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17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA

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17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA George Boyd made the metal grave vault which is used today in the same form and function. He developed the burglar ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA


1
17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA
2
17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA
  • The Egyptians 5000 years ago buried their dead in
    simple graves at the east end of their villages.
    Thousand of years later they used most of their
    energies up in the care, preservation and
    disposal of the dead.
  • The mere passage of time or the geographic
    location guarantees nothing about the burial
    customs of certain cultures or people.

3
17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA
  • In society today we as Americans spend more money
    on funerals than do most of our neighboring
    countries.
  • It is interesting to note that our neighboring
    cultures spend more time observing morning
    customs and ceremonies than we in America do.

4
17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA
  • It must be admitted that the precise nature of
    ceremonies, goods and equipment incorporated into
    behavior toward the dead is always subject to the
    circumstances of a particular culture.
  • War Natural Resources
    Poverty
  • Famine National Disasters
    Wealth
  • Pestilence

5
17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA
  • It is highly doubtful that coffins were imported
    at any time during the colonial period. Why?
  • Ocean voyage was costly and slow and the length
    of time was to long in a society that did not
    practice embalming. They couldnt wait for the
    order to be filled abroad and shipped to them.

6
17TH AND 18TH CENTURY COFFIN BURIAL IN AMERICA
  • During this time the colonist did not stockpile
    coffins. Why?
  • Because there were coffinmakers available locally
    who could make the coffins on demand and they
    turned out pretty respectable coffins.
  • Coffin furniture- trimmings and fittings- were
    imported during the 18th century.

7
  • Coffin furniture began to take hold in America
    after the 1800s.
  • Early American coffins were made of wood.
  • The different varieties of wood revealed the
    economic status of the person buried.
  • The shape was nearly always octagonal with all
    the sides flat.

8
  • When the trade of coffin making became a
    full-time occupation, coffin-shops emerged
    followed by coffin warehouses and furnishings
    undertakers.(remember from the previous chapters)

9
EARLY COFFIN SHOPS AND COFFIN WAREHOUSES
  • Following the war of 1812, there was rapid growth
    and spread of coffin shops. Why?
  • With the productive enterprise of coffin making,
    the emphasis in funerals began to shift in the
    direction of the coffin, especially with regard
    to price, quality and diversity of purpose.
  • In 1825 John Dillon made a Mahogany Coffin,
    lined, trimmed, hinged, and mounted for 24.

10
  • Remember (from chapter 4) that in 1678 David
    Porters casket was only 12s, which was less than
    1/4 of the total cost of the liquor alone. In
    1825 the casket was almost 2/3 of the funeral
    bill.
  • The most significant development in funeral
    business in the 19th century was the growth of
    coffin shops and the increased attention to the
    casket as a major item in the burial.

11
VARIATION IN EARLY FUNCTION AND TYPE
  • Throughout the 19th century in America, by means
    of experimentation carried out by a considerable
    number of people, the old fashioned coffin slowly
    became transformed into the modern casket.

12
VARIATION IN EARLY FUNCTION AND TYPE
  • Around 1800 there was a determined effort to
    improve the function, style, and composition of
    the coffin.
  • They wanted to improve by
  • increasing utility
  • better indicate the importance of the deceased
    and their family

13
  • provide protection against grave robbers
  • protect against the elements
  • should be more artistic and beautiful in order to
    influence an aesthetic movement in burials.
  • Lead lined coffins were used to help prevent
    decay of the body.

14
  • The American Naval hero of the Revolutionary War,
    John Paul Jones was buried in 1792 in a lead
    coffin and his limbs wrapped in tin foil.
  • In 1905 his body was recovered and was still
    recognizable because of the preservation ability
    of the lead and tin foil.
  • That being said, why do you think we dont just
    wrap people in tin foil and bury them today?

15
  • With the growth of medical science in England and
    the increased need for cadavers to be used in
    anatomical studies the practice of graverobbing
    and body snatching became common enough to cause
    alarm over the safety of the dead.
  • British trade undertakers were the first to
    utilize coffins made of iron that were advertised
    as ghoul-proof. (improved coffins pg. 162)

16
  • Before 1850 the primary claim of caskets was that
    is was beautiful and therefore suitable for use
    in a public funeral. This started the gradual
    drift in mood of the funeral to from gloomy to
    beautiful.
  • A corresponding development is to be found in the
    current emphasis on restorative art as one of the
    most valued aspects of the embalming process.

