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SUBJECT INDEX for MARKERS (updated in July 2005 to include XXI and XXII; index to volumes I-XX was published in Markers XXI)

Compiled by Gary Collison

[EXPLANATORY NOTE: This subject index to the twenty-one earlier volumes is designed to be brief and usable while still being relatively comprehensive.  The general rule has been to include an article under a state heading if it includes a discussion of, listing of, or a photograph of one or more gravemarkers in the state.  Studies of the work of individual stonecarvers are listed under “CARVER STUDIES” and also under the state or states in which the carver’s work appears.  For the first time, it will be easy for researchers interested in the gravestones of Nova Scotia or Rhode Island, for example, to discover that Jim Blachowicz and Vincent Luti’s article, “William Coye: Father of the Plymouth Carving Tradition,” contains information about Coye stones in those areas.  Anyone perusing the entries for Georgia, Iowa, Vermont, or any of nine other states will discover that Angelika Krüger-Kahloula’s pathbreaking article, “Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” discusses examples of African American gravemarkers or memorial notices in those states.  The index reveals many similar unexpected connections.  Carvers’ names do not appear unless given in the title of an article.  With the exception of Boston, no names of cities are used as subject headings; see state headings. Copies of volumes VI-XXI are available from the AGS office. Note that some of the earlier volumes are in short supply.  See the Markers webpage at www.gravestonestudies.org/markers.htm.]

ACADIANS

“Acadian Cemeteries in Nova Scotia: A Survey,” Sally Ross, photos by Deborah Trask, XXII: vi, 1-31 

AFRICA

“'I Never Regretted Coming to Africa': The Story of Harriet Ruggles Loomis' Gravestone,” Laurel K. Gabel, XVI: 140-173

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100 

AFRICAN AMERICAN

“Afro-American Gravemarkers in North Carolina,” M. Ruth Little, VI: 102-134

“Carving a Path to Freedom: The Life and Work of African American Stonecarver Sebastian ‘Boss’ Hammond,” Mary Ann Ashcraft, XXI: 12-39

“A Modern Gravestone Maker: Some Lessons for Gravestone Historians,” Barbara Rotundo, XIV: 86-109

“Slavery in Colonial Massachusetts as Seen Through Selected Gravestones,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XI: 112-141

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

“Under Grave Conditions: African-American Signs of Life and Death in North Florida,” Robin Franklin Nigh, XIV: 158-189 

ALABAMA

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

AMERICAN INDIAN (see NATIVE AMERICAN)

ANIMAL

“'Best Damm Dog We Ever Had': Some Folkloristic and Anthropological Observations on San Francisco's Presidio Pet Cemetery,” Richard E. Meyer and David M. Gradwohl, XII: 160-205

“Remembering Man’s Other Best Friend: U.S. Horse Graves in Historical Perspective,” Gary Collison, XXII: 70-107

ARCHAEOLOGY

“The Archaeological Significance of Mausoleums [Pittsburgh, PA],” James B. Richardson III and Ronald C. Carlisle, I: 156-165

“Gravestones and Historical Archaeology: A Review Essay,” David H.Watters, I: 174-179

ARCHITECTURE

“Poems in Stone: Tombs of Louis Henri Sullivan,” Robert A. Wright, V: 168-209

“The Thomas Foster Mausoleum: Canada's Taj Mahal,” Sybil F. Crawford, XX: 154-191

ARKANSAS

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

ASIA MINOR (see TURKEY)

AUSTRALIA

“Aboriginal Australian Burials in Christian Missions,” Karolyn K. Wrightson, XV: 234-263

BELGIUM

“Mourning in a Distant Land: Gold Star Pilgrimages to American Military Cemeteries in Europe, 1930-33,” Lotte Larsen Meyer, XX: 30-75

“Stylistic Variation in the Western Front Battlefield Cemeteries of World War I Combatant Nations,” Richard E. Meyer, XVIII: 188-253

BIBLIOGRAPHY

“The Year’s Work in Gravemarker/Cemetery Studies,” Richard E. Meyer, XII: 206-219; XIII: 223-231; XIV: 190-216; XV: 318-336; XVI: 242-263; XVII: 206-235; XVIII: 254-283; XIX: 272-313; XX: 333-390

BIOGRAPHY (see also, OBITUARIES)

“Harriette Merrifield Forbes,” VII: vi, 1-2

BLACK (see AFRICAN AMERICAN)

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS (see also, MASSACHUSETTS)

“Boston's Historic Burying Grounds Initiative: 'Eliot Burying Ground,' 'Dorchester North Burying Ground,' 'Copp's Hill Burying Ground,'” VII: 59-102

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

“Seven Initial Carvers of Boston, 1700-1725,” Theodore Chase and Laurel K. Gabel, V: 210-232

BRITISH COLUMBIA

“In the Way of the White Man's Totem Poles: Stone Monuments Among Canada's Tsimshian Indians 1879-1910,” Ronald W. Hawker, VII: 213-232

CALIFORNIA

“'Best Damm Dog We Ever Had': Some Folkloristic and Anthropological Observations on San Francisco's Presidio Pet Cemetery,” Richard E. Meyer and David M. Gradwohl, XII: 160-205

“Contemporary Gravemarkers of Youths: Milestones of Our Path Through Pain to Joy,” Gay Lynch, XII: 144-159

“The Origins of Marble Carving on Cape Cod, Part I: William Sturgis and Family,” James Blachowicz, XIX, 64-173

CANADA (see BRITISH COLUMBIA, ONTARIO, NOVA SCOTIA)

CARIBBEAN

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

CARVER IDENTIFICATION METHODOLOGY AND ISSUES (see also, studies of individual stonecarvers)

“By Their Characters You Shall Know Them: Using Styles of Lettering to Identify Gravestone Carvers,” Gray Williams, Jr., XVII: 162-205

“Purchase Delay, Pricing Factors, and Attribution Elements in Gravestones from the Shop of Ithamar Spauldin,” John S. Wilson, IX: 105-132

“Seven Initial Carvers of Boston 1700-1725,” Theodore Chase and Laurel K. Gabel, V: 210-232

CARVER STUDIES (also listed under state entries)

“Carving a Path to Freedom: The Life and Work of African American Stonecarver Sebastian ‘Boss’ Hammond,” Mary Ann Ashcraft, XXI: 12-39

“The Carvers of Kingston, Massachusetts,” James Blachowicz, XVIII: 70-145

“The Carvers of Portage County, Wisconsin, 1850-1900,” Phil Kallas, II: 187-202

“Charles Miller Walsh: A Master Carver of Gravestones in Virginia, 1865-1901,” Martha Wren Briggs, VII: 139-172

“A Chronological Survey of the Gravestones Made by Calvin Barber of Simsbury, Connecticut,” Stephen Petke, X: vi, 1-52

“The Colburn Connections: Hollis, New Hampshire Stonecarvers, 1780-1820,” Theodore Chase and Laurel Gabel, III: 93-146

“Daniel Hastings of Newton, Massachusetts,” Daniel Farber, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 157-159

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: Gabriel Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XX: 76-109

“Eighteenth-Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: George Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XXII: 108-159

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Narragansett Basin: John and James New,” Vincent F. Luti, XVI: 6-103

