Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Community Resource | Page 4

Montessori Kindergarteners study pond-life at Auburn Lake. This past spring we had just walked into Mount Auburn through the east gate when a great blue heron flew over our heads. The orioles have always excited the kids, not only seeing the birds but also their nests. Last year two classes loved seeing the male rose-breasted grosbeak coming to the bird feeder—it was phenomenal to see his colors in full sunlight. The view from Washington Tower is great for map study when combined with readings from Birds of the Cambridge Region, written by William Brewster. Brewster was a 19th- century authority on birds who wrote extensively about the walks he took from his house on Brattle Street into the marshes along the Charles River. When you’re on top of Washington Tower, you can get a good idea of what he was talking about, concerning the natural and human history of this area. (When we’re at Mount Auburn, we also visit Brewster’s grave.) Most years I conduct a topography class at the Cemetery. We come to Mount Auburn with a topographic map and cross-sectional profiles. We walk Indian Ridge Path to the main gate and then turn south, walking straight into Con- secration Dell. As we’re walking I ask my students to keep aware of exactly where they are on the path. We have check points where I ask them to tell me the exact height of a particular place and how the topography they observe compares with their cross sections. I’ve also used the Cemetery for tree study. When you’ve “lived” with a tree on the school campus, it’s a totally different experience to hunt for a similar tree at Mount Auburn. We find the name plaque on the tree—and it’s so much better than identifying it by using a field guide. You’ve really connected completely with the tree. Other teachers use Mount Auburn for other purposes. The youngest children study the pond life, as do second-graders when they learn about the Charles River. Seventh and eighth graders do sketching or water colors of plants or monuments. Grades five through eight might come for other reasons, but are ex- posed to views of death and the afterlife and begin interesting discussions as a result of their visits. (Of course, they are all immortal!) Sometimes we combine classes and students bring books and have an hour of quiet reading at Mount Auburn. One student asked me, “Why can’t the rest of the city be like Mount Auburn?” He was just overwhelmed with the peace and quiet–and the care taken to make the landscape visually interesting. I myself look on the setting as ideal and have worked to make Shady Hill’s landscaping more like Mount Auburn’s. Scheri Fultineer, Design Critic in Landscape Architecture Harvard Graduate School of Design I teach a course called “The Dead” at the Design School. I’ve been interested in the way religious and spiritual practices have impacted our understanding of the landscape and its design, and how, in our increasingly pluralistic world, different communities have to literally share common ground in cemeteries. I usually bring that into the design Harvard Graduate School of Design’s class “The Dead” take a tour of Mount Auburn on March 6, 2009. 2 | Sweet Auburn