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Welcome
Taphophilia (dot) Com...
A repository of morbid curiosities:
Thanatology and Taphophile Issues, Cemetery,
Funeral Industry and Death Related News.
What's New at Arcadia
Historic Burial Grounds of the New Hampshire Seacoast By Glenn A. Knoblock
Arcadia Publishing has releases a new title in the Images of America series, the historic account of the cemeteries along the New Hampshire Seacoast. This collection is a must for anyone interested in local history, genealogy, or colonial-era art. Please visit Arcadia Publishing to purchase your copy of Historic Burial Grounds of the New Hampshire Seacoast and browse other cemetery books!
Green-Wood Cemetery By Alexandra Mosca
Arcadia Publishing announces the release of the historic account of one of New York's most famous cemeteries. Aracdia Publishing's Images of America series has an extensive catalog of many cemetery publications! Please visit Arcadia Publishing to purchase your copy of Green-Wood Cemetery.
Announcements
Quoting Death in Early Modern England: The Poetics of Epitaphs Beyond the Tomb By Scott L. Newstok
An innovative study of the Renaissance practice of making epitaphic gestures within other English genres. A poetics of quotation uncovers the ways in which writers including Shakespeare, Marlowe, Holinshed, Sidney, Jonson, Donne, and Elizabeth I have recited these texts within new contexts. Visit Palgrave Macmillan and purchase your copy today!
Living by the Dead By Ellen Ashdown with illustrations by Mary Liz Moody.
A memoir about living beside a cemetery--and about the members of my family who came to rest at Roselawn Cemetery in Tallahassee, Florida. Please visit Kitsune Books for more information.
Graveyards of Chicago: The People, History, Art, and Lore of Cook County Cemeteries By Matt Hucke And Ursula Bielski.
Discover a Chicago That Exists Just Beneath the Surface - About Six Feet Under! Take a tour of Chicago's permanent residents! Please visit the Lake Claremont Press website to purchase your copy of Graveyards of Chicago today!
Epitaphs: The Magazine for Cemetery Lovers By Cemetery Lovers
For information regarding subscriptions, single issues, submission guidelines, deadlines, classifieds or advertising for future issues, please visit The Cemetery Club.
Guardians of the Soul: Angels and Innocents, Mourners and Saints with photography by John Bower and foreword by Claude Cookman
Indiana's remarkable cemetery sculpture is now available. Please visit Studio Indiana for more information.
West Springfield Massachusetts: Stories Carved in Stone by Rusty Clark
Features information on early New England gravestone carvers with more than two hundred photos and illustrations. Please visit the Dog Pond Press website.
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Mindful but not fearful of death, man makes his own coffin |
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Tuesday, 17 July 2007 |
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By KELLY JASPER
Daily News-Record
HARRISONBURG, Va. -- Under the dust mask, Dan Smucker frowned. "Not smooth enough," Smucker said as he peeled the fabric from his mouth and flipped the off switch of his power sander. He set the mask to rest atop his forehead and ran a palm over the walnut planks of wood.
"I've only got one chance to get this right," he said. "You only die once."
It may seem a little morbid at first. After all, there Smucker stood, hunched over two sawhorses, power tools in hand, building his own coffin.
He's 89, almost 90, and says he's bound to need a casket sometime soon. Why, the Harrisonburg man reasoned, couldn't he make one himself?
Several days a week, Smucker comes to a small, tin-roofed hobby shop just south of the auto-body business, Dan's Body Service, he opened nearly 50 years ago.
Smucker started the project just a few weeks ago and isn't sure how long it'll take to finish. He's in no rush, though. Already, the casket--which he estimates will cost about $200--measures more than 6 feet long and 18 inches deep.
It's an odd sight, Smucker admits. He's gotten mixed reactions from friends and family, but says he still isn't sure what the big deal is.
"People buy life insurance. People buy plots," he said. "One of the most important things about living is planning to die."
Even before retirement, Smucker kept his hands busy. He's worked a number of jobs, mostly as a laborer.
"I am really just a country boy," Smucker said. "I never went to high school. Not a day."
In the 1930s, he was too busy helping his father. The Great Depression took its toll, and the family lost the farm where they raised chickens outside of Newport News.
"Things were bad," Smucker said. "My father lost everything. He never really got started again."
By 1940, Smucker found work on an assembly line in a Norfolk Ford factory. Almost 20 years later, he put those skills to use when he opened the body shop on Va. 42 north of Harrisonburg.
All those years during the Great Depression, Smucker said, he tried to do the right thing, tried to help his family, and, as one of nine children, tried to care for his siblings. But he made mistakes, too, and had a few "wild years."
He remembers the day in detail when all that changed--the day, at 20 years old, when he became a Christian.
"The Lord has been with me ever since," Smucker said.
For a time, he juggled both his auto body business and a life in ministry. Smucker was named pastor of the Red Hill Mission, now Ridgeway Mennonite Church, near Woodbine Cemetery.
"It was hard, but I always had to answer the church's call first," he said.
Smucker admits he was an unlikely choice for the church's first pastor. After all, he wasn't ordained at the time and had little training.
But, "they asked and I answered," Smucker said of the congregation he served for 38 years. By his side all those years was his wife, Frances, "the sweetest girl you ever did see," Smucker said. To this day, he still calls her "flower." She died in 1999 after a bout with cancer.
They had a long, happy marriage, Smucker said, although they both struggled at times with the hand life had dealt. Their first child, Ellwood, died young. Birth defects kept him from ever fully developing, Smucker said.
The young couple decided to follow Smucker's parents, who came to the Valley in search of work, to Harrisonburg. Both generations lived together and farmed.
"We worked hard and saved a little money that year," he said.
They went on to have two other children, Gary, now a teacher in Alexandria, and Jean, who lives in the Valley still. Their fourth child was born disabled and died in her 30s, Smucker said.
"We weren't going to have children anymore," he said. "We didn't think we could do it."
But not long after Smucker was ordained, he learned Frances was pregnant with her fifth child.
"We prayed hard," he said. "I got a full sense that she was going to be all right."
And she was. Karen is now a teacher, Smucker said. "I call her my 'answered prayer baby."'
Smucker planned to move his wife and children back home to Newport News, but they had settled down and the church was growing. "We never got around to it," Smucker said.
He eventually sold the auto-body business to pursue mission work. In 1974, he and Frances started a body shop in Botswana, teaching African men the trade. He's traveled to Trinidad also, and taken nearly 100 evangelical trips across the country.
"I get out as often as I can, for as long as I can," he says.
Smucker still drives to church every Sunday. He's been known to cruise in his restored 1923 Model T on warm spring days. Smucker says he's confident his license will be renewed this year. He hasn't had a ticket in 35 years, and his eyesight is good.
Smucker says his health, overall, is good. He had triple-bypass heart surgery in 1985, but has had few problems since.
At times, he's hard of hearing, but often won't wear the hearing aid the doctors gave him.
"It drives my children crazy," Smucker said.
But that's OK, he says. "At this age, I've learned to do what I want," he says, running the sander over the casket's cover. "I get up each morning to do this and I hope to finish, but if I go today, that's all right. If it's tomorrow, that's OK, too."
He still plans to add coats of polyurethane and wants to attach handles to the side. And then there's the inside to think about.
"I don't care so much, because I suppose I won't get to see the inside," Smucker said. "But I might add a little mat or trim. I told my daughter I was going to put some shag carpet inside, but she had a fit."
Whatever happens, Smucker says, he wants to be buried in this coffin, next to Frances, at Lindale Mennonite Church, where his two children and parents also rest.
He'll get up just after sunrise most mornings to work on the casket because it gives him something to do. Other days, he'll prune the rosebushes Frances planted outside their home behind the body shop, or work on a crossword puzzle, as long as it's not too hard.
"I try to keep busy," he said. "But some days, I'm just waiting. Planning to die keeps me living."
http://www.dailypress.com/news/local/virginia/dp-va--thecoffinmaker0715jul15,0,403843.story?page=2&coll=dp-headlines-virginia
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Taphophilia?
taphophilia (taf′ō-fil′ē-ă)
ORIGIN:
From the Greek words taphos, meaning "tomb" or "sepulcher" and philia, meaning "attraction or affinity to something, in particular the love or obsession with something"
DEFINITION: 1. An excessive interest in graves and cemeteries. 2. A love or fondness for funerals, graves, and cemeteries. 3. In psychiatry, a morbid attraction to graves and cemeteries
Quote Repository
“And thou, his Florence, to thy trust Receive and keep, Keep safe his dedicated dust, His sacred sleep. So shall thy lovers, come from far, Mix with thy name As morning-star with evening-star His faultless fame.” A.C. Swinburne
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