Login
No account yet? Register

Welcome

Taphophilia (dot) Com...
A repository of morbid curiosities:
Thanatology and Taphophile Issues, Cemetery,
Funeral Industry and Death Related News.

Deadgirl Recommends

Advertisement

Cemetery Snapshot

P1010001-2.jpg.jpg

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.

Google me: Last rites - and wrongs - by worlds bungling men in black PDF Print E-mail
Written by DeadGirl   
Saturday, 26 June 2004
By JULIE MIDDLETON

It's not an area in which you want to believe people make mistakes, but undertakers are still human. Evidence: yesterday's story about the Blenheim funeral home whose client's coffin was damaged between funeral and crematorium. Apparently the coffin slipped off a trolley (cringe) and was dinged. It was switched for another, but the family noticed and, quite rightly, complained. Police are investigating.

That family are not alone in suffering from funeral home errors. On the site taphophilia.com - billed as "a repository of morbid curiosities" - you'll find reports of similar stuff-ups galore, culled from media all over the world.

(Taphophilia means "the love of cemeteries".)

* In Manchester, England, a mortuary mix-up led to a family cremating the wrong body.

Confusion arose when two men named John Walsh died last July at Manchester Royal Infirmary. One of the men, who went by his middle initials N.M., wanted to be buried in a family plot. But the funeral directors picked up the wrong John Walsh and his body was cremated by the other family.

* Family and friends went to a Memphis, Tennessee funeral home for the wake of Paulene Parker. But Mrs Parker, who died of cancer aged 67, wasn't there. Daughter Pauline said: "They had a funeral yesterday and they buried my mom with a whole other family and everything. They just got the bodies mixed up and the lady they were supposed to bury is still here."

Even worse is this story: Grieving relatives of a Brazilian woman were shocked when her opened coffin revealed the body of a man, minutes before it was to be buried in Candeal, northeast Brazil.

The family of a dead motorcyclist are pressing charges against bungling undertakers in Antwerp, Belgium, after the man's cellphone began ringing in his closed coffin as they sat beside it in a chapel of rest.

Some of the relatives were so shocked they ran into the street, the Gazet van Antwerpen reported.

Meanwhile, ABC Action News in Florida claims "dozens" of people are suing a funeral home chain for mishandling loved ones' bodies.

Says lawyer Tom Carey: "We have cases where coffins are being reused. We have cases where multiple cremations are taking place and the ashes are just doled out with a shovel. We have cases where bodies are lost, where headstones are turned over and re-carved."

Rest in peace, indeed.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=3563258&thesection=technology&thesubsection=general&thesecondsubsection=

 
< Prev   Next >