Manners Most Morbid: Funerary Practices and Traditions of Charleston’s Past


Manners Most Morbid:  Funerary Practices and Traditions of Charleston’s Past

Back by popular demand,  Chief Curator Grahame Long will present Manners Most Morbid: Funerary Practices and Traditions of Charleston’s Past on October 27, at 6:00 pm. He’ll be sharing fascinating aspects of Charleston’s history as well as a few chilling stories, followed by a brief Q&A segment.

This lecture is FREE and open to the public!

Downtown Charleston is speckled with historic graveyards, housing century old tombstones, markers for those placed beneath. Those still in the land of the living pass by these graves daily, glimpsing through the churchyard fences the etchings on stones balanced on ground no longer freshly disturbed. But what of the etchings on these tombstones? What do they mean and are they significant?

 
Those lucky enough to prepare their post-mortem affairs did so with varying degrees of style. Lowcountry funeral planning and its eventual implementation in many instances, in fact, became more of a social event ranging anywhere from the elegantly elaborate to the morosely mundane. As early as the mid-eighteenth century, an array of funerary arts and services was available, and well-to-do Charlestonians paid handsomely for grand send-offs. These cultural interactions — and the decorations, mementos and observances they birthed — soon became among the most visible and remarkable aspects of Carolina lore.

Date/Time

10/27/2016, 6:00 pm

Location

The Charleston Museum, Arthur M. Wilcox Auditorium
360 Meeting St.
Charleston, South Carolina 29403

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