Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn and The Civil War | Page 21

Remembering Blanche M.G. Linden (July 4, 1946 – July 31, 2014) Historian of Mount Auburn Cemetery, Author of Silent City on a Hill We are saddened by the loss of our friend Blanche M.G. Linden and are forever grateful for her scholarship on the founding and early decades of Mount Auburn Cemetery. Blanche with her two children Marc Lindow and Julia Lentini on February 8, 2008 (above). At the signing of her revised and expanded edition of Silent City at the Harvard Bookstore, 2008 (below). “Blanche’s magisterial Silent City was just being published when I arrived as the new President of Mount Auburn in the spring of 1988. What a gift it was to me, a new chief executive trying to understand the Cemetery’s place in American history. And what a gift Blanche herself was to us, always an invaluable resource throughout my 20-year tenure at Mount Auburn.” — Bill Clendaniel, President Emeritus, Mount Auburn Cemetery “Blanche helped us appreciate how Mount Auburn reflected the culture of its founding period and gave us insights to understand the changes that occurred over time. We shall miss her but hear her voice when we visit the Cemetery, read her books, and remember her spirit. — Janet Heywood, Former Vice President of Interpretive Programs, Mount Auburn Cemetery “Since it was first published in 1989, Blanche M. G. Linden’s Silent City on a Hill has been the cornerstone in our understanding of the 19th-century rural cemetery movement and Mount Auburn’s leadership role in that movement. Silent City provided the intellectual context for the 1993 Master Plan that has guided stewardship of the Cemetery for the past 20 years.” — Shary Berg, Author of The Mount Auburn Cemetery Historic Landscape Report, 1993 “Her passion and dedication to the study of cemeteries and grave- markers have served as an inspiration and model of excellence for those who follow.” — J. Joseph Edgette, Ph.D.; Chair, Cemeteries and Gravemarkers Area American Culture Association “Our knowledge and understanding of Mount Auburn Cemetery and the rural cemetery movement begins with historian Blanche M.G. Linden. In fact, Blanche was the first scholar to discover and study Mount Auburn Cemetery’s archival collection of institutional records. With penetrating scholarship, Blanche made the most important point of all: that these designed landscapes have meaning. ” — Meg L. Winslow, Curator of Historical Collections, Mount Auburn Cemetery “As Mount Auburn inspired the rural cemetery movement in 19th-century America, Blanche, through her work, inspired scores of scholars to study historic cemeteries as complex and layered landscapes.” — Elise M. Ciregna, Cultural Historian Also online at: mountauburn.org/2014/remembering-blanche-linden “As Mount Auburn approaches its bicentennial it remains vibrant in a constant Renaissance, its beauties repeatedly renewed through the seasons while it serves actively as a place for burials and for preserving memory.” — Blanche Linden Winter 2015 | 19