“Enos Clark, Vermont Gravestone Carver,” Margaret R. Jenks, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 174-176

“The Feltons of New Salem, Massachusetts,” Robert Drinkwater, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 169-173

“'Fencing ye Tables': Scotch-Irish Ethnicity and the Gravestones of John Wight,” David H. Watters, XVI: 174-209

“Fifty Years of Reliability: The Stonecarving Career of Charles Lloyd Neale (1800-1866) in Alexandria, Virginia,” David Vance Finnell, X: 91-116

“The Gravestone Carving Traditions of Plymouth and Cape Cod,” James Blachowicz, XV: 38-203

“Ithamar Spauldin, Stonecarver of Concord, Massachusetts,” C. R. Jones, I: 50-55

“James Stanclift,” Sherry Stancliff, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 154-157

“James Wilder of Lancaster, Massachusetts, 1741-1794,” Laurel Gabel and Theodore Chase, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 166-169

“The JN Carver,” David Watters, II: 115-131

“Jonathan and John Loomis of Coventry, Connecticut,” James A. Slater, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed. “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 131-138

“From Jonathan Hartshorne to Jeremiah Lane: Fifty Years of Gravestone Carving in Coastal New Hampshire,” Glenn A. Knoblock, XIII: 74-111

“John Anthony Angel and William Throop: Stonecutters of the Narragansett Basin,” Vincent F. Luti, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 148-153

“The John Dwight Workshop in Shirley, Massachusetts, 1770-1816,” Eloise Sibley West, VI: vii, 1-31

“John Huntington, Gravestone Carver of Lebanon, Connecticut,” Ann F. Shepardson, XIII: 142-222

“John Solomon Teetzel and the Anglo-German Gravestone Carving Tradition of 18th Century Northwestern New Jersey,” Richard F. Veit, XVII: 124-161

“The John Stevens Shop,” Esther Fisher Benson, I: 80-83

“Joseph Barbur, Jr.: The Frond Carver of West Medway,” Michael Cornish, II: 133-147

“The Joshua Hempstead Diary,” Ralph L. Tucker, XII: 118-143

“‘And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England, 1984 Additions,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, III: 149

“‘And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” Warren E. Roberts, VII: 173-194

“Jotham Warren, The Plainfield Trumpeter,” James A. Slater, XIII: vi, 1-43

“The Lamson Family Gravestone Carvers of Charlestown and Malden, Massachusetts,” Ralph L. Tucker, X: 151-218

“’Md. by Thomas Gold’: The Gravestones of a New Haven Carver,” Meredith M. Williams and Gray Williams, Jr., V: vi, 1-59

“Merrimac Valley Style Gravestones: The Leighton and Worster Families,” Ralph L. Tucker, XI: 142-167

“The Mullicken Family Gravestone Carvers of Bradford, Massachusetts, 1663-1768,” Ralph L. Tucker, IX: 23-58

“The New York and New Jersey Gravestone Carving Tradition,” Richard F. Welch, IV: 1-54

“Openwork Memorials of North Carolina,” Francis Y. Duval and Ivan B. Rigby, I: 62-75

“The Origins of Marble Carving on Cape Cod, Part I: William Sturgis and Family,” James Blachowicz, XIX, 64-173

“The Origins of Marble Carving on Cape Cod, Part II: The Orleans and Sandwich Carvers,” James Blachowicz, XX: 196-279

“The Papers of Dr. Ernest J. Caulfield on Connecticut Carvers and their Work,” VIII: 9-342

“A Particular Sense of Doom: Skeletal ‘Revivals’ in Northern Essex County, Massachusetts, 1737-1784,” Peter Benes, III: 71-92

“The Pratt Family of Stonecutters,” Ralph L. Tucker, XIV: 134-157

“Purchase Delay, Pricing Factors, and Attribution Elements in Gravestones from the Shop of Ithamar Spauldin,” John S. Wilson, IX: 105-132

“The Rule Family: Vermont Gravestone Carvers and Marble Dealers,” Ann M. Cathcart, XIX: 214-239

“Samuel Dwight: Vermont Gravestone Cutter,” Nancy Jean Melin, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 160-165

“Seven Initial Carvers of Boston, 1700-1725,” Theodore Chase and Laurel K. Gabel, V: 210-232

“Solomon Brewer: A Connecticut Valley Yankee in Westchester County,” Gray Williams, Jr., XI: 52-81

“Stonecutters and Their Works,” edited by Jessie Lie Farber, IV: 131-176 (see individual carvers)

“Stonecarvers of Monroe County, Indiana 1828-1890,” Jennifer Lucas, VII: 195-212

“Wanted: The Hook-And-Eye Man [Gershom Bartlett],” Ernest Caulfield, I: 12-49

“Where the Bay Meets the River: Gravestones and Stonecutters in the River Towns of Western Massachusetts, 1690-1810,” Kevin Sweeney, III: 1-46

“William Coye: Father of the Plymouth Carving Tradition,” James Blachowicz, in collaboration with Vincent F. Luti, XVII: 32-107

“William Young of Tatnuck, Massachusetts,” Mary and Rick Stafford, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed. “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 138-148

CAST IRON (see IRON)

CEMETERY (GENERAL)

“The Adkins-Woodson Cemetery: A Sociological Examination of Cemeteries as Community,” Gary S. Foster and Richard L. Hummell, XII: 92-117

“The Care of Old Cemeteries and Gravestones,” Lance R. Mayer, I: 118-141

“Mystery, History, and an Ancient Graveyard,” Melvin Williams, I: 166-171

“Protective Custody: The Museum's Responsibility for Gravestones,” Robert P. Emlen, I: 142-147

“Recording Cemetery Data,” F. Joanne Baker, Daniel Farber, Anne G. Giesecke, I: 98-117

“Resources for the Classroom Teacher: an Annotated Bibliography,” Mary Anne Mrozinski, I: 172-173

CERAMIC

“'...do not go and leave me behind unwept...': Greek Gravemarkers Heed the Warning,” Gay Lynch, XX: 280-301

“'A Piece of Granite That's Been Made in Two Weeks': Terra-Cotta Gravemarkers from New Jersey and New York, 1875-1930,” Richard Veit, XII: vi, 1-30

CHILDREN

“’Safe in the Arms of Jesus’: Consolation on Delaware Children's Gravestones, 1840-99,” Deborah A. Smith, IV: 85-106

CHINESE

“Chinese Graves and Gravemarkers in Hong Kong,” Chun-shing Chow and Elizabeth Kenworthy Teather, XV: 286-317

CHINESE AMERICAN

“The Chinese of Valhalla: Adaptation and Identity in a Midwestern American Cemetery,” C. Fred Blake, X: 53-90

CIVIL WAR

“Quantrill's Three Graves and Other Reminders of the Lawrence Massacre,” Randall M. Thies, XVIII: vi, 1-29

“'Where Valor Proudly Sleeps': Theodore O'Hara and 'Bivouac of the Dead',” Thomas C. Ware, XI: 82-111

COLORADO

“Colorado Wooden Markers,” James Milmoe, I: 56-61

“The Woodmen of the World Monument Program,” Annette Stott, XX: vi, 1-29

CONCRETE/CEMENT

“A Modern [African American] Gravestone Maker: Some Lessons for Gravestone Historians,” Barbara Rotundo, XIV: 86-109

CONNECTICUT

“The Center Church Crypt of New Haven, Connecticut: A Photographic Essay,” Photographs by Daniel and Jessie Lie Farber; Text by Gray Williams, Jr., IX: 79-104

“By Their Characters You Shall Know Them: Using Styles of Lettering to Identify Gravestone Carvers,” Gray Williams, Jr., XVII: 162-205

“A Chronological Survey of the Gravestones Made by Calvin Barber of Simsbury, Connecticut,” Stephen Petke, X: vi, 1-52

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

“The Disappearing Shaker Cemetery,” Thomas A. Malloy and Brenda Malloy, IX: 257-274

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: Gabriel Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XX: 76-109

“Eighteenth-Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: George Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XXII: 108-159

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Narragansett Basin: John and James New,” Vincent F. Luti, XVI: 6-103

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

“'I Never Regretted Coming to Africa': The Story of Harriet Ruggles Loomis' Gravestone,” Laurel K. Gabel, XVI: 140-173

“James Stanclift,” Sherry Stancliff, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 154-159

“John Huntington, Gravestone Carver of Lebanon, Connecticut,” Ann F. Shepardson, XIII: 142-222

“Jonathan and John Loomis of Coventry, Connecticut,” James A. Slater, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed. “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 131-138

“The Joshua Hempstead Diary,” Ralph L. Tucker, XII: 118-143

“Jotham Warren, The Plainfield Trumpeter,” James A. Slater, XIII: vi, 1-43

“The Lamson Family Gravestone Carvers of Charlestown and Malden, Massachusetts,” Ralph L. Tucker, X: 151-218

“’Md. by Thomas Gold’: The Gravestones of a New Haven Carver,” Meredith M. Williams and Gray Williams, Jr., V: vi, 1-59

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Merrimac Valley Style Gravestones: The Leighton and Worster Families,” Ralph L. Tucker, XI: 142-167

“The Papers of Dr. Ernest J. Caulfield on Connecticut Carvers and their Work,” VIII: 9-342

 “A Particular Sense of Doom: Skeletal ‘Revivals’ in Northern Essex County, Massachusetts, 1737-1784,” Peter Benes, III: 71-92

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

Review of James A. Slater’s The Colonial Burying Grounds of Eastern Connecticut and the Men Who Made Them, Peter Benes,  VI: 232-240

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

“Wanted: The Hook-And-Eye Man [Gershom Bartlett],” Ernest Caulfield, I: 12-49

“Where the Bay Meets the River: Gravestones and Stonecutters in the River Towns of Western Massachusetts, 1690-1810,” Kevin Sweeney, III: 1-46

CONSERVATION (see PRESERVATION)

CONTEMPORARY DESIGN

“The Example of D. Aldo Pitassi: Evolutionary Thought and Practice in Contemporary Memorial Design,” Robert Prestiano, II: 203-220

CRETE

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

CZECH AMERICAN

“Gravestones and the Linguistic Ethnography of Czech-Moravians In Texas,” Eva Eckert, XVIII: 146-187

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

 “Language and Ethnicity Maintenance: Evidence of Czech Tombstone Inscriptions,” Eva Eckert, XV: 204-233

“From Moravia to Texas: Immigrant Acculturation at the Cemetery,” Eva Eckert, XIX: 174-211

DELAWARE

“’Safe in the Arms of Jesus’: Consolation on Delaware Children's Gravestones, 1840-99,” Deborah A. Smith, IV: 85-106

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

EGYPTIAN REVIVAL (STYLE)

“Egyptian Revival Funerary Art in Green-Wood Cemetery,” Elizabeth Broman, XVIII: 30-67

ENGLAND

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Mourning in a Distant Land: Gold Star Pilgrimages to American Military Cemeteries in Europe, 1930-33,” Lotte Larsen Meyer, XX: 30-75

“Origins and Early Development of the Celtic Cross,” Douglas Mac Lean, VII: 233-275

EPITAPH

“'...do not go and leave me behind unwept...': Greek Gravemarkers Heed the Warning,” Gay Lynch, XX: 280-301

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Resurrecting the Epitaph,” Diana Hume George and Malcolm A. Nelson, I: 84-95

ETHNICITY/RACE  (see AUSTRALIA, AFRICAN AMERICAN, CHINESE, CHINESE AMERICAN, CZECH AMERICAN, ITALIAN AMERICAN, MEXICAN AMERICAN, PENNSYLVANIA GERMAN, SCOTCH-IRISH)

EUROPE

“Stylistic Variation in the Western Front Battlefield Cemeteries of World War I Combatant Nations,” Richard E. Meyer, XVIII: 188-253

FICTION

“The Old Gravestone,” Hans Christian Andersen, XX: 192-195

FENCING

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

FLORIDA

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

“Under Grave Conditions: African-American Signs of Life and Death in North Florida,” Robin Franklin Nigh, XIV: 158-189

FOLK ART

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

FRANCE

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Mourning in a Distant Land: Gold Star Pilgrimages to American Military Cemeteries in Europe, 1930-33,” Lotte Larsen Meyer, XX: 30-75

“Stylistic Variation in the Western Front Battlefield Cemeteries of World War I Combatant Nations,” Richard E. Meyer, XVIII: 188-253

FRATERNALISM

“Ritual, Regalia, and Remembrance: Fraternal Symbolism and Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XI: vi, 1-27

“The Woodmen of the World Monument Program,” Annette Stott, XX: vi, 1-29

FUNERAL RITUAL

“'...do not go and leave me behind unwept...': Greek Gravemarkers Heed the Warning,” Gay Lynch, XX: 280-301

GATES

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

GEOGRAPHY

“Louisiana Cemeteries: Manifestations of Regional and Denominational Identity,” Tadashi Nakagawa, XI: 28-51

“Ontario Gravestones,” Darrell A. Norris, V: 122-149

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

GEORGIA

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: Gabriel Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XX: 76-109

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

GERMAN AMERICAN

“Early Pennsylvania Gravemarkers,” photographs and text by Daniel and Jessie Lie Farber, V: 96-121

“John Solomon Teetzel and the Anglo-German Gravestone Carving Tradition of 18th Century Northwestern New Jersey,” Richard F. Veit, XVII: 124-161

“Pennsylvania German Gravestones: An Introduction,” Thomas E. Graves, V: 60-95

“Language Codes in Texas German Graveyards,” Scott Baird, IX: 217-256

GERMANY

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

GREECE

“'...do not go and leave me behind unwept...': Greek Gravemarkers Heed the Warning,” Gay Lynch, XX: 280-301

HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

“The Archaeological Significance of Mausoleums [Pittsburgh, PA],” James B. Richardson III and Ronald C. Carlisle, I: 156-165

“Gravestones and Historical Archaeology: A Review Essay,” David H.Watters, I: 174-179

ILLINOIS

“The Adkins-Woodson Cemetery: A Sociological Examination of Cemeteries as Community,” Gary S. Foster and Richard L. Hummell, XII: 92-117

“Acculturation and Transformation of Salt Lake Temple Symbols in Mormon Tombstone Art,” George H. Schoemaker, IX: 197-216

