Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Horticultural Innovator | Page 2
A publication of the
Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery
580 Mount Auburn Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
617-547-7105
www.mountauburn.org
Editorial Committee
Bree D. Harvey, Editor
Vice President of External Affairs
Lauren S. Marsh, Managing Editor
Communications, Grants & Events Coordinator
Jennifer J. Johnston, Photo Editor
Media & Imaging Coordinator
David P. Barnett, Contributing Editor
President & CEO, Mount Auburn Cemetery
William G. Barry, Jr.
Vice President of Preservation & Facilities
Dennis Collins
Horticultural Curator
Candace Currie
Director of Planning & Sustainability
Tom Johnson
Family Services Coordinator
Piper P. Morris
Former Senior Vice President of Development
Sean J. O’Regan
Vice President of Cemetery Services
Brian A. Sullivan
Archivist
Natalie Wampler
Preservation & Facilities Planner
Margaret L. Winslow
Curator of Historical Collections
Designer
Elizabeth A. Bonadies
Printer
P+R Publications
Cover Photo: Col. Henry Coffin Nevins monument (Lot
4659, Eagle Ave), created by Beaux-Arts architect, Stanford
White, and preeminent “American Renaissance” sculptor,
Augustus Saint-Gaudens. Photo by Jennifer Johnston.
Trustees of the Friends
of Mount Auburn
Mary Lee Aldrich, Secretary, Cambridge, MA
Clemmie L. Cash, Chair, Wellesley, MA
Thomas C. Cooper, Watertown, MA
Caroline Loughlin, Treasurer, Weston, MA
Sean McDonnell, Cambridge
Caroline Mortimer, Vice-Chair, Cambridge
Ann M. Roosevelt, Cambridge
Honorary Trustee of the Friends
President’s Corner
The theme of this issue of Sweet Auburn is certainly
touching my own “sweet” spot. Having come to Mount
Auburn 17 years ago as Director of Horticulture, I have
truly enjoyed being part of a great team charged with
preserving and enhancing this magnificent landscape
and continuing a long tradition of horticultural innovation.
In the feature article Dennis Collins does a superb job
of highlighting some of the historical accomplishments
and current challenges of our horticultural program.
Hardly a day goes by that I am not amazed at (and
Dave Barnett
grateful for) the dedication and creativity of the Horticulture
Department staff as they continue to achieve high standards of landscape maintenance
despite budget cutbacks.
President’s
Corner
Sweet Auburn
We are all very excited about the plans for a new Horticulture Center, described on page 7,
which will bring us to even greater levels of innovation. Most exciting is the fact that
the Horticulture Center has been designed to achieve LEED Platinum, the highest
standard of certification possible from the Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design program of the U.S. Green Building Council. This reflects the enthusiasm and
commitment of our entire staff and Board of Trustees to maximize our energy efficiency
and environmental sustainability in all that we do throughout the organization.
We will only be able to realize our vision for this project with the generous support of our
friends and the broader community. I have no doubt that plans for a new Horticulture
Center will become a reality. Under the leadership of Senior Vice President of Devel-
opment Piper Morris, the groundwork has been laid for a successful capital campaign
– Mount Auburn’s first ever. Having retired in June (p.14), we are sorry to see Piper go
but grateful for all that she accomplished in her six years at Mount Auburn. I am very
pleased to welcome Jane Carroll to the Mount Auburn team as the new Vice President of
Development. As described on page 15, Jane brings a wealth of experience, and I look
forward to working with her to accomplish our many goals.
Speaking of goals, we could not achieve them and could not continue to carry out the
many programs and services that Mount Auburn provides to our clients and visitors
without the dedicated and talented staff in all departments, including our growing group
of enthusiastic volunteers like Irene Dygas (p.17).
And truly, our diverse horticultural collections are just one of the many facets that make
Mount Auburn such a unique treasure. The elements of art and architecture, history, wildlife,
and the lives of those interred here make up the interconnected layers that we can use to
“read the landscape.” These aspects have all been addressed in the supplementary articles
of this issue through poetry, images, inscriptions, and stories. I hope you will plan a visit
to the Cemetery sometime this fall to enjoy the spectacular foliage (make sure to bring
your Fall Foliage Pull-Out Guide on p. 10) and to reflect on all of the things Mount
Auburn is and very soon will be. Enjoy this issue of Sweet Auburn.
David P. Barnett, President
Susan W. Paine, Cambridge
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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 inter-
pretive 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.
Sweet
Auburn
pg.1
pg.11
pg.14
As a correction of the feature article in the Spring 2010 issue of Sweet Auburn, on page 4., the surname Emmet is
spelled as such and not as “Emmett.” And in addition, the family lot in which Schlesinger is interred is the historic
Cushing family lot.