Americans have frequently used photographs and ephemera as part of their expressions of grief after the death of a family member, fraternal organization member, community member, or elected official. Funeral invitations and memorial cards were popular in the United States from mid-19th to early-20th centuries. Often when photographers were available, postmortems of the deceased, the deceased with family, the deceased with funeral attendees, burial sites, monuments, monuments with mourners, memorial flowers, and later family groups with portraits of deceased members provided lasting memorial tributes. Funeral home invoices and casket invoices provide relevant primary sources. Monument makers catalogs, invoices and mailings also provide evidence of the availability of professional tombstone craftsmen and companies.

Alexander Eckles Funeral Notice

Alexander Eckles Funeral Notice

Charles Enoch of the Enoch Funeral Home in Bowling Green, KY at Fairview Cemetery.

Charles Enoch of the Enoch Funeral Home in Bowling Green, KY at Fairview Cemetery.

Enoch Funeral Home, Bowling Green, Kentucky

Enoch Funeral Home, Bowling Green, Kentucky

Cherry Family Mausoleum with Memorial Flowers, 1937

Cherry Family Mausoleum with Memorial Flowers, 1937

Floyd Collins Funeral

Floyd Collins Funeral

J. Warren Robinson Burial Site

J. Warren Robinson Burial Site

Funeral Viewing of Open Casket and Memorial Flowers

Funeral Viewing of Open Casket and Memorial Flowers