“Communities of the Dead: Tombstones as a Reflection of Social Organization,” Paula J. Fenza, VI:136-157

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Poems in Stone: Tombs of Louis Henri Sullivan,” Robert A. Wright, V: 168-209

INDIAN (see NATIVE AMERICAN)

INDIANA

“Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” Warren E. Roberts, VII: 173-194

“Stonecarvers of Monroe County, Indiana 1828-1890,” Jennifer Lucas, VII: 195-212

“Tree-Stump Tombstones: Traditional Cultural Values and Rustic Funerary Art,” Susanne S. Ridlen, XIII: 44-73

IOWA

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

IRELAND

“Origins and Early Development of the Celtic Cross,” Douglas Mac Lean, VII: 233-275

IRON

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

“Unser Lieber Gottesacker” (Our Dear God’s Acre): An Iron-Cross Cemetery on the Northern Great Plains

Timothy J. Kloberdanz, photos by Bob Pierce, XXII: 160-181

“Wisconsin's Wrought Iron Markers,” Julaine Maynard, I: 76-79

ITALIAN AMERICAN

“Death Italo-American Style: Reflections on Modern Martyrdom,” Robert McGrath, IV: 107-113

“Domesticating the Grave: Italian-American Memorial Practices at New York's Calvary Cemetery,” Joseph J. Imguanti, XVII: 8-31

ITALY

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Death Italo-American Style: Reflections on Modern Martyrdom,” Robert McGrath, IV: 107-113

“An Early Christian Athlete: The Epitaph of Aurelius Eutychus of Eumeneia,” Scott T. Carroll, VI: 208-230

“Museum in the Garden: Mount Auburn Cemetery and American Sculpture, 1840-1860,” Elise Madeline Ciregna, XXI: 100-147

“The Protestant Cemetery in Florence and Anglo-American Attitudes Toward Italy,” James A. Freeman, X: 219-242

JAMAICA

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

JEWISH

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

“The Jewish Cemeteries of Louisville, Kentucky: Mirrors of Historical Processes and Theological Diversity through 150 Years,” David M. Gradwohl, X: 117-150

“Judah Monis’s Puzzling Gravestone as a Reflection of his Enigmatic Identity,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XXI: 66-97

“Legendary Explanations: The Protection of the Remu Cemetery during the Holocaust,” Simon J. Bronner, XIX: 40-53

KANSAS

“The New Deal's Landscape Legacy in Kansas Cemeteries,” Cathy Ambler, XV: 264-285

“Quantrill's Three Graves and Other Reminders of the Lawrence Massacre,” Randall M. Thies, XVIII: vi, 1-29

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

KENTUCKY

“The Jewish Cemeteries of Louisville, Kentucky: Mirrors of Historical Processes and Theological Diversity through 150 Years,” David M. Gradwohl, X: 117-150

“Monumental Ambition: A Kentucky Stonecutter's Career,” Deborah A. Smith, XI: 168-185

“Remembering Man’s Other Best Friend: U.S. Horse Graves in Historical Perspective,” Gary Collison, XXII: 70-107

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

LETTERING

“By Their Characters You Shall Know Them: Using Styles of Lettering to Identify Gravestone Carvers,” Gray Williams, Jr., XVII: 162-205

LIMESTONE

“Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” Warren E. Roberts, VII: 173-194

LINGUISTICS

“Gravestones and the Linguistic Ethnography of Czech-Moravians In Texas,” Eva Eckert, XVIII: 146-187

“Language and Ethnicity Maintenance: Evidence of Czech Tombstone Inscriptions,” Eva Eckert, XV: 204-233

“Language Codes in Texas German Graveyards,” Scott Baird, IX: 217-256

“Taylor, Texas, City Cemetery: A Language Community,” Scott Baird, XIII: 112-141

LOUISIANA

“Louisiana Cemeteries: Manifestations of Regional and Denominational Identity,” Tadashi Nakagawa, XI: 28-51

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

MAINE

“The Carvers of Kingston, Massachusetts,” James Blachowicz, XVIII: 70-145

“The Disappearing Shaker Cemetery,” Thomas A. Malloy and Brenda Malloy, IX: 257-274

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Narragansett Basin: John and James New,” Vincent F. Luti, XVI: 6-103

“The Pratt Family of Stonecutters,” Ralph L. Tucker, XIV: 134-157

MARBLE CARVERS

“Charles Miller Walsh: A Master Carver of Gravestones in Virginia, 1865-1901,” Martha Wren Briggs, VII: 139-172

“Fifty Years of Reliability: The Stonecarving Career of Charles Lloyd Neale (1800-1866) in Alexandria, Virginia,” David Vance Finnell, X: 91-116

“The Origins of Marble Carving on Cape Cod, Part I: William Sturgis and Family,” James Blachowicz, XIX, 64-173

“The Rule Family: Vermont Gravestone Carvers and Marble Dealers,” Ann M. Cathcart, XIX: 214-239

MARYLAND

“Carving a Path to Freedom: The Life and Work of African American Stonecarver Sebastian ‘Boss’ Hammond,” Mary Ann Ashcraft, XXI: 12-39

MASSACHUSETTS

“Boston's Historic Burying Grounds Initiative: 'Eliot Burying Ground,' 'Dorchester North Burying Ground,' 'Copp's Hill Burying Ground,'” VII:59-102

“The Carvers of Kingston, Massachusetts,” James Blachowicz XVIII: 70-145

“A Chronological Survey of the Gravestones Made by Calvin Barber of Simsbury, Connecticut,” Stephen Petke, X: vi, 1-52

“The Colburn Connections: Hollis, New Hampshire Stonecarvers, 1780-1820,” Theodore Chase and Laurel Gabel, III: 93-146

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

“Daniel Hastings of Newton, Massachusetts,” Daniel Farber, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 157-159

“The Disappearing Shaker Cemetery,” Thomas A. Malloy and Brenda Malloy, IX: 257-274

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: Gabriel Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XX: 76-109

“Eighteenth-Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: George Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XXII: 108-159

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Narragansett Basin: John and James New,” Vincent F. Luti, XVI: 6-103

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“The Feltons of New Salem, Massachusetts,” Robert Drinkwater, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 169-173

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

“Gravemarkers and Memorials of King Philip’s War,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XXI: 40-65

“Gravemarkers of the Early Congregational Ministers in North Central Massachusetts,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XIV: 34-85

“The Gravestone Carving Traditions of Plymouth and Cape Cod,” James Blachowicz, XV: 38-203

“Ithamar Spauldin, Stonecarver of Concord, Massachusetts,” C. R. Jones, I: 50-55

“James Wilder of Lancaster, Massachusetts, 1741-1794,” Laurel Gabel and Theodore Chase, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 166-169

“The JN Carver,” David Watters, II: 115-131

“John Anthony Angel and William Throop: Stonecutters of the Narragansett Basin,” Vincent F. Luti, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 148-153

“The John Dwight Workshop in Shirley, Massachusetts, 1770-1816,” Eloise Sibley West, VI: vii, 1-31

“Joseph Barbur, Jr.: The Frond Carver of West Medway,” Michael Cornish, II: 133-147

“Judah Monis’s Puzzling Gravestone as a Reflection of his Enigmatic Identity,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XXI: 66-97

