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Woodmen grave markers dot cemeteries across the United States.When Joseph Cullen Root founded Woodmen more than 100 years ago, one of his objectives was to provide a decent burial for all members.

Root made a special effort to honor deceased Woodmen. He created Woodmen Memorial Day, celebrated on June 6 each year, and included the following statement in the Objectives of Woodcraft: "... to give honorable burial to our sacred dead ..."

Early Woodmen certificates provided for a death and a monument benefit. Gravestones were originally furnished to members free of charge and later were offered only to those who purchased a $100 rider to their certificates.

However, during the 1920s the Society stopped providing stone markers to members when the cost of gravestones increased and cemeteries began prohibiting above-ground markers for maintenance reasons. The monument rider was discontinued and converted to an extra $100 of insurance protection, but for many years after that, members and lodges arranged for markers and monuments on their own.

Markers vary

Woodmen gravestones vary greatly in size and shape. Some resemble a tree stump, others a stack of cut wood. There are elaborate hand-carved monuments, simple stone markers and stake-type markers driven into the ground.

Woodmen gravestones were originally intended to be a uniform design sent by the Home Office to local stonecutters, but not all the cutters followed the design. Some used their own interpretation of the Woodmen design which they felt was more appropriate.

The result was a wide range of designs that reflected members' personal tastes and included elements that were symbolic of Woodmen ceremonies or rituals. A tree stump, part of the Society's logo, is the most common symbol used on gravestone designs. Many stand approximately four to five feet high.

In one Kentucky cemetery, the gravestones started out as a modest Woodmen stump and grew larger with each additional burial. One gravestone is three feet wide with seven branches.

Woodmen cemeteries

Over the years, the once popular gravestones have become a rarity. Woodmen gravestones are still scattered in cemeteries throughout the United States. But in Laredo, Texas, there is a special section of the city cemetery reserved for Woodmen members that has been there for more than 40 years.

  • Years ago Laredo Lodge 2364 members bought a section of lots in the cemetery for their membership. They built an ornate concrete fence around the area and planted rose bushes for decoration. A committee from the lodge takes care of the upkeep.
  • A cemetery for Woodmen members also exists near Grand Rivers, Ky. Located at Land Between the Lakes, a strip of Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) land between the Kentucky and Barkley Lakes, it is maintained by four area lodges.
  • Many lodge members across the country take time to keep Woodmen gravestones in their area from decaying. For Owensboro, Ky., Ranger Lodges 732 and 805, taking care of gravestones has become a yearly fund-raiser.
  • Each year adult Lodge 43 pays Ranger lodge members to clean and maintain all the Woodmen gravestones in the area.

No unmarked graves

Although the monument benefit is no longer included in Woodmen Life Insurance certificates, the Society does not let graves go unmarked.

The same Woodmen emblem is also available, fitted with pegs, for attaching to an existing stone. To purchase a bronze marker contact the Fraternal and Lodge Services Department at the Woodmen Home Office (402) 342-1890.

Regardless of its shape or size, Woodmen gravestones serve as a lasting tribute to its members and the ideals of Woodcraft. They also serve the Society's long standing motto that "no Woodmen shall rest in an unmarked grave."


WOW: On the Search of Graves

By Steve Johnson, March 15, 2000

Jim Davenport travels the west in search of grave markers of Woodmen of the World members. He photographs them, takes measurements, and records the inscriptions. It's a hobby that has taken him to all over the Western United States.

One summer day while driving through the pine trees on a high mountain side, following what he'd been told was possibly the road to the cemetery in Alma, Colorado, Jim Davenport spotted what he was searching for, a Woodmen of the World tombstone. He got out his camera and notebook, measured the tombstone, recorded the inscription, and photographed it. A careful search throughout the cemetery showed there were no other such tombstones. Then, a year and a half later, a lady e-mailed him asking if he had any information on a WOW member buried at the Alma cemetery. He sent her the inscription and a copy of the photograph. The lady was thrilled to learn that her shot-in-the-dark paid dividends!

To Jim, WOW markers are as desired and elusive as truffles are to the French. Armed with his maps and lists he compiles from the local library, Jim and his wife use their keen eyes to spot the WOW markers as they walk through a sea of tombstones. It's a hobby that has grown into a passion.

About seven years ago, Jim was visiting a cemetery in Durango, Colorado, when he spotted a tombstone resembling a tall brown tree-stump with the inscription, "Here Rests a Woodman of the World". "I figured that they were some sort of logging association from the turn of the Century", says Jim. The death date on the marker was 1907. Jim visited the local library and learned that there was an insurance company called Woodmen of the World. "I went to the cemetery in Cortez, Colorado and found several Woodmen stones, but they were not the tree stump type, just ordinary tombstones but each had a circular design on them with a log, a dove, an axe, maul, and wedge, and the inscription, 'DUM TACET CLAMAT'".

