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Grave Houses: A Review
Don C.
Marler
[This material was presented in different format at the Second Annual
Conference of the Redbone Heritage Foundation in Natchitoches, La.
(September, 2006. The relevance to Redbones is that the Redbones of
southwest Louisiana have a tradition of maintaining their cemeteries well,
and the cemetery with the most grave houses in the U.S. is in their
territory].

Mann Cemetery at Colmesneil, Texas
Background
In order to
understand the grave house phenomena it is necessary to look at the
origins of, and influences on, funerary practices in America. Nowhere are
the problems of transmission of history and custom by oral methods alone
more evident than in our funerary practices. The problems of oral
transmission have been well documented. Oral transmission is highly
dependent upon such factors as the differing perceptions of the
individuals involved, the emotional nature of the subject, changes in
circumstances and therefore in the customs developed to deal with these
changes, and the great expanse of time involved.
In early America the weakness of the oral history method was exacerbated
by the melding of customs from many countries and religions. These customs
migrated to America from Africa, Europe and with the Amerindians. Many of
these customs grew out of Paganism-and passed to us through the Egyptians,
Greeks and Romans.
Catholic cemeteries in America today are considered sacred and are
elaborately adorned with statues, emblems, artifacts and icons.
Protestant cemeteries are not so adorned with few muted exceptions such as
an emblem of a dove, lamb, bible or organizational affiliation. John
Wesley said that consecration of burial grounds was a "Š mere Romanish
superstition." This belief is reflected in the use of secular names such
as: Little Hope and Dark Corner.1 My own survey of Vernon Parish, La.
cemeteries reveals that of 123, only 14 are, by name, church related.2
Many burials from early times are on private grounds for various reasons,
not the least of which is that many people on the frontier were little
concerned with religion. And if they were concerned established cemeteries
were often far away. Funeral services, if they were held, were sometimes
delayed for months or years until a minister came to the area. Some common practices from paganism can be seen in the following:
1. Burials on high hills or slopes predate
Christianity, 2. flowers and evergreen were used in the Pagan
religion-including planting roses and other flowers and their use in
funeral services. The rose was associated with the Mediterranean
Mother Goddess, Cedar trees (tree of death) was associated with the
Cedars of Lebanon.3 3. Burial east and west (feet east); in the American
South outlaws are sometimes buried north and south. 4.
Wife is buried to the South of the husband.
Mann Cemetery at
Colmesneil, Texas Mann Cemetery at
Colmesneil, Texas
Flowers were not used at funerals in England and America until the 1800s,
and then used over the objections of Christian leaders.4 Another Pagan
holdover is placing shells on graves. Pagans being concerned with
fertility rites used the shell and up-right stone marker as symbolic of
the female and male genitalia respectively.
Grave houses have evolved over time from cave burial to pyramids, our own
grave houses, sepulchers and mausoleums.
Grave Houses in America
As stated above, grave houses in America were influenced by
Pagan religion and also African and Amerindian beliefs and practices. They
have been found in Africa, Scandinavia, Europe and all over North America.
Most of the surviving ones are in the southeastern part of the U.S. and
the upper South. The Talbert/Pierson Cemetery in Vernon Parish, La. is
reported to contain the largest number of grave houses of any cemetery in
the U.S. (See photos).
Considering the above background it should not be a surprise that our
customs and practices have outlived our knowledge of the meaning of
those customs. Not much is known about the original purpose of grave
houses and the current purposes seem to have evolved to fit the
conditions of society in America. Some ideas about the purposes seem to
be guesses or rationalizations to cover lack of knowledge of the real or
original purpose.
Some stated purposes are to: A. Keep livestock and wild animals off the graves. This is attributed to
the days of open range for livestock. It ignores that the cemetery could
have been fenced with less effort than erecting and maintaining grave
houses. B. Keep rain
off the grave. C. Provide shade and a resting place for family members. D. Provide a memorial to loved ones--usually babies or older honored
persons. E. Provide a status symbol. F. Give comfort to the spirit of the dead. G. Provide a home for the spirit of the dead. Provisions for the
journey of the dead could be left unmolested.
