Wednesday night, I learned that the venerable Sears, Roebuck catalog actually marketed tombstones a century or more in the past!
This fascinating factoid came out during a book club meeting hosted by the Virtual Genealogical Association.
We were discussing Stories in Stone by Douglas Keister, a terrific book about gravestone architecture, symbolism, and acronyms.
Then the Sears catalog was mentioned. I can envision ancestors in small, rural towns ordering a wide range of merchandise by mail. But I had no idea tombstones were also for sale in the catalog.
Especially in tiny communities where few skilled craftspeople were available to create stones, this must have been a good alternative.
Doing a quick online search, I discovered an entire Sears catalog devoted to products called Memorial Art in Granite and Marble, better known to consumers as tombstones.The 1906 catalog, available for free to view or download from Internet Archive, includes more than 200 pages of illustrations and explanations. The catalog page at top shows a stone priced at $57.40 (and upward), which today would be more than $1,800.
Prices varied, depending on size, type of stone, and whether ordered with or without engraving. Want a bench or a fence? Also available in this specialized catalog.
I don't know for sure whether any ancestors purchased tombstones from Sears, but it's an intriguing possibility I hadn't considered before. Did you think any of your ancestors bought a stone from Sears?
You could buy almost anything from the Sears catalog including whole houses, so why not tombstones?
ReplyDeleteGood point!
DeleteThanks for the link! I just heard about catalog tombstones from a webinar last month, but I thought people went to the mortuary and ordered their tombstones from a special catalog they had there. Maybe they did offer the Sears catalog at funeral homes to browse through. My sister lived in a Sears home, so makes sense like Lisa said that they sold everything imaginable. The man who presented the webinar said the diverse art work on tombstones deteriorated after the catalog as it became very cookie cutter and repetitive.
ReplyDeletein Wilson, North Carolina if you go to the Internet, there is a little short film on one of the sites where a lady talks about the Maplewood cemetery and says that there was some of the markers ordered in the cemetery ordered from Susan and Robert catalog mainly the ones that was a square stone, standing straight up with a Bible on the top
ReplyDelete