charge of murder against McDougal “not proven.” William Burke was hanged on January 28, 1829 in front of a crowd estimated to be around 25,000.

Burke's Death Mask
Burke's Skeleton
Burke’s body was publically dissected the following day at the Old College in Edinburgh. A death mask was made of his face and exhibited in the Surgeon’s Hall. Burke’s skeleton was sent to the University of Edinburgh’s Anatomy Museum, where it is still on display.




Jean Waldie


But Burke and Hare were not the first. In 1751, Jean Waldie and Helen Torrence were convicted of murdering an 8 year-old boy and selling his body to medical students in Edinburgh.






William Smellie
Textbook Illustration
Even a Scottish surgeon, William Smellie, was alleged to have murdered, or encouraged the murder of, several pregnant women so that he could use the cadavers for his illustrated textbooks on childbirth.



Anatomy Act of 1832
The Anatomy Act of 1832 finally put a stop to most body snatching by legally increasing the supply of cadavers for medical purposes. After its passage, the unclaimed dead from prisons and workhouses were then donated for medical study and dissection before burial, greatly increasing the number of cadavers available.


Mob
After its passage, the Act was protested by mobs of paupers and the poor who feared their bodies could be sold for medical research without their consent. The medical community became worried that their source of bodies would “stop dead”, so they began keeping medical reclaiming activities quiet. (A practice that continued well into the 20th century.)



Garbage Picker
Although it’s been 185 years since William Burke was executed for his crimes, anatomy murders (killing for a body) still occur. In 1992, a Barranquilla, Colombia man led police to a warehouse where they found the freshly killed bodies of 10 paupers, and body parts belonging to 14 more bodies. Night guards at the medical school were allegedly coaxing garbage pickers and street people into the building and then murdering them so the medical students would have fresh bodies to dissect. (And making about $200 per body.)




Michael Mastromarino
In 2005, Michael Mastromarino, CEO of a company called Biomedical Tissue Services, was arrested for stealing body parts, some infected with HIV and cancer, and selling them for tissue replacement. He was charged with running an illegal bone, skin and tissue harvesting scheme in New Jersey and sentenced to prison where he died a fitting death last July  - of bone cancer.


~ Joy

In 2010 (UK) and 2011 (US) a movie about the crimes of William Burke and William Hare, called Burke and Hare, was released by John Landis. Watch the trailer below: