Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn A Dynamic and Evolving Landscape | Page 3

The theme of this issue of Sweet Auburn, “A Dynamic and Evolving Landscape,” is an easy one for me to get excited about. Mount Auburn’s landscape has been evolving for 185 years, the last 23 of which I have been a part of. When I arrived as Director of Horticulture in 1993, the Trustees and staff had just completed a master planning process resulting in guidelines and recommendations for Mount Auburn’s future as both an active cemetery and a dynamic cultural institution. What attracted me to Mount Auburn, in addition to the spectacular trees of course, was the stated commitment that “preservation and enhancement of the landscape will come first in all future decisions regarding cemetery development.” I was fortunate to arrive at Mount Auburn when such a great plan was in place and such an exciting future had been charted. Ever since then, we have been working to preserve the historic character of Mount Auburn’s evolving landscape while also enhancing it as a cemetery, arboretum, outdoor museum and wildlife sanctuary within a beautiful park-like setting. Our work has always respected and appreciated the amazing vision and design skills of our founders (pp. 2-5), who imagined and created a place of beauty and tranquility to accommodate the burial and commemoration of the deceased while also providing comfort and inspiration to the living. Over the past 185 years, many others have modified or influenced the design of the Cemetery’s landscape in response to changing horticultural and architectural tastes and funerary customs, with four major periods characterizing Mount Auburn’s evolution (pp. 6-7). And today Mount Auburn’s landscape continues to be both preserved and refined, as evidenced by two major landscape projects completed in the spring of 2016. The renovation of the “corridor” between Beech Avenue and Central Avenue near Bigelow Chapel was designed and installed by Mount Auburn’s own horticultural staff, and made possible because of contributed funds (pp. 8-9). Concurrently, the “rejuvenation” of the area known as Harvard Hill was designed by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, installed by Robert Hanss Landscape Construction, and achieved thanks to a wonderful collaboration with Harvard University and Arnold Arboretum (pp.10-13). Mount Auburn’s landscape and rich history have recently been recognized in several exciting ways. In April a new book about Mount Auburn by Stephen Kendrick, entitled “The Li