“The Lamson Family Gravestone Carvers of Charlestown and Malden, Massachusetts,” Ralph L. Tucker, X: 151-218

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Merrimac Valley Style Gravestones: The Leighton and Worster Families,” Ralph L. Tucker, XI: 142-167

“The Mullicken Family Gravestone Carvers of Bradford, Massachusetts, 1663-1768,” Ralph L. Tucker, IX: 23-58

“Murder in Massachusetts: It's Written in Stone,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XVI: 210-241

“The Origins of Marble Carving on Cape Cod, Part I: William Sturgis and Family,” James Blachowicz, XIX, 64-173

“Museum in the Garden: Mount Auburn Cemetery and American Sculpture, 1840-1860,” Elise Madeline Ciregna, XXI: 100-147

“The Origins of Marble Carving on Cape Cod, Part II: The Orleans and Sandwich Carvers,” James Blachowicz, XX: 196-279

“A Particular Sense of Doom: Skeletal ‘Revivals’ in Northern Essex County, Massachusetts, 1737-1784,” Peter Benes, III: 71-92

“‘In the Palm of Nature’s Hand’: Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Address at the Consecration of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery,”introduced and edited by Ronald A. Bosco and Joel Myerson, XXI: 148-173

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

“The Pratt Family of Stonecutters,” Ralph L. Tucker, XIV: 134-157

“Purchase Delay, Pricing Factors, and Attribution Elements in Gravestones from the Shop of Ithamar Spauldin,” John S. Wilson, IX: 105-132

“Seven Initial Carvers of Boston, 1700-1725,” Theodore Chase and Laurel K. Gabel, V: 210-232

“Slavery in Colonial Massachusetts as Seen Through Selected Gravestones,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XI: 112-141

“Silent Stones in a Potter's Field: Grave Markers at the Almshouse Burial Ground in Uxbridge, Massachusetts,” Ricardo J. Elia, IX: 133-158

“Samuel Dwight: Vermont Gravestone Cutter,” Nancy Jean Melin, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 160-165

“Solomon Brewer: A Connecticut Valley Yankee in Westchester County,” Gray Williams, Jr, XI: 52-81

“Speaking Stones: New England Grave Carving and the Emblematic Tradition,” Lucien L. Agosta, III:

47-70

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

“Thomas Crawford's Monument for Amos Binney in Mount Auburn Cemetery, ‘A Work of Rare Merit,’” Lauretta Dimmick, IX: 169-196

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

“Where the Bay Meets the River: Gravestones and Stonecutters in the River Towns of Western Massachusetts, 1690-1810,” Kevin Sweeney, III: 1-46

“William Coye: Father of the Plymouth Carving Tradition,” James Blachowicz, in collaboration with  Vincent F. Luti, XVII: 32-107

“William Young of Tatnuck, Massachusetts,” Mary and Rick Stafford, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed. “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 138-148

MAUSOLEUMS

“The Archaeological Significance of Mausoleums [Pittsburgh, PA],” James B. Richardson III and Ronald C. Carlisle, I: 156-165

“Poems in Stone: Tombs of Louis Henri Sullivan,” Robert A. Wright, V: 168-209

“The Thomas Foster Mausoleum: Canada's Taj Mahal,” Sybil F. Crawford, XX: 154-191

METAL (see IRON)

METHODOLOGY

“Applications of Developing Technologies to Cemetery Studies,” Gary Foster and Richard L. Hummel, XVII: 110-123

“Gravestones and Historical Archaeology: A Review Essay,” David H.Watters, I: 174-179

“Recording Cemetery Data,” F. Joanne Baker, Daniel Farber, Anne G. Giesecke, I: 98-117

“Resurrecting the Epitaph,” Diana Hume George and Malcolm A. Nelson, I: 84-95

MEXICAN AMERICAN

“Composantos: Sacred Places of the Southwest,” Laura Sue Sanborn, VI: 158-179

“New Mexico Village Composantos,” Nancy Hunter Warren, IV: 115-129

MICHIGAN

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

MID-WEST (see also, individual states)

“The Adkins-Woodson Cemetery: A Sociological Examination of Cemeteries as Community,” Gary S. Foster and Richard L. Hummell, XII: 92-117

“The Chinese of Valhalla: Adaptation and Identity in a Midwestern American Cemetery,” C. Fred Blake, X: 53-90

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Tree-Stump Tombstones: Traditional Cultural Values and Rustic Funerary Art,” Susanne S. Ridlen, XIII: 44-73

MILITARY (see also, CIVIL WAR, WORLD WAR I)

“Gravemarkers and Memorials of King Philip’s War,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XXI: 40-65

MINISTERS

“Gravemarkers of the Early Congregational Ministers in North Central Massachusetts,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XIV: 34-85

MINNESOTA

“Elegy” (reflection), James Silas Rogers, XXII: 182-188

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

MINORITIES (see AFRICAN AMERICAN, AUSTRALIA, MEXICAN AMERICAN, NATIVE AMERICAN)

MISSISSIPPI

“A Modern Gravestone Maker: Some Lessons for Gravestone Historians,” Barbara Rotundo, XIV: 86-109

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

MISSOURI

“The Chinese of Valhalla: Adaptation and Identity in a Midwestern American Cemetery,” C. Fred Blake, X: 53-90

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Poems in Stone: Tombs of Louis Henri Sullivan,” Robert A. Wright, V: 168-209

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Quantrill's Three Graves and Other Reminders of the Lawrence Massacre,” Randall M. Thies, XVIII: vi, 1-29

MODERNISM

“The Example of D. Aldo Pitassi: Evolutionary Thought and Practice in Contemporary Memorial Design,” Robert Prestiano, II: 203-220

MONTANA

“Remembering Man’s Other Best Friend: U.S. Horse Graves in Historical Perspective,” Gary Collison, XXII: 70-107

MORMON

“Acculturation and Transformation of Salt Lake Temple Symbols in Mormon Tombstone Art,” George H. Schoemaker, IX: 197-216

“Mormon Temple Reproductions on Cemetery Markers,” Jacqueline S. Thursby, XX: 312-333

NATIVE AMERICAN

“Cemetery Symbols and Contexts of American Indian Identity: The Grave of Painter and Poet T. C. Canon,” David M. Gradwohl, XIV: vi, 1-33

“In the Way of the White Man's Totem Poles: Stone Monuments Among Canada's Tsimshian Indians 1879-1910,” Ronald W. Hawker, VII: 213-232

NEBRASKA

“Mourning in a Distant Land: Gold Star Pilgrimages to American Military Cemeteries in Europe, 1930-33,” Lotte Larsen Meyer, XX: 30-75

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

NEVADA

“Mormon Temple Reproductions on Cemetery Markers,” Jacqueline S. Thursby, XX: 312-333

NEW ENGLAND (see also, individual states)

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“‘And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England, 1984 Additions,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, III:

“Resurrecting the Epitaph,” Diana Hume George and Malcolm A. Nelson, I: 84-95

“Scottish Gravestones and the New England Winged Skull,” Betty Willshire, II: 105-114

“Speaking Stones: New England Grave Carving and the Emblematic Tradition,” Lucien L. Agosta, III: 47-70

