Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn In Celebration of 175 Years | Page 2
Sweet Auburn
A publication of the
Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery
580 Mount Auburn Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
617-547-7105
www.mountauburn.org
Editorial Committee
Priscilla P. Morris, Editor
Vice President of Development
Stephen H. Anable, Managing Editor
Communications Coordinator & Writer
William C. Clendaniel, Contributing Editor
Trustee & President, Mount Auburn Cemetery
Candace Currie
Project Manager, Mapping & Planning
Bree Detamore Harvey
Director of Public Programs
Jennifer J. Johnston, Photo Editor
Development Technical Assistant & Photographer
Dawnielle Peck
Visitor Services Specialist
Meg Winslow
Curator of Historical Collections
Designer
Elizabeth Bonadies
Printer
P+R Publications, Inc.
Cover: 19th-century granite goddess on Gay family
monument on Rosebay Avenue
(Photo by Jennifer Johnston)
Trustees of the Friends
of Mount Auburn
Ann M. Roosevelt, Chair, Cambridge, MA
Mary Lee Aldrich, Cambridge
Clemmie Cash, Wellesley, MA
William C. Clendaniel, Boston
Thomas C. Cooper, Watertown, MA
Caroline Loughlin, Weston, MA
Caroline Mortimer, Cambridge
Susan Paine, Cambridge
The Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery was established in
1986 to assist in the conservation of the Cemetery’s natural
beauty and to promote the appreciation of its cultural, historic
and natural resources. Organized in 1990 as a 501(c)3 non-
profit charitable trust, the Friends seeks financial support from
its members, other individuals, foundations, corporations and
public agencies. It receives gifts for educational and interpretive
programs and materials for the public, specific cultural projects,
and operating support for horticultural rejuvenation and the
preservation of the historic monuments, structures, and archival
artifacts and records. The Friends has over 1,300 active
members.
ii | Sweet Auburn
President’s Corner
We are now more than halfway through Mount Auburn’s celebration of its 175 th year,
and this expanded issue of Sweet Auburn brings you many images of the varied
events that have enlivened the past few months. From the presentation of resolutions
from the Senate and House at the State House in June, recognizing the Cemetery’s
contributions to the life of the Commonwealth over 175 years, to the moving ceremo-
ny on Bigelow Chapel Lawn in September
commemorating the 175 th Anniversary of
the consecration, from the unveiling of the
restored chancel window in Bigelow Cha-
pel to the Gates, Ledbetter, Dobkin Hall,
and Dearinger lectures at the Boston Public
Library in October, January, February and
March respectively, hundreds of people have
joined our Trustees and staff in recogniz-
ing the many ways in which the Cemetery
enriches our lives. We are deeply grateful to
our cultural partners, speakers, musicians,
artists, conservators and historians who,
together with our Trustees, staff and donors,
have made these special events and projects
Bill Clendaniel in front of a portrait of
possible.
Israel Munson Spelman, President of the
Cemetery from 1874-1905
Also running through this issue of Sweet
Auburn is a timeline of significant and interest-
ing events in the history of the Cemetery, helping to remind us how this “new Ameri-
can landscape” grew from an intellectual concept into a physical, vibrant institution that
preserves countless cultural treasures from three centuries—plantings, architecture, art,
archives—and serves an ever-broader community—clients and visitors, both on-site
and increasingly over the web. This mission of preservation and service, which has
run throughout our 175 years, is the focus of this issue’s main article, 175 Years of
Stewardship: Looking Backward and Moving Forward.
Many more 175 th Anniversary events are yet to come in 2007—including the
remaining lectures in our “Facets of Mount Auburn: Celebrating 175 Years of a
Boston Jewel” series at the Boston Public Library and the Gala Dinner in the
Cemetery on June 14, which promises to be a truly “once in a lifetime” occasion. We
hope you will join us at these events, which will help many more people appreciate
Mount Auburn’s role in the development of our state and nation, its contribution to
our cultural life today, and the Cemetery’s need for a broader base of support so that
its exemplary record of “preservation and service” can continue long into the future.
William C. Clendaniel, President
pg. 1
pg. 7
pg. 12
President’s Corner