Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Community Resource | Page 9

My daily life is shooting a lot of people and activity for newspapers and magazines. For me the Cemetery is great because I may have four or five jobs in a day, but I can just pop in for an hour or half an hour in the middle of the day and grab a few pictures. You can shoot high or low at Mount Auburn, photograph birds nesting in the tops of trees or in the water, on one of the ponds. The view from Washington Tower is beautiful. Sometimes, when you go up there, you can shoot birds with the skyline of Boston behind them, which is just spectacular. Susan Caulfield and Randall Cox Cambridge, MA Susan and Randy are longtime neighbors of Mount Auburn on nearby Aberdeen Avenue. They have two sons, Ben, 16, and Andy, 15. They are Charter Members of the Friends of Mount Auburn, having joined in 1986. Susan is a reference librarian at the Newton Free Library and Randy is an architect with Icon Architecture, Inc., in Boston. W e actually went to the Cemetery on our first date! We walked to the top of Susan Caulfield (far left) with infant son Andy and slightly older son Ben (learning his letters) at Mount Auburn Cemetery circa mid-1990’s. the Tower, past really amazing monuments and beautiful trees. It was early June—and we were hooked! Now our family has lived near Mount Auburn, practically across the street, on Aberdeen Avenue, for 17 years. We started taking our children, now teenagers, to Mount Auburn when they were babies. We would go for walks all through the year, just as if it were a park. You could see ponds, rabbits, birds and foliage—all kinds of things kids just love. Our boys had a couple of favorite “hiding trees.” One was at the foot of Indian Ridge Path, with branches that bent low to the ground and a hollow, making a hiding space. The other was up by Winslow Homer’s grave. And the kids also liked the Dell. We went to most of the bulb plantings in the fall and all of the Arbor Day tree plantings each spring. Then, in the spring, we would go to see the bulbs that we had planted in bloom—that sort of thing. We would practice letters by reading letters off monuments. The whole cemetery was good for teaching all kinds of things—the letters, tadpoles and frogs in the ponds, leaves we would collect and identify. The children liked the labels on the trees. I have photos from years ago, of a big ice storm, when we went to the Cemetery to see the damage. We have tenants and when they first move in, we give them brochures and maps of Mount Auburn. ^ Volunteer Profile: Jim Gorman A Docent’s Perspective J i m Gorman ( r ight) of S outh B o ston b e gan volunteering as a docent at the Mount Auburn Visitors Center in Story Chapel in November 2007. He has had “a longtime relationship” with the Cemetery, having been a member of the Friends since 1986. Of the Cemetery and himself he says, “Professionally I’m a horticulturalist, and as an avocation, I’m interested in Boston history. And it’s all there at Mount Auburn.” He has been involved with “public horticulture” for 25 years. Currently, he is teaching in the Landscape Architecture Program at the Boston Architectural College. Prior to that, he worked at the Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain and as Chief of Interpretation in the park ranger program for the city of Boston. When he travels, he gravitates toward open spaces, used bookstores, botanical gardens, and cemeteries. He finds cemeteries enjoyable “because of their horticultural pull.” “At Mount Auburn, I like being able to help people make connections that are a little more meaningful for them. If somebody comes in to the Visitors Center and you ask informally about their interest and it turns out to be poetry, you can direct them to the graves of Amy Lowell, Robert Creeley, and Henry Wads- worth Longfellow. If sports fans come in, you can lighten them up by saying ‘You know Curt Gowdy is buried here.’ Pick a topic and there are notable people in the Cemetery from medicine, law, politics, the military…” Jim has also alerted visitors to a great horned owl roosting in Consecration Dell and other avians of note. He enjoys talking to all the visitors, in all their diversity. He says, “Mount Auburn is a truly a democratic—small ‘d’—place where people of all cultural and social strata cross paths.” What does his work as a docent give him? “I like learning from others, from the visitors, and being able to share any- thing that I might have as well—it’s a reciprocal situation.” Fall 2009 | 7