17
  • Five major themes in defining and fulfilling the
    proper function of the coffin.
  • Utility
  • Status indication
  • Preservation of the body
  • Protection
  • Aesthetic representation

18
STONE AND METAL COFFINS
  • Coffins of material other than wood made their
    appearance in the first half of the 19th century.
  • In 1836 patents were granted for coffins made of
    stone or marble and hydraulic cement.
  • These patents were allowed to expire in 1849
    because the coffins were hard to manufacture and
    or too heavy to be handled and were not very nice
    looking.

19
STONE AND METAL COFFINS
  • By 1860 coffin patents included iron, cement,
    marble and artificial stone, potters clay

20
  • Cement and wood, zinc, iron and glass.
  • Before the turn of the century the list was
    extended to include elastic material including
    vulcanized rubber, fabricated metals,
    papier-mache, aluminum, cloth and wood, wood and
    glass, and coffins with inner-coffins.

21
Fisk Metallic Coffin
  • It was perhaps the most remarkable coffin ever
    patented and put into widespread use in America.

22
Fisk Metallic Coffin
  • An Air-tight Coffin of Cast or Raised Metal.
  • It resembled an ancient Egyptian sarcophagus with
    a glass plate to allow the face to be visible
    (like a divers helmet).
  • It was made by Almond D. Fisk.
  • It claimed to be air-tight, used the least amount
    of metal possible, so it was lightweight.

23
  • It could either take all of the air out of the
    casket or if you wanted to you could add any gas
    or fluid you wanted.
  • What could they have filled the coffin with?
  • They sold for 7.00 to 40.00.
  • During the Civil War advertisements, the Fisk
    coffins were sold by other manufacturing
    companies so we could believe the patent expired
    or Almond D. Fisk had died.

24
  • Advertisement pg. 165
  • In the burial of The Honorable John C. Calhoun at
    the Congressional Cemetery the other congressmen
    were impressed to write- We witnessed the
    utility of your ornamental burial case. It
    impressed us with the belief that it is the best
    article known by us for transporting the dead to
    their final resting place.
  • President James K. Polk was buried in a similar
    case after being wrapped in a silk winding sheet,
    his coffin was lined in copper and sealed.
    (Titanic unknown baby boy)

25
Large Scale Manufacture of Metallic Burial Cases
  • By the mid-1800s the small coffin shops were no
    longer dominating the market.
  • Stove manufacturers began to make burial cases
    out of metal.
  • Their advantages were
  • protection from plagues and epidemics
  • protection against water seepage and vermin
  • easy to move for re-burial

26
  • Re-burial was important because it was not
    uncommon for urban cemeterys to be moved
    frequently. Also, bodies could be transported
    easily with the steamboat and the rail in the
    metal coffins.
  • The large scale shipment of bodies back to family
    homesteads or family vaults no doubt received its
    greatest impetus with the mass return of the
    Civil War soldiers killed in battle.

27
  • In 1854 the wholesale price of a six foot
    Ornamental Bronzed Case was 20.50.
  • In 1854 a Cloth Covered Case was an additional
    21.00
  • The cloth covered casket were a European
    designthey constituted the luxury level of
    burial receptacles.
  • How do we now view cloth covered caskets?

28
Metallic Burial Casket
  • In 1859, A.C. Barstow of Rhode Island developed
    the ogee design, a system of overlapping ribs.

29
Metallic Burial Casket
  • The curves of the ogee design served a specific
    purpose, what do you thing the purpose was?
  • To remove as much of the excess material as
    possible. It goes without saying the less
    material used the lighter the casket becomes and
    the less material wasted therefore the lower the
    cost of the casket.

30
Metallic Burial Casket
  • The term casket suggests a jewel box or a
    container for something valuable (a Cask).
  • Iron Casketts on the import list of articles in
    the Colonies referenced an iron box or container
    not a burial receptacle.
  • Therefore the term evolved as an American term
    from the two origins.

31
Metallic Burial Casket
  • In 1862 there was a change in the burial cases.
    The advertisements spoke of its advantages
  • it was simple in design
  • not ornate
  • air-tight
  • it claimed it would stop the spread of contagion
    and for a time would arrest the process of
    decomposition.

32
  • The most radical change was that they were now
    building the casket so it consisted of two large
    sections of plate glass.
  • Why do you think they wanted to start using plate
    glass?
  • The decision was based on the presentation of the
    dead in a receptacle designed to provide an
    aesthetically pleasing setting for the visually
    prominent and dramatically centered object of
    attention.

33
  • In the early 1870s the first true sheet metal
    caskets were made by Crane, Breed, and Co.
  • This was the beginning of the lighter sheet metal
    caskets gradually replacing the heavier cast iron
    caskets.

34
  • In the 1890s the term casket was starting to be
    use more frequently than coffin.
  • The caskets were square in form and the octagonal
    coffin was no longer used.
  • Still today the wedge shaped octagonal coffin,
    rarely appears in America, and the American
    casket has yet to be popularly accepted in
    England and Europe.
  • Why do you think that is?

35
Cloth Burial Cases
  • An actual line of cloth covered caskets began in
    1871 with the Samuel Stein Patent Burial Casket.
  • They were made of wood with metal reinforcements
    and were cloth covered.
  • It was his idea to make a casket that was light
    strong and aesthetically pleasing.

36
Cloth Burial Cases
  • Stein was a showcase builder and tried to carry
    his showcase idea over to the casket design
    with a casket that was built with all glass sides
    and showcase in style.
  • It was later determined that it was too
    innovational for the time.
  • Stein first triumph was his securing of the order
    for a casket to be used for the funeral of James
    Gordon Bennettproprietor and editor of the New
    York Herald. (pg. 174)

37
  • Stein merged with National Casket Co. in 1890 and
    they made 600 cloth covered caskets a week.
  • His second triumph was his display at the
    Philadelphia Centennial in 1876. His permission
    to show his caskets was revoked and he built a
    building finishing only hours before the
    Exposition opened.

38
  • This success put Stein Manufacturing Company on
    the map and
  • Reinforced the fashion of placing coffins and
    caskets on display in coffin shops and in
    undertaking establishments where such receptacles
    were.

39
  • His third milestone was the order received for
    the Ex-President Ulysses S. Grant.
  • In 1855 Stein made the casket for President
    Grant. It was called the Style E State Casket

40
  • Made with the finest black broadcloth, heavy
    silver metal mountings, flat top, with full
    French plate glass. Its inner metallic case was
    especially finished on the interior and set off
    by a pillow on which the Generals initials were
    embroidered. The result, claimed by a company
    brochure, was a real triumph.

41
Also rans
  • The 3 types of burial receptacles commonly used
    during the 19th century were
  • the metallic mummy case
  • the cloth-covered metal reinforced burial case
  • the traditional wooden coffin
  • All were gradually modified in an effort to
    improve their appearances.
  • Many other receptacles were dreamed up, but never
    gained popular acceptanceThe Also Rans.

42
Also Rans
  • Two influences were at cross purposes in the
    experimentation of the The Also Rans
  • Potential market for more artistic or more
    serviceable funeral recepticle.
  • Second was the hard facts of production and
    distribution. Many of the inventors and the
    innovators never managed to get their proposals
    beyond the idea stage.
  • Money, Patents, Limited Manufacturing Ability

43
  • The also rans were
  • terra cotta
  • wood and cement
  • glass and iron
  • cross shaped
  • The designs were box like, long and narrow, and
    octagon

44
Also Rans
  • Terra Cotta Coffin, 1855
  • David Sholl, 1855
  • Composed of Terra Cotta or pottery ware
  • Lighter than the earlier cement types

45
Also Rans
  • Wood and Cement, 1839
  • William H. Bachtel of Canton, Ohio
  • An Intermediate step between the cement coffin
    and its eventual form as a burial vault
  • Became to heavy to transport efficiently

46
Also Rans
  • Coffin of Glass Plates and Iron Bands, 1859
  • John R. Cannon of New Albany, Indiana.
  • Long and narrow, hexagonal, with all sides made
    in sections of glass.
  • Cement was used to keep unit air tight with iron
    bands to hold the lid secure.
  • Removed a portion of the air inside. Thought to
    make the body look more life-like.