Jim standing by a WOW marker at the Greenmount Cemetery in Durango, Colorado.

On a whim, he mentioned to his wife that he would photograph all the Woodmen of the World markers in Colorado. Little did he know what this comment would turn into. Says Jim, "My wife is used to my crazy ideas, but figured this would be a better hobby than collecting farm implements or old lawn mowers, and it seemed like fun thing to do".

Jim and his wife began searching the local newspaper archives for cemetery locations in their county. They contacted the local "guru" who gave them a copy of a map showing all of the known burials and cemeteries in the county. Jim later learned that she belonged to the DAR, was a genealogist, and was a member of the local historical society.

While driving home from a trip to Colorado Spings, Jim and his wife stopped by at a cemetery in Salida, and found a couple of WOW markers. One was a tree stump of an unusual design. "When I got home and developed the photos, I discovered that I had no reference as to how tall the stump was. That was when I decided to measure them." Now the hobby was getting serious.

The photographs, measurements and inscriptions get stored into a three-ring binder. Since the hobby started, he has filled up sixteen of these binders. Each page in the binder holds information for two tombstones. To date, he has personally visited over 200 cemeteries in seven states, recording more than 3,600 WOW markers.

Some of Jim's friends will help out by snapping photos of some WOW markers, but do not necessarily take measurements. "I just feel lucky to get the photos and inscriptions. I put them all into the binders with photo credits of course". But his wife is his biggest helper, locating cemeteries, and finding markers.

The couple will pick out an area where they have not yet been, and spend several days prowling cemeteries. "My poor old Colorado map is marked up with places we've visited. We lucked out and found an atlas of Colorado which indicates several cemeteries, and I found a wonderful book at the library that lists most of the cemeteries by county".

When Jim visits a cemetery, the other people nearby are usually curious to see a man taking measurements, jotting something into a notebook, and snapping pictures. "If they are a groundskeeper, especially the volunteers, they'll want to know what we're doing and many times will help us locate WOW graves", says Jim. "Sometimes they are a bit suspicious due to the increasing number of grave markers that are being stolen. But after talking a bit, they are usually most friendly and want to tell you stories about people in the cemetery."

But Jim caused one caretaker in California to become concerned, when he explained that he was "collecting tombstones". The caretaker reacted by asking Jim if he knew that collecting stones was illegal. "When I assured him that I only collected the photographs, he became friendly and led me to another small cemetery where I found a dozen more WOW markers".

A WOW marker found in Colorado. Notice the Axe, Maul, Wedge, and Dove, all indicative of WOW symbolism.

Perhaps the biggest challenge for Jim, it is finding time for his hobby. Jim has made a career in law enforcement, and is only able to visit cemeteries on vacation time. "We probably get out about three times a year, and you can bet that those times are packed with cemetery visits". In 1967 he started out as a patrol officer for the City of Cortez, CO. Later, he was promoted to Detective, and then Chief of Police. He currently works as a chief investigator for the District Attorney. "I have done just about everything there is to do as an investigator but my 'love' for many years has been fingerprint work. Looking at crime scene fingerprints and trying to match them up with the perpetrators. It's quite a 'rush' when you find one that matches up."

Jim also served time in the military. "I served 10 years in the Navy as a hospital corpsman. Served on aircraft carriers, with the marines, and on submarines for the last 5 years of my career. I was also a navy SCUBA diver. I would have stayed for much longer but received a medical retirement for a heart problem."

In 1883, a man by the name of Joseph Cullen Root organized a fraternal society in Omaha, Nebraska, called "Modern Woodmen of America". One of the benefits of being a member was that upon death, the other members would pass around a hat and donate money to the widow. Membership was limited to white males older than 18 years of age. Later when passing around the hat became more frequent and costly, Root decided to sell life insurance to members. Modern Woodmen of America became a fraternal benefit society

Later, a womens's auxiliary started up called "Royal Neighbors of America. Both the male and female organizations grew steadily and in five years, Modern Woodmen had a total membership of twenty-four thousand.

In 1899, several members had a "falling out" with the leaders of the society, and separated to form a new society under the leadership of Fred A. Falkenburg, and named it "Woodmen of the World". Shortly after, tensions were high in the new organization, and Falkenburg moved to Denver to form, "Woodmen of the World, Pacific Jurisdiction". Today, the three societies remain as insurance companies. Woodmen of the World created women's auxiliaries called "Woodmen Circle" and "Supreme Forest Woodmen", while the Pacific Jurisdiction created an auxiliary called, "Neighbors of Woodcraft", which still exists as an insurance company in Portland, Oregon.