NEW HAMPSHIRE

“The Colburn Connections: Hollis, New Hampshire Stonecarvers, 1780-1820,” Theodore Chase and Laurel Gabel, III: 93-146

“The Disappearing Shaker Cemetery,” Thomas A. Malloy and Brenda Malloy, IX: 257-274

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“'Fencing ye Tables': Scotch-Irish Ethnicity and the Gravestones of John Wight,” David H. Watters, XVI: 174-209

“The JN Carver,” David Watters, II: 115-131

“From Jonathan Hartshorne to Jeremiah Lane: Fifty Years of Gravestone Carving in Coastal New Hampshire,” Glenn A. Knoblock, XIII: 74-111

“The Lamson Family Gravestone Carvers of Charlestown and Malden, Massachusetts,” Ralph L. Tucker, X: 151-218

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Merrimac Valley Style Gravestones: The Leighton and Worster Families,” Ralph L. Tucker, XI: 142-167

“A Particular Sense of Doom: Skeletal ‘Revivals’ in Northern Essex County, Massachusetts, 1737-1784,” Peter Benes, III: 71-92

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

“Purchase Delay, Pricing Factors, and Attribution Elements in Gravestones from the Shop of Ithamar Spauldin,” John S. Wilson, IX: 105-132

“Quantrill's Three Graves and Other Reminders of the Lawrence Massacre,” Randall M. Thies, XVIII: vi, 1-29

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

NEW JERSEY

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

“John Solomon Teetzel and the Anglo-German Gravestone Carving Tradition of 18th Century Northwestern New Jersey,” Richard F. Veit, XVII: 124-161

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“The New York and New Jersey Gravestone Carving Tradition,” Richard F. Welch, IV: 1-54

“'A Piece of Granite That's Been Made in Two Weeks': Terra-Cotta Gravemarkers from New Jersey and New York, 1875-1930,” Richard Veit, XII: vi, 1-30

NEW MEXICO

“Composantos: Sacred Places of the Southwest,” Laura Sue Sanborn, VI: 158-179

“New Mexico Village Composantos,” Nancy Hunter Warren, IV: 115-129

NEW YORK

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

“By Their Characters You Shall Know Them: Using Styles of Lettering to Identify Gravestone Carvers,” Gray Williams, Jr., XVII: 162-205

“The Disappearing Shaker Cemetery,” Thomas A. Malloy and Brenda Malloy, IX: 257-274

“Domesticating the Grave: Italian-American Memorial Practices at New York's Calvary Cemetery,” Joseph J. Imguanti, XVII: 8-31

“Egyptian Revival Funerary Art in Green-Wood Cemetery,” Elizabeth Broman, XVIII: 30-67

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“James Stanclift,” Sherry Stancliff, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 154-159

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Museum in the Garden: Mount Auburn Cemetery and American Sculpture, 1840-1860,” Elise Madeline Ciregna, XXI: 100-147

“The New York and New Jersey Gravestone Carving Tradition,” Richard F. Welch, IV: 1-54

“'A Piece of Granite That's Been Made in Two Weeks': Terra-Cotta Gravemarkers from New Jersey and New York, 1875-1930,” Richard Veit, XII: vi, 1-30

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“The Rule Family: Vermont Gravestone Carvers and Marble Dealers,” Ann M. Cathcart, XIX: 214-239

“Samuel Dwight: Vermont Gravestone Cutter,” Nancy Jean Melin, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 160-165

“Scriptural Stones and Barn Mending: At the Grave of Herman Melville,” Kenneth Speirs, XV: 30-37

“Solomon Brewer: A Connecticut Valley Yankee in Westchester County,” Gray Williams, Jr, XI: 52-81

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

NORTH CAROLINA

“Afro-American Gravemarkers in North Carolina,” M. Ruth Little, VI: 102-134

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“The Gravestone Carving Traditions of Plymouth and Cape Cod,” James Blachowicz, XV: 38-203

“Openwork Memorials of North Carolina,” Francis Y. Duval and Ivan B. Rigby, I: 62-75

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

NORTH DAKOTA

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Unser Lieber Gottesacker” (Our Dear God’s Acre): An Iron-Cross Cemetery on the Northern Great Plains

Timothy J. Kloberdanz, photos by Bob Pierce, XXII: 160-181

NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA

“Acadian Cemeteries in Nova Scotia: A Survey,” Sally Ross, photos by Deborah Trask, XXII: vi, 1-31

“The Gravestone Carving Traditions of Plymouth and Cape Cod,” James Blachowicz, XV: 38-203

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Research Report on the Graveyards of Kings County, Nova Scotia,” Deborah Trask and Debra McNabb, V:150-167

“William Coye: Father of the Plymouth Carving Tradition,” James Blachowicz, in collaboration with  Vincent F. Luti, XVII: 32-107

OBITUARIES

“Daniel Farber (1906-1998),” James A. Slater, XVI: vi, 1-5

“Ernest Joseph Caulfield (1893-1972),” VIII: 1-8-Biographical Sketch

 “Ivan B. Rigby (1908-2000),” Jessie Lie Farber, with Katherine M. Noordsij, XIX: 12-17

“James Fanto Deetz (1930-2000),” Kathryn Crabtree and Eugene Prince, XIX: vi, 1-11

“Recollections of a Collaboration: A Tribute to the Art of Francis Duval,” Ivan B. Rigby with Katherine M. Noordsij, IX: vi, 1-22

“Terry Jordan (1938-2003),” Richard Francaviglia, XXI, 8-11

“Theodore Chase (1912-2003),” Laurel Gabel, XXI, viii, 1-7

“Warren E. Roberts (1924-1999),” Simon J. Bronner, XVII: vi, 1-5

OCCUPATION

“Gravemarkers of the Early Congregational Ministers in North Central Massachusetts,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XIV: 34-85

OHIO

“Quantrill's Three Graves and Other Reminders of the Lawrence Massacre,” Randall M. Thies, XVIII: vi, 1-29

OKLAHOMA

“Cemetery Symbols and Contexts of American Indian Identity: The Grave of Painter and Poet T. C. Canon,” David M. Gradwohl, XIV: vi, 1-33

“The Cowboy Cemetery of Kenton, Oklahoma,” June Hadden Hobbs, XXII: 32-69

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

ONTARIO, CANADA

“Ontario Gravestones,” Darrell A. Norris, V: 122-149

“The Thomas Foster Mausoleum: Canada's Taj Mahal,” Sybil F. Crawford, XX: 154-191

“United Above Though Parted Below: The Hand as Symbol on Nineteenth Century Southwest Ontario Gravestones,” Nancy-Lou Patterson, VI: 180-206

OREGON

“'And Who Have Seen the Wilderness': The End of the Trail on Early Oregon Gravemarkers,” Richard E. Meyer, XI: 186-219

“Mormon Temple Reproductions on Cemetery Markers,” Jacqueline S. Thursby, XX: 312-333

PEDAGOGY

“Mystery, History, and an Ancient Graveyard,” Melvin Williams, I: 166-171

“Resources for the Classroom Teacher: an Annotated Bibliography,” Mary Anne Mrozinski, I: 172-173

PENNSYLVANIA

“The Archaeological Significance of Mausoleums [Pittsburgh, PA],” James B. Richardson III and Ronald C. Carlisle, I: 156-165