At the Talbert-Pierson Cemetery, it was in the past a strong custom to
build the grave house before nightfall on the day of the funeral. This
custom suggests forgotten purposes.

TALBERT-PIERSON CEMETERY 1889
Established by members of the
Talbert and Pierson families, pioneers who first settled in the area
in the 1860s. Thirteen graves are covered are covered with unique
grave houses. The origins of grave houses are uncertain-some tracing
to European or Native American roots. Other sources simply attribute
the custom to a form of protecting the graves before cemeteries were
commonly fenced. Grave houses were a part of the Upland South
tradition: this custom also included decorating the graves with
shells. Tradition demanded that the grave house was to be built before
sunset on the day of the burial. Talbert-Pierson Cemetery was
listed on the National Register of Historical Places in 2003. Adjacent
to the cemetery is Pine Grove Methodist Church established on April
10, 1887 as part of the Sugartown circuit. The first church was
located approximately one mile from the present church, which was
built in 1921.
Grave houses are made from local materials. In Appalachia they are
likely to be made of rock or wood. In East Texas and Louisiana they were
mostly made of cypress. Some were covered by cypress boards rived by
hand, but most are covered with what was then called tin--a metal roof.
Some had a roof only, others were totally enclosed with windows,
curtains, etc., but most of the ones made of wood had pickets and a
gate. Most cover one or two graves, but as many as six have been
observed.
Many grave houses are neglected today and they are disappearing; some
are maintained by family members. The Talbert/Pierson Cemetery is
maintained by Parish (County) prisoners, but the grave houses are still
maintained by family members.
Two members of the Talbert family who live near the Talbert/Pierson
Cemetery, Susan Talbert Bass and her mother Sarah Talbert, were
interviewed for information on the grave houses. Susan recently lost a
son who had a young family, and a grave house is planned for him. When
asked why it was not built before sundown on the day he was buried she
said that the tombstone had yet to be put in place by heavy equipment
and the grave house would be built around it later. Perhaps this is
another bit of evidence that times and circumstances change, and customs
match the change.
Both of these ladies said they would like a grave house when they die
"if the family will do it for me". This statement suggests that there
is still a strong value placed on grave houses by this family even
though they have lost track of the original purpose of the houses. And
it suggests that they are hopeful but uncertain about the future of
grave houses in the current culture.
Terry Jordan in his book, Texas Graveyards: A Cultural Legacy,
has a wonderful summary statement with which I will close.
The traditional southern cemetery, then, contains a disorderly array of
European, African and Amerindan (sic) material culture. In the main,
the customs and artifacts displayed are pagan, and almost without
exception, the original symbolic meaning is unknown to Š the people who
maintain these graveyards. They have no knowledge of the ancient
fertility cults and animism that provided the individual elements of
their funerary culture. They do not know they are perpetuating
millennia-old practices.
The message of the folk cemetery, for those who would read it, is that
there is a lot of European, a fair amount of African, and more than a
trace of Indian in all southerners, regardless of their skin color. In
the cultural sense the people of the South have much in common with each
other. For three centuries the three groups exchanged ideas and genes,
creolizing the culture to a remarkable degree. Nowhere is that blending
more apparent than in places we have set aside for our dead. These
traditional graveyards are not merely repositories for our dead, but
museums full of reminders from our ancient past and distant, diverse
ancestral homelands.5
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Endnotes:
1.
Terry G. Jordan, Texas Graveyards: A Cultural
Legacy ( Austin: University of Texas Press, 1982), p. 33.
2. Jane Parker McManus, L'est
We Forget, (Alexandria, La. Parker Enterprises, 1995), and
Don C. Marler,
Redbones of Louisiana, (Dogwood Press Hemphill, 2003), p. 255. 3.
Op.cit., Jordan. 4.
J. Mitford, The American Way of Death, (New York. Simon and
Schuster, 1963). Also see James K. Crissman, Death and Dying in Central
Appalachia, (Chicago, University of Illinois Press, 1994).
5. Op. cit., Jordan, pp. 39-40.
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