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Are Funeral Homes segregated?

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1Are Funeral Homes segregated? Empty Are Funeral Homes segregated? 8/24/2013, 1:31 pm

Guest


Guest

Benboe Funeral Home
416 W Wright St, Pensacola, FL 32501 » Map
(850) 438-7503


Tracy Morton Memorial Chapel
55 Coast Rd, Pensacola, FL 32507 » Map
(850) 332-7661
3.0 stars (9)

There is a new Funeral home in my area. I have never seen a white person there. Do some funeral homes cater only to Blacks? Just wondering....


Guest


Guest

Of course. Willi Jr.'s did I think.

knothead

knothead

[quote="Mr Ichi"]Benboe Funeral Home
416 W Wright St, Pensacola, FL 32501 » Map
(850) 438-7503


Tracy Morton Memorial Chapel
55 Coast Rd, Pensacola, FL 32507 » Map
(850) 332-7661
3.0 stars (9)

There is a new Funeral home in my area.  I have never seen a white person there.  Do some funeral homes cater only to Blacks?  Just wondering....


DUH!!!


2seaoat



A funeral home will take anybody, but racial preference has been obvious. Do you think that business model was going to be crushed in just fifty years.......nope. When folks would not bury your loved ones, you found alternatives, and those alternatives did not go away fifty years ago.

Guest


Guest

African-American Funeral Homes in the USA

Funeral Homes
City Listings
In the United States there is a rich cultural heritage of black owned and operated funeral homes. Indeed black funeral parlors were some of the first businesses to be set up by African-Americans after the abolition of slavery.
How do you locate an African-American owned and operated funeral home?

Often at US Funerals Online we see searches come in for a “black funeral home in city”, which demonstrates how there definitely is still some aspect of segregation in cultural rituals and the ritual of death care is no different.
The question is, how does one either promote being a ‘black’ funeral home, or locate one, in an era when mentioning ‘black’ is not PC? Many African-American owned and operated funeral homes will openly acknowledge that they are a “black funeral home”, and obviously there are certain areas in the United States where it is expected that black funeral homes operate.

But for those who need to communicate this message implicitly to their customers, how is it easily conveyed? It is usually fairly easy to identify Jewish funeral homes as the Star of David acts symbolically. In the age of image saturation, a visual cue is a key means by which many black funeral homes clearly communicate their cultural heritage.

The death care industry is still one that operates distinctly on a word-of-mouth basis. Families seek out the funeral home that has served their family over time, or people refer a funeral home to the recently bereaved. Unfortunately not everyone has the benefit of having a ‘family’ funeral home, or people are choosing to shop around more, being more concerning about funeral costs.

If you are looking to locate a ‘black’ funeral home then the Internet is a great means by which to conduct your research. These days’ funeral homes with web sites frequently employ photographs of their owners and staff to communicate their African-American heritage.

There is also a national association of funeral directors that is specifically comprised of African-American funeral homes. The National Funeral Directors & Morticians Association (NFD&MA) is based in Georgia and has been in existence since 1924. The NFD&MA has chapters across the U.S, Caribbean and South Africa.

If you require more information about funeral homes in the NFD&MA, they can be contacted at:

National Funeral Directors & Morticians Association, Inc.
6290 Shannon Parkway
Union City
GA 30291

6Are Funeral Homes segregated? Empty Re: Are Funeral Homes segregated? 8/24/2013, 11:43 pm

Yella

Yella

Do the morticians dress the bodies completely. Like shoes and socks. Underwear? In one of Stephen King's novels a coffin is dropped accidently when a pallbearer trips and falls going down some outside steps and the coffin got away and opened and the body slithered out but was naked below the waist since the lower half is never opened the funeral home saved money by skipping the pants but charging for them. Can you imagine the pandemonium?

http://warpedinblue,blogspot.com/

7Are Funeral Homes segregated? Empty Re: Are Funeral Homes segregated? 8/24/2013, 11:45 pm

Sal

Sal

Yella wrote:Do the morticians dress the bodies completely. Like shoes and socks. Underwear?   In one of Stephen King's novels a coffin is dropped accidently when a pallbearer trips and falls going down some outside steps and the coffin got away and opened and the body slithered out but was naked below the waist since the lower half is never opened the funeral home saved money by skipping the pants but charging for them. Can you imagine the pandemonium?
That's the way I want to go out  ...


... actually, that's the way I'd like to go through life. 

8Are Funeral Homes segregated? Empty Re: Are Funeral Homes segregated? 8/24/2013, 11:48 pm

Guest


Guest

Yella wrote:Do the morticians dress the bodies completely. Like shoes and socks. Underwear?   In one of Stephen King's novels a coffin is dropped accidently when a pallbearer trips and falls going down some outside steps and the coffin got away and opened and the body slithered out but was naked below the waist since the lower half is never opened the funeral home saved money by skipping the pants but charging for them. Can you imagine the pandemonium?
Maybe it was a cut rate or just a half ass funeral home.

Guest


Guest

Do you think this would work?


White-American Funeral Homes in the USA

Funeral Homes
City Listings
In the United States there is a rich cultural heritage of white owned and operated funeral homes. Indeed white funeral parlors were some of the first businesses to be set up by White-Americans after the abolition of slavery.
How do you locate an White-American owned and operated funeral home?

Often at US Funerals Online we see searches come in for a “white funeral home in city”, which demonstrates how there definitely is still some aspect of segregation in cultural rituals and the ritual of death care is no different.
The question is, how does one either promote being a ‘White’ funeral home, or locate one, in an era when mentioning ‘white’ is not PC? Many White-American owned and operated funeral homes will openly acknowledge that they are a “White funeral home”, and obviously there are certain areas in the United States where it is expected that white funeral homes operate.

But for those who need to communicate this message implicitly to their customers, how is it easily conveyed? It is usually fairly easy to identify Jewish funeral homes as the Star of David acts symbolically. In the age of image saturation, a visual cue is a key means by which many white funeral homes clearly communicate their cultural heritage.

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