Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Reimagining the Cemetery as Museum | Page 10

The Surprising Range of Resources in Mount Auburn’s Historical Collections By Meg L. Winslow, Curator of Historical Collections We deal, not with tracts of land, nor even with lots large enough to provide a house with a garden, but with areas often measured in feet or inches…There is probably no business in existence in which the importance and value of mere records is so high. — Cemetery Accounts, Walter Mucklow (1935) Every year, the Historical Collections Department at Mount Auburn fields inquiries from some four hundred researchers: architects, landscape designers, historians, biographers, genealogists, preservationists, curators, writers, publishers, teachers, filmmakers, artists, poets, and individuals with family members at the Cemetery. Institutions such as the Boston Athenaeum, Gettysburg Cemetery, Harvard University, Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and New York State Historical Association have consulted our records, which are unique among American rural cemeteries in their extent, completeness, and organization. Mary Roach, author of the bestselling book Stiff:The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, describes Mount Auburn’s holdings as “a rich and endlessly surprising trove of death-related goodness, the likes of which I have never come across elsewhere.” The Department holds a wealth of materials that tell the story of the Cemetery and those interred here: burial records, guidebooks, maps, plans, blueprints, photographs, lithographs, engravings, drawings, paintings, sculpture, decorative arts, and ephemera. Though the Department was only officially established in 1993, its holdings go back to the Cemetery’s founding in 1831 and continue to grow through purchases, gifts, and acquisitions. In addition to aiding researchers, the Historical Collections serve as a valuable resource for Cemetery staff seeking to improve the landscape, implement preservation plans for monuments and buildings, or create interpretive programs and materials. Researchers come to us with questions relating to family genealogy, historical figures, landscape and architectural history, horticulture, American studies, anthropology, sociology, natural sciences, and medicine. The rural cemetery movement is a subject of increasing interest to scholars and educators, and Mount Auburn’s records reflect society’s changing ideas about death, commemoration, religion, ethics, and nature over the past century and a half. 8 | Sweet Auburn Contact with researchers enriches the Cemetery as well. The late Caroline Loughlin, a Trustee of the Cemetery who for many years handled research questions at the Historical Collection Department, remarked that “The exchange we have with researchers—between what we know and what they know—is enormously useful.” Curator of Historical Collections Meg L. Winslow concurs: “The people laid to rest here and the ways in which they are commemorated are remarkably varied and rich. Each day we continue to discover new things about the Cemetery through our growing collections and through our interactions with the families and scholars we serve.” The Cemetery’s holdings are organized into Archives, Library, Photographs, and Fine and Decorative Arts collections. In addition, the Department manages the Cemetery’s collection of significant fine art monuments, stained glass, monuments, and landscape furnishings. Archives The Archives holds more than 2,000 linear feet of materials gener ]Y[