Up until 1935, when a member died, the society would donate $100.00 towards the burial expenses if the surviving family allowed the society's emblem and/or wording to appear on the stone. "This was probably a really good advertising gimmick, but that's just my guess", says Jim.

A typical aluminum marker of the Royal Neighbors of America, the women's auxiliary to the Modern Woodmen of America.

Jim's hobby has taken him and his wife into seven states, including much of Colorado. "I can say that I've been to most of the cemeteries in the south part of the state, on a line from Rifle to Denver and east on I-70. There are a couple of small town cemeteries out on the plains along I-70 that I've not yet been to, but I will get there within the next couple of years. I've gone north from Denver as far as Loveland, but not east from there yet. I've been to Utah and found lot's of WOW stones in the Ogden and Salt Lake City cemeteries. One marble stump in Ogden is about 10 feet tall!! Nevada has a few, but they are far between. California has quite a few. I've found a bunch in the Phoenix, Arizona area, and some in the outlying towns. "

"New Mexico has a bunch of them in the Albuquerque area and scattered around the other parts of the state. During the last Martin Luther King weekend my wife and I ventured into the SE corner of New Mexico as far as Hobbs but not quite to Carlsbad as we just ran out of time. We got to several cemeteries in the SE part of NM including Roswell where we found a "forest" of WOW tree stumps in the South Park Cemetery. I've only been to one cemetery in Kansas. I guess when I get done in Colorado, I'll head to Kansas or Wyoming and see what I find there."

Traveling across the West means having to spend nights in motel rooms. "It is rare that when we go on one of our scouting expeditions that we really plan ahead as far as motel rooms, etc. We kind of plan the route we take to cover a specific part of the country and then catch as catch can for motel rooms. On a couple of occasions it has been quite an experience to get caught in some little town with only a 1940's type motel that hasn't been updated except for the addition of a TV and phone! Usually the restaurant facilities in the town match the motel!! But that's what makes life exciting and makes the trips memorable."

Jim's hobby has mostly benefited his interest in WOW markers. But there have been some people whom he has helped. Jim gets a couple a queries a week from people asking about a name, and will give them what information he has collected including a copy of the photograph. Jim has also signed up as a volunteer photographer on Cemetery Photos.

As to what plans Jim has for all the photographs and information he has collected, he does not quite know what he'll do. Some ask if he plans to write a book. "I don't know, that might take the fun out of it, and turn it into work", replies Jim. "I usually tell people that when I am gone it will be up to the kids to do with it as they please, which may mean 'trashcan'". But for the meantime, Jim does answer e-mails concerning his hobby, and tries to provide scanned photographs to inquiring people.

When asked what other people think about his hobby, he responds, "Some folks think that I'm crazier then a pet coon, but then one day while watching some of the rare TV that I do, I saw them interviewing a fellow who was trying to go to every McDonald's in the USA and eat something there. He has this big spiral notebook of every one that he had been to with the date and what he purchased there!"

 

- Steve Johnson

Steve is the editor of The Cemetery Column, and is the Webmaster of Cemetery Records Online.

All of Jim's WOW tombstone recordings (minus the photographs and measurements) can be accessed from Cemetery Records Online.

You can contact Jim for any questions and comments about WOW grave markers at: jimjanie@fone.net




 

    It's all about mystery. Take a random stroll through any cemetery and you're, bound to find something which sparks your curiosity, some piece of the past which leaves you wondering. Few gravestones give extensive personal information about the people they memorialize, but most give clues that may prove helpful in further investigations.

    The one gravestone that especially sparked my fancy was that of James Stothers (1854 - 1905) and his wife, Miranda ( 1854 - 1933 ), which stands surrounded by other stones in a grassy plot on the southern end of Mount Hope Cemetery. The Stothers' stone is a very impressive piece, and it is easy to pick it out from among its neighbors. Standing approximately eight feet high, the stone is fashioned as a large tree trunk carved so convincingly that, from a distance, it is difficult to discern whether it is a real tree or not. Upon closer inspection, it is obvious that the monument is carved of limestone.

    The intricacy of the carving is remarkable. For decoration, there are two axes lodged in the wood near the middle and strands of ivy climb the tree, while ferns and a lily border the bottom of the trunk. Hanging from a cut-off branch is a large scroll with the names and date's of the two people whom are being memorialized. Concerning symbolism of the stone's iconography, the tree stump itself, with its cut-off branches, symbolizes ended life while the ivy clinging to its side stands for steadfastness, memory, and faithfulness. The lily at the bottom signifies life sprung anew, that eternal life which many hope find after their earthly lives are over. No more information is given to indicate who these people may have been; that is, until you walk around to the left side of the stone, and see what appears to be a seal on the side of the trunk. The small square is the mark of the Woodmen of the World and pictures a stump, a wreath, and a ribbon which contains almost indecipherable words.