47
Also Rans
  • Glass Coffin, Air Tight, with Rib-Flange, 1860
  • George W. Scollay of St. Louis, Missouri
  • More along rectangle casket lines
  • Not to be filled with poisonous liquor to
    destroy the animalcula, but remove the air for
    same effect

48
Also Rans
  • Showcase-cakset
  • Samuel Stein, about 1870
  • Built to display the body in its physical
    entirety
  • To enhance the handsome setting part of which was
    comprised by the casket

49
Also Rans
  • Cruciform or Cross-shaped Casket
  • Oswego Cruciform Casket Co. Oswego, N.Y., 1877
  • Shaped like the crucifix
  • Marketed to the Christian minded
  • the Common Sense Casket

50
Life Signals
  • Purpose- fear of live burial and grave robbers.
  • What were the grave robbers nicknamed?
  • Resurrectionists (body snatchers)
  • They stole bodies from graves to sell to
    anatomists

51
Life Signals
  • Christian Eisenbrandt, Baltimore, MD, 1843
  • A new and useful improvements to coffins
  • Life preserving coffins in case of doubtful death
  • Designed with wires and pins and a spring lid to
    enable the occupant of the coffin, by the
    slightest movement of the hand or head to have
    the coffin lid spring open.
  • How would that work if it were buried?

52
Life Signals
53
Life Signals
  • The next life preserving coffins were designed to
    operate after burial.
  • Franz Vester of Newark, NJ
  • Square tube, containing a ladder and a cord, one
    end of which was to be placed in the hand of the
    person laid in the coffin, while the other
    extended up to a bell on the top of the tube
    which was attached to the head end of the coffin

54
Life Signals
55
Life Signals
  • Theodore Schroeder and Herman Wuest of Hoboken,
    NJ in 1871
  • A narrow round tube , similar to a speaking tube,
    attached to the head end of the coffin in such a
    manner that a rope within might be pulled by the
    buried person, releasing an air opening in the
    mouth of the tube and simultaneously setting off
    an electrical alarm.

56
Life Signals
57
Life Signals
  • Albert Fearnaught, Indianapolis, Indiana in 1882
  • Contraption that released a flag through the end
    of a tube which projected up from the foot of the
    grave, if its occupant were to move a hand.

58
Life Signals
59
Life Signals
  • John Krichbaum of Youngstown, Ohio in 1882
  • Consisted of pipes, bars, tubes and cross-pins,
    which would upon movement of the hands of
    persons buried in a trance, open an air vent
    and at the same time give indication that there
    was life in the coffin below.

60
Life Signals
61
Life Signals
  • Another creation of the inventive mind applied to
    the problem of protecting the graves from the
    ressurectionists-
  • The coffin Torpedo-a device, made of iron, about
    an inch in diameter and six inches long,
    contained a charge of explosive and a mechanism
    set to go off with the tampering of any coffin
    which had properly been prepared.
  • What other problems would have been brought about
    by the torpedo?

62
Burial Vaults and Outside Boxes
  • The idea started from the desire of permanent
    protection of the body from ghouls and the
    elements.
  • Original material used during the 19th century
    were grave liners of rock, stone, and brick.
    Later concrete slabs were used in sectionals
    sealed with sand-cement mortar.
  • The were called burial safes and mort-safes.

63
  • The concrete vault as we know it today was not
    common until after 1900.
  • During 1900-1920 the number of vault patents
    granted were the greatest in history.
  • People started wanting protection for the casket
    because it was so beautiful.

64
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65
  • The terminology starting in the late 1840s was
  • mummy-case
  • burial-case
  • coffin-case
  • casket-burial case
  • grave vault (1870s)

66
  • George Boyd made the metal grave vault which is
    used today in the same form and function.
  • He developed the burglar proof vault unknowingly
    however, the principal of the vault was the air
    seal. Thus the Boyd vault was originally made to
    sell for protection against grave robbing, but
    developed into the present air sealed burial
    vault.

67
  • The Champion Company and the Springfield Metallic
    Casket Company made most of the vaults in the
    1890s.
  • By 1915, 5 to 10 of all funerals included a
    vault, nearly all metal.
  • They became used for protection of the casket and
    the remains.

68
Furnished Outside Boxes
  • The Stein Manufacturing Company made boxes of
    cedar, chestnut, oak, and mahogany.
  • They were 25 to 23 for adult sizes.
  • What is another reason that we use vaults today?

69
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71
Outer Burial Containers/Vaults
72
Outer Burial Containers/Vaults
  • Protection of
  • Casket
  • Remains
  • Protect
  • Continuity of
  • Grave
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