Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Expanding our Educational Outreach | Page 10

Copying Books, Rare Records of Cemetery Operations, Captured for Research Use By Margaret L. Winslow , Curator of Historical Collections, and Brian A. Sullivan , Archivist A project that will help educators and researchers for generations to come has just been completed: thou- sands of pages of outgoing correspondence, circa 1860 to 1925 contained in 65 volumes known as copying books have been captured with high-resolution digital images by Boston Photo Imaging. These irreplaceable, detailed copy- ing books transport the reader back in time. On March 31, 1902, James C. Scorgie, Superintendent of Mount Auburn Cemetery, wrote to Mrs. Julie Nevins of Washington, D.C., regarding her family lot on Eagle Avenue, the final resting-place of her husband, Henry C. Nevins: “Dear Madam, I went over to your lot yesterday (Easter) morning about 9 o’clock and found the three wreaths and cross there, and they were very beautiful. The Easter lilies of which the cross were made were the most perfect and largest lilies brought into Mount Auburn on that day.” This touching note is one of many that provide evidence of the daily operations of the Cemetery and our staff ’s ongoing dedication to an outstanding level of service. Mount Auburn collected and cared for, in separate lot fold- ers, the early incoming correspondence from lot owners and tradespeople, but the Cemetery’s responses by super- intendents and treasurers were hidden away in the pages of the deteriorating copying books. Copying these fading pages has been one of our highest preservation priorities for many years. We are now thrilled to be able to make this information available to staff and researchers. In 2006, a generous donation allowed the project to get underway and time was of the essence. The books’ leather bindings were powdery with red rot, making handling them impossible, and, inside, the ink was becoming illegible. An initial survey of the newly available letters has already yielded intriguing information. For example, they show that Cemetery staff consistently warned lot owners that 8 | Sweet Auburn The Cemetery’s fragile and fading copying books, historical volumes dem- onstrating ongoing correspondence from Mount Auburn to lot owners and tradesmen circa 1860-1925, have been digitally captured for use in research. The type of letterpress in these copying book documents represents a means of producing copies other than longhand duplicates. The original letter was trans- ferred to a page by a process of blotting ink. Photos by Meg Winslow marble monuments were destined to deteriorate in the harsh New England environment. In 1889, Superinten- dent James W. Lovering wrote to a Mrs. R.A. Vinal stating: “None of the marbles stand well out of doors, and the more elaborate the work the greater the liability to decay.” Few cemetery records have survived to this extent. Our collections offer an extraordinary snapshot of commemo- rative and horticultural practices from the Victorian era well into the 20th century that will be mined in the years ahead by our staff as well as scholars. The copying book digitization project will be precedent-setting—a model that Mount Auburn staff will consult when planning to preserve other significant archival collections.