Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn In Celebration of 175 Years | Page 5

ideal for this same purpose in more delicate settings; jugs of Art in the Great Outdoors D2, an anti-microbial solution to kill the biological growth Much of the preservation of monuments happens out on especially hazardous to marble; and one of the most formi- the grounds, a big challenge for everyone concerned. A dable helpers in the workshop, a gantry—part tractor, part Victorian marble sculpture at the Museum of Fine Arts has forklift—capable of lifting stones or monuments weighing guards to protect it, stopping people from touching it and up to 4,000 pounds. hurting it with oil from their hands. A roof shelters it from As a result of the Cemetery’s recently completed strategic the elements and extremes of temperature and moisture, planning, which calls for an expanded and more systematic and from bird droppings and falling branches. It has been preservation program, we have hired architect and preser- often noted that Ginger Rogers did everything that Fred vation specialist William (Bill) Barry of Heritage Planning Astaire did—except backwards and in high heels. Mount and Design in Cambridge as a consultant. Bill—who has Auburn is in the same kind of situation, worked with such clients as the Com- caring for a museum’s worth of art out monwealth of Massachusetts, Harvard in the open and an arboretum—simulta- University, the Boston Public Library, the neously and in the same place. Preservation Resource Center in New Today Preservation Supervisor Dave Orleans, and St. Petersburg University Gallagher is at work on the Andrews in Russia—will coordinate a task force monument (on Laurel Avenue). Dating composed of Trustees, staff and outside from the nineteenth century, the monu- experts to create comprehensive policies ment consists of a marble tree trunk for our conservation program that cover adorned with delicately rendered bark, both the wide array of Cemetery-owned ferns, a book, an anchor and other items. buildings, structures, historical collections Dave used Akepox2010, a stone epoxy, and infrastructure, as well as privately- to mend the broken wing of a dove owned monuments and mausolea. The that appears to be taking flight from the task force will also quantify our future monument. He is now in the process preservation needs, including the staff of deciding how to reattach the dove, required to ensure that our treasures are probably with metal pins that will also handed down intact to future generations. indicate sections of the bird’s feet that Mount Auburn’s Curator of Historical have eroded away. Collections Meg Winslow sees preserva- Another view of the 19th-century granite One big shift in thinking during the goddess, as pictured on the cover, in the Gay tion as “part of everything that we do,” family lot on Rosebay Avenue (Photo by past decade has been to view mainte- adding, “all of the staff is involved in Jennifer Johnston) nance as preservation and to have the preservation in one form or another.” Cemetery staff regularly care for monu- Today’s leaders in preservation attest ments rather than allowing them to deteriorate to a crisis to Mount Auburn’s impact on the field. “I think Mount point, then raising funds to bring in an outside consultant Auburn has set a national standard in preservation,” says to conserve them. Another change has been the recogni- Susan Park, president of the Boston Preservation Alliance. tion that “washing” is better than “cleaning.” Many monu- “The stewardship there has been phenomenal. And under ment surfaces, especially marble ones, are fragile. Cleaning (President) Bill Clendaniel’s leadership, Mount Auburn has practices in the past often harmed these surfaces—making expanded its mission to make preservation and education them even more vulnerable to damage from plant life, acid an even greater priority.” In giving the Cemetery a Massa- rain, and especially acid snow, which stays on the stone chusetts Preservation Award in November 2006, the Massa- rather than running quickly off it. Our newer and gen- chusetts Historical Commission stated that Mount Auburn tler methods of washing, taught to us by outside experts, was being recognized “in honor of its 175th Anniversary involve using a steam cleaner that can be moved as needed and for its longstanding commitment to historic landscape around the grounds. The result is fewer gleaming surfaces preservation and public education programs,” which Sec- but, more importantly, a slowing down of the inevitable de- retary of the Commonwealth William F. Galvin said, “have terioration of these marble treasures. become a model of stewardship for many historic proper- ties throughout the Commonwealth and the nation.” Not all preservation challenges are “set in stone.” Mount Many more people visit Mount Aburn as public transportation improves. 1856 Individual monuments are added to honor Civil War veterans. 1861-1865 Land from the old Stone Farm section of the Cemetery is devel- oped in the style of a landscaped lawn. 1875 Spring 2007 | 3