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Early Pennsylvania Gravemarkers,” photographs and text by Daniel and Jessie Lie Farber, V: 96-121

“The Example of D. Aldo Pitassi: Evolutionary Thought and Practice in Contemporary Memorial Design,” Robert Prestiano, II: 203-220

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“Pennsylvania German Gravestones: An Introduction,” Thomas E. Graves, V: 60-95

“Remembering Man’s Other Best Friend: U.S. Horse Graves in Historical Perspective,” Gary Collison, XXII: 70-107

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

“'Where Valor Proudly Sleeps': Theodore O'Hara and 'Bivouac of the Dead',” Thomas C. Ware, XI: 82-111

PET  (see ANIMAL)

POEMS

“A Cemetery,” Emily Dickinson, XVIII: 68-69

“Joshua Sawyer,” John Fitzsimmons, XVI: 138-139

“Key West Cemetery,” Kenneth Pobo, XIX: 212-213

“The Quaker Graveyard,” Silas Weir Mitchell, XVII: 108-109

POETRY

“In the Bronx with Melville,” Henry Hughes, XXI: 98-99

“Poets Among the Stones,” Kenneth Pobo, XX: 302-311

“'Where Valor Proudly Sleeps': Theodore O'Hara and 'Bivouac of the Dead',” Thomas C. Ware, XI: 82-111

POLAND

“Legendary Explanations: The Protection of the Remu Cemetery during the Holocaust,” Simon J. Bronner, XIX: 40-53

PORTUGAL

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

PRESERVATION

“Boston's Historic Burying Grounds Initiative: 'Eliot Burying Ground,' 'Dorchester North Burying Ground,' 'Copp's Hill Burying Ground,'” VII: 59-102

“The Care of Old Cemeteries and Gravestones,” Lance R. Mayer, I: 118-141

“Protective Custody: The Museum's Responsibility for Gravestones,” Robert P. Emlen, I: 142-147

“Recording Cemetery Data,” F. Joanne Baker, Daniel Farber, Anne G. Giesecke, I: 98-117

RHODE ISLAND

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: Gabriel Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XX: 76-109

“Eighteenth-Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: George Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XXII: 108-159

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Narragansett Basin: John and James New,” Vincent F. Luti, XVI: 6-103

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

“Gravemarkers and Memorials of King Philip’s War,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XXI: 40-65

“John Anthony Angel and William Throop: Stonecutters of the Narragansett Basin,” Vincent F. Luti, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 148-153

“The John Stevens Shop,” Esther Fisher Benson, I: 80-83

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Portfolio of Mrs. Forbes' Cast-Iron Gates,” Margot Gayle, VII: 19-34

“Stonecarvers of the Narragansett Basin: Stephen and Charles Hartshorn of Providence,” Vincent F. Luti, II: 149-169

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

“William Coye: Father of the Plymouth Carving Tradition,” James Blachowicz, in collaboration with Vincent F. Luti, XVII: 32-107

RURAL CEMETERY

“Communities of the Dead: Tombstones as a Reflection of Social Organization,” Paula J. Fenza, VI:136-157

“Egyptian Revival Funerary Art in Green-Wood Cemetery,” Elizabeth Broman, XVIII: 30-67

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“The Example of D. Aldo Pitassi: Evolutionary Thought and Practice in Contemporary Memorial Design,” Robert Prestiano, II: 203-220

“’The Fencing Mania’: The Rise and Fall of Nineteenth-Century Funerary Enclosures,” Blanche Linden-Ward, VII: 35-58

“Museum in the Garden: Mount Auburn Cemetery and American Sculpture, 1840-1860,” Elise Madeline Ciregna, XXI: 100-147

“‘In the Palm of Nature’s Hand’: Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Address at the Consecration of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery,”introduced and edited by Ronald A. Bosco and Joel Myerson, XXI: 148-173

“Poems in Stone: Tombs of Louis Henri Sullivan,” Robert A. Wright, V: 168-209

SAMOA

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

SCOTS IRISH

“'Fencing ye Tables': Scotch-Irish Ethnicity and the Gravestones of John Wight,” David H. Watters, XVI: 174-209

SCOTLAND

“Adam and Eve Scenes on Kirkyards in the Scottish Lowlands: An Introduction and Gazetteer,” Betty Willsher, XII: 31-91

“The Green Man as an Emblem on Scottish Tombstones,” Betty Willsher, IX: 59-78

“Origins and Early Development of the Celtic Cross,” Douglas Mac Lean, VII: 233-275

“Scottish Gravestones and the New England Winged Skull,” Betty Willshire, II: 105-114

SCULPTURE AND SCULPTORS

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“The Example of D. Aldo Pitassi: Evolutionary Thought and Practice in Contemporary Memorial Design,” Robert Prestiano, II: 203-220

“Museum in the Garden: Mount Auburn Cemetery and American Sculpture, 1840-1860,” Elise Madeline Ciregna, XXI: 100-147

“Thomas Crawford's Monument for Amos Binney in Mount Auburn Cemetery, ‘A Work of Rare Merit,’” Lauretta Dimmick, IX: 169-196

SHAKERS

“The Disappearing Shaker Cemetery,” Thomas A. Malloy and Brenda Malloy, IX: 257-274

SHORT STORY (see FICTION)

SOCIOLOGY

“The Adkins-Woodson Cemetery: A Sociological Examination of Cemeteries as Community,” Gary S. Foster and Richard L. Hummell, XII: 92-117

“Contemporary Gravemarkers of Youths: Milestones of Our Path Through Pain to Joy,” Gay Lynch, XII: 144-159

“Communities of the Dead: Tombstones as a Reflection of Social Organization,” Paula J. Fenza, VI:136-157

SOUTH (see also, individual southern states)

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

SOUTH CAROLINA

“Eighteenth Century Gravestone Carvers of the Upper Narragansett Basin: Gabriel Allen,” Vincent F. Luti, XX: 76-109

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

“The Gravestone Carving Traditions of Plymouth and Cape Cod,” James Blachowicz, XV: 38-203

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

SOUTH DAKOTA

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

SOUTHWEST (see New Mexico)

STYLES

“Egyptian Revival Funerary Art in Green-Wood Cemetery,” Elizabeth Broman, XVIII: 30-67

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“Louisiana Cemeteries: Manifestations of Regional and Denominational Identity,” Tadashi Nakagawa, XI: 28-51

“Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” Warren E. Roberts, VII: 173-194

“Stylistic Variation in the Western Front Battlefield Cemeteries of World War I Combatant Nations,” Richard E. Meyer, XVIII: 188-253

“Tree-Stump Tombstones: Traditional Cultural Values and Rustic Funerary Art,” Susanne S. Ridlen, XIII: 44-73

SYMBOLISM

“Acculturation and Transformation of Salt Lake Temple Symbols in Mormon Tombstone Art,” George H. Schoemaker, IX: 197-216

“Adam and Eve Scenes on Kirkyards in the Scottish Lowlands: An Introduction and Gazetteer,” Betty Willsher, XII: 31-91

“Cemetery Symbols and Contexts of American Indian Identity: The Grave of Painter and Poet T. C. Canon,” David M. Gradwohl, XIV: vi, 1-33