    In the cemetery office, I was fortunate to be able to consult the record books for information about the unknown people behind this magnificent memorial marker. James Stothers had been interred on the 16th of June, 1905. The cause of death was listed as apoplexy, or a stroke; he died at the age of 51 years and 8 days. His last recorded residence was Reynolds Street, Rochester. Less is known of his wife. Miranda H. Stothers was interred on the 3rd of April, 1933, after having died of myocarditis, which is an inflammation of the myocardium the middle layer of muscle tissue in the heart, at the age of 79. Her last place of residence was listed as Wyoming, NY.

    Upon further research at the Rundel Library, I was able to find a death notice for James Stothers in The Democrat & Chronicle from the 15th of June, 1905. The notice reported that Mr. Stothers had died the day before, on the 14th. His residence, was listed as 86 Main Street West, which seemed to contradict the cemetery records until I read further Mr. Stothers was survived by his wife and three sons: Clifford J. and Norman D., both of Rochester, and Russell C. of Fairchance, PA. The family service was held at the home of one of their sons, located at 69 Reynolds Street, explaining the entry in the Mount Hope, records. A public service was to follow at Mt. Hope Chapel "in the charge of Foresters and Woodman Organizations, of which he was a member," bringing us back to the Woodmen's seal on the side of the tree trunk in the cemetery.

    The Woodmen of the World's predecessor, the Modern Woodmen of America, was founded by Joseph Cullen Root in 1883. The woodcutter theme came from a sermon which Root heard one Sunday at his church in Iowa, where the minister compared the community's need to work together to "pioneer woodsmen coming together and clearing forests to provide for their families" (Amidon, 2). Root wanted only the healthiest members in order to keep insurance premiums low. He stipulated that his members must be: white males aged 18 to 45, in good health, and have "exemplary habits and high morals." Residents of large cities were not allowed to be members, as living in such cities was considered too dangerous, having none of the "wholesome, qualities that apparently were part of living in small towns" (Amidon, 2). Also, persons with certain professions were denied membership if their occupations were deemed too hazardous. One characteristic not discriminated against was religion.

    In 1890, Root and the head physician of the organization had an argument and threatened to sue one another. As a solution, the head camp evicted both from the society. Both men went on to attempt forming now fraternal organizations, but Root alone was successful. The result of his efforts was the Woodmen of the World, which was very similar to its predecessor. For all the similarities, however, there were a few key differences between the, organizations. In the Woodmen of the World, men between the ages of 16 and 52 were eligible for membership, and the organization "took extra steps to maintain the secrecy and mystery associated with its ceremonies" (Amidon, 3). The new organization also offered a burial benefit as well as death and disability benefits.

    The society's motto was "Dum, Tacet Clamat" which in Latin means "Though silent, he speaks." It is this phrase which is barely distinguishable on the Woodmen's seal on Jams Stothers' tree trunk gravestone. One might wonder what, indeed, this gravestone. is trying to say as it silently communicates with all those who see it. While this may seem a fitting epitaph for Mr. Stothers, one may wonder what it meant to society members who adopted it in life. Perhaps it signified the good reflection of being a member of a fraternal organization, as a man's actions and loyalties often speak more faithfully and clearly of his character than what he says.

    While it would seem that such a magnificent piece, of sculpture would be affordable only to those who were quite wealthy, it turns out that Mr. Stothers was a blacksmith who had emigrated from Canada with his wife and three sons in 1892. Some tree stump monuments were easy and of low cost to produce, especially when the style was popular in the midwest between the mid-nineteenth and the mid-twentieth centuries. The Woodmen of the World did offer a burial benefit for between $50 and $100, but it is doubtful that this incredible stone was one of those pieces (Amidon).

    An interesting point which further mystifies Mr. Stothers is that the first Rochester camp of the Woodmen of the World did not appear until 1906, a year after he died. Thus it would make sense that Mr. Stothers became involved with the organization as a young man in Canada and retained its benefits after he and his family relocated to the United States. Perhaps because of this perpetuated connection to the Woodmen, some special standing in the order earned him his distinctive gravestone. However, if Mr. Stothers did hold a distinguishing place in the order, it is curious that he should have moved to Rochester and left behind those fraternal roots which were obviously so important to him.

    Epilogue

    Today, more than 100 years after its founding, the Woodmen of the World still work together to clear away society's problems. Woodmen lodges can be found in all 50 states, with members totaling 856,000. The Woodmen of the World .... no longer erects grave markers for deceased members. They have, however, kept alive the society's original goals: to provide fraternalism, protection, and service by continuing to furnish life insurance (Amidon, 4).

    Researcher: Reneka Mergenthaler
    University of Rochester