“The Cowboy Cemetery of Kenton, Oklahoma,” June Hadden Hobbs, XXII: 32-69

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

“Contemporary Gravemarkers of Youths: Milestones of Our Path Through Pain to Joy,” Gay Lynch, XII: 144-159

“The Green Man as an Emblem on Scottish Tombstones,” Betty Willsher, IX: 59-78

“Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” Warren E. Roberts, VII: 173-194

“Origins and Early Development of the Celtic Cross,” Douglas Mac Lean, VII: 233-275

“A Particular Sense of Doom: Skeletal ‘Revivals’ in Northern Essex County, Massachusetts, 1737-1784,” Peter Benes, III: 71-92

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Ritual, Regalia, and Remembrance: Fraternal Symbolism and Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XI: vi, 1-27

“Say it with Flowers in the Victorian Cemetery,” June Hadden Hobbs, XIX: 240-271

“Scottish Gravestones and the New England Winged Skull,” Betty Willshire, II: 105-114

“Speaking Stones: New England Grave Carving and the Emblematic Tradition,” Lucien L. Agosta, III: 47-70

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

“Tree-Stump Tombstones: Traditional Cultural Values and Rustic Funerary Art,” Susanne S. Ridlen, XIII: 44-73

“United Above Though Parted Below: The Hand as Symbol on Nineteenth Century Southwest Ontario Gravestones,” Nancy-Lou Patterson, VI: 180-206

“The Woodmen of the World Monument Program,” Annette Stott, XX: vi, 1-29

“The Willow Tree and Urn Motif,” Blanche M. G. Linden, I: 148-155

“'And Who Have Seen the Wilderness': The End of the Trail on Early Oregon Gravemarkers,” Richard E. Meyer, XI: 186-219

TABLE STONES (LEDGER STONES)

“Gravemarkers of the Early Congregational Ministers in North Central Massachusetts,” Tom and Brenda Malloy, XIV: 34-85

TEACHING (see PEDAGOGY)

TECHNOLOGIES

“Applications of Developing Technologies to Cemetery Studies,” Gary Foster and Richard L. Hummel, XVII: 110-123

TENNESSEE

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

TERRA-COTTA

“'A Piece of Granite That's Been Made in Two Weeks': Terra-Cotta Gravemarkers from New Jersey and New York, 1875-1930,” Richard Veit, XII: vi, 1-30

TEXAS

“Gravestones and the Linguistic Ethnography of Czech-Moravians In Texas,” Eva Eckert, XVIII: 146-187

“Language and Ethnicity Maintenance: Evidence of Czech Tombstone Inscriptions,” Eva Eckert, XV: 204-233

“Language Codes in Texas German Graveyards,” Scott Baird, IX: 217-256

“From Moravia to Texas: Immigrant Acculturation at the Cemetery,” Eva Eckert, XIX: 174-211

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

“Taylor, Texas, City Cemetery: A Language Community,” Scott Baird, XIII: 112-141

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

TEXTILE DESIGNS

“A Common Thread: Needlework Samplers and American Gravestones,” Laurel K. Gabel, XIX: 18-49

TREE-STUMP

“Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” Warren E. Roberts, VII: 173-194

“Tree-Stump Tombstones: Traditional Cultural Values and Rustic Funerary Art,” Susanne S. Ridlen, XIII: 44-73

“The Woodmen of the World Monument Program,” Annette Stott, XX: vi, 1-29

TURKEY

“An Early Christian Athlete: The Epitaph of Aurelius Eutychus of Eumeneia,” Scott T. Carroll, VI: 208-230

UTAH

“Acculturation and Transformation of Salt Lake Temple Symbols in Mormon Tombstone Art,” George H. Schoemaker, IX: 197-216

“Mormon Temple Reproductions on Cemetery Markers,” Jacqueline S. Thursby, XX: 312-333

VERMONT

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Death Italo-American Style: Reflections on Modern Martrydom,” Robert McGrath, IV: 107-113

“Enos Clark, Vermont Gravestone Carver,” Margaret R. Jenks, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 174-176

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

“'I Never Regretted Coming to Africa': The Story of Harriet Ruggles Loomis' Gravestone,” Laurel K. Gabel, XVI: 140-173

“’And the Men Who Made Them’: The Signed Gravestones of New England,” Sue Kelly and Anne Williams, II: 1-103

“The Rule Family: Vermont Gravestone Carvers and Marble Dealers,” Ann M. Cathcart, XIX: 214-239

“Samuel Dwight: Vermont Gravestone Cutter,” Nancy Jean Melin, in Jessie Lie Farber, ed., “Stonecutters and Their Works,” IV: 160-165

“Symbolic Cemetery Gates in New England,” Harriette M. Forbes, VII: 3-18

“Tributes in Stone and Lapidary Lapses: Commemorating Black People in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century America,” Angelika Krüger-Kahloula, VI: 32-100

“Wanted: The Hook-And-Eye Man [Gershom Bartlett],” Ernest Caulfield, I: 12-49

VIRGIN ISLANDS

Benditcha Sea Vuestra Memoria: Sephardic Jewish Cemeteries in the Caribbean and Eastern North America,” David Mayer Gradwohl, XV: vi, 1-29

VIRGINIA

“Charles Miller Walsh: A Master Carver of Gravestones in Virginia, 1865-1901,” Martha Wren Briggs, VII: 139-172

“Do-It-Yourself Immortality: Writing One's Own Epitaph,” Karl S. Guthke, XX: 110-153

“Fifty Years of Reliability: The Stonecarving Career of Charles Lloyd Neale (1800-1866) in Alexandria, Virginia,” David Vance Finnell, X: 91-116

“Folk Art on Gravestones: The Glorious Contrast,” Charles Bergengren, II: 171-183

“Funerary Monuments and Burial Patterns of Colonial Tidewater Virginia, 1607-1776,” Elizabeth A. Crowell and Norman Vardney Mackie III, VII: 103-138

“Remembering Man’s Other Best Friend: U.S. Horse Graves in Historical Perspective,” Gary Collison, XXII: 70-107

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

WASHINGTON, D.C.

“Eternal Celebration in American Memorials,” Jonathan L. Fairbanks, XVI: 104-137

“'Where Valor Proudly Sleeps': Theodore O'Hara and 'Bivouac of the Dead’,” Thomas C. Ware, XI: 82-111

WEST VIRGINIA

“Rural Southern Gravestones: Sacred Artifacts in the Upland South Folk Cemetery,” Gregory Jeane, IV: 55-84

WISCONSIN

“The Carvers of Portage County, Wisconsin, 1850-1900,” Phil Kallas, II: 187-202

“The Remarkable Crosses of Charles Andera,” Loren N. Horton, XIV: 110-133

WOOD

“Colorado Wooden Markers,” James Milmoe, I: 56-61

WOODMEN OF THE WORLD (see TREE-STUMP)

WORLD WAR I

“Mourning in a Distant Land: Gold Star Pilgrimages to American Military Cemeteries in Europe, 1930-33,” Lotte Larsen Meyer, XX: 30-75

“Stylistic Variation in the Western Front Battlefield Cemeteries of World War I Combatant Nations,” Richard E. Meyer, XVIII: 188-253

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