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                                        News & Events, September 2009
Dear Friend,
The Friends of Mount Auburn is pleased to present the September 2009 edition of our
electronic
newsletter. We invite you to join our email list to receive this mailing on a monthly basis.  To
ensure that you continue to receive emails from us, add friends@mountauburn.org to your
address book today.
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In this issue
For the Love of Trees
Horticultural Highlight
Friends of Mount Auburn September Programs
Birds & Birding at Mount Auburn
September History Highlight
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katsura tree on Lime Avenue For the Love of Trees:
A Celebration Through Music and Pictures 
 
Join us in Story Chapel on Saturday, September 12th
at 4:00 PM to celebrate the power and beauty of
trees through music and in pictures. 
 
The Record Players will present a program inspired
by the beauties and mysteries of nature, featuring
the works of Marcel Tournier, John Rutter, Francois
Couperin, Jean-Philippe Rameau, Henry Purcell, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. During the second half of the program, The Record Players will perform against a backdrop of photographs that explore the many lives of trees, mostly taken by Edward A. Mason (1919-2007), a physician, conservationist and life-long lover of trees.  The concert will conclude with a
reception and the opportunity to explore some of the Cemetery's magnificent
trees.  $10 members of the Friends; $15 non-members.
 
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 Paper Birch
Horticultural Highlight
Text and Photo by Jim Gorman, Mount Auburn Cemetery Docent  
 
Betula papyrifera commonly referred to as paper, white or canoe birch is a native of the northern New England forest. It has the most widespread geographic distribution of the other American birch species, actually being circumboreal, extending from Greenland and Labrador west across our continent to Washington state, British Columbia and southern Alaska.
 
The Abenaki, native people of the pre-colonial area of current-day Maine, used a roll made of birch bark to wrap the bodies of their dead prior to burial. The more quintessential image of these native peoples' use of this bark was for building birch bark canoes, a craft they shared with early European settlers. The Abenaki also used this waterproof bark for baskets, boxes, bowls, cups, kettles, cooking utensils, cradles, mats and a host of other items. Decorative arts were created by a technique of biting birch bark between one's eye teeth that had been folded and refolded, similar to our creating paper snowflakes. Snowshoes were made from the wood and sap was tapped as a second favorite to maple sap.
 
The birch's inconspicuous flowers are separate "male" and "female" catkins on the same tree. Seeds from pollinated female catkins provide food for many of Mount Auburn's birds and are the preferred food of the purple finch, American goldfinch, red-breasted nuthatch and common redpole. The larvae (caterpillars) of the viceroy, red-spotted purple and mourning cloak butterflies eat birch leaves for sustenance before producing their chrysalis.
 
While experts have differing opinions as to why the bark is white, who can be unmoved by the beauty of this smooth yet naturally peeling bark? James Russell Lowell (Lot #323, Fountain Avenue) in his "An Indian Summer Reverie" referred to this birch as "the most shy and ladylike of trees". This birch was one Eleanor Roosevelt's favorite trees.
 
As this month's passing days slowly inch us toward fall, the paper birch will begin to glow with leaves turning the colors of gold. On your next visit to Mount Auburn look for paper birch located on Larch Ave., Pine Ave., Beech Ave., Halcyon Ave., Garden Ave., Glen Ave., Meadow Rd., Primrose Path and Aralia Path among other locations 
 
Learn more about Mount Auburn's horticultural collections.
 
"Big Trees at Mount Auburn" and "Unusual Trees of Mount Auburn" maps are available for purchase at the Mount Auburn Entrance Gate and in the Visitors Center.
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Fall Tour at Mount AuburnFriends of Mount Auburn September Programs
 
 
Our September 2009 Program and Event schedule is
available online. View the complete list of events
and register for them on our website today! 
 
Monument Inscription Workshops - Learn and
practice techniques for deciphering inscriptions on Mount
Auburn's 19th-century monuments that are disappearing
as marble wears away and brownstone disintegrates. 
Workshops are held outdoors - please wear proper clothing and plenty of sunscreen.  Meet at
the Entrance Gate.  Thursday, September 3rd or Sunday, September 20th at 2:00 PM.  FREE.  
 
Mount Auburn Book Club - Combine your passion for books with your love of Mount
Auburn by joining our book club on Thursday, September 10th at 10:00 AM.  We will discuss
Sudden Sea: The Great Hurricane of 1938 by R.A. Scotti (2004).  The Hurricane of 1938
was one of the most ferocious storms to hit the East Coast, killing 682 people and causing
extensive damage across the Northeast. Mount Auburn was one of many sites devastated
by the hurricane - the Cemetery lost over 800 trees and more than 400 monuments were
damaged. Following the discussion, join us for a brief tour to look at evidence of this historic
disaster. 
 
Discover Mount Auburn Cemetery - This 1.5-mile walking tour will focus on stories of
history, monuments, and the lives of those buried here.  Mount Auburn, designated a
National Historic Landmark, is one of the country's most significant designed landscapes.
Here the arts of horticulture, architecture and sculpture combine with the beauty of nature
to create a place of comfort and inspiration.   Saturday, September 5th at 2:00 PM. 
$5 for members of the Friends, $10 for non-members.
 
Beautiful, Timeless and Still Available - a free presentation and driving tour of the
Cemetery.  On Thursday, September 24th at 5:00 PM we will begin in Story Chapel and
then proceed by van to explore the late-summer beauty of this historic landscape.  Learn
more about Mount Auburn's many burial and memorialization options and experience how
contemporary landscape design and architecture are shaping the burial spaces for the
21st-century.  The driving tour will end at Bigelow Chapel for a brief tour of the Cemetery's
oldest chapel.  Limited enrollment. Preregistration required
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 Hermit Thrush
Birds & Birding at Mount Auburn
The Hermit Thrush
Text and photo by Robert H. Stymeist
 
"Ever since I entered the woods, even while listening to
the lesser songsters, or contemplating the silent forms
about me, a strain has reached my ears from out of the depths of the forest that to me is the finest sound in
nature,--the song of the hermit thrush."
- John Burroughs from Wake-Robin 1871
 
John Burroughs was not alone in his appreciation of the Hermit Thrush song, a flute-like whistle followed by a series of ethereal bell-like ascending
and descending tones. Unfortunately Mount Auburn visitors seldom hear this beautiful song on
its migration north in the spring. The first birds appear in the Cemetery by mid-April and
peak by the first week of May and at this time have a very quiet song which they sing very
early in the morning or just as the sun sets in the evening. To hear these birds you must
visit their breeding territories.
 
The Hermit Thrush is one of the most widely distributed forest-nesting migratory birds in
North America and is the only one of the spotted thrushes that winter here in the northern
states - changing their diet from insects to berries and buds. It is the fall and early winter when an encounter with a Hermit Thrush at Mount Auburn can be very satisfying.
 
The Hermit Thrush was named for its shy retiring ways but in the fall and winter it can
be coaxed into view by "spishing" - which is making sounds that some say resemble alarm calls.  Spishing and imitating a Screech Owl will also produce a flock of curious birds. The Hermit Thrush will first be detected as it scolds you with a soft "tchupp" note. The Hermit is easily identified from the other brown spotted thrushes by its gray-brown back and its habit of slowly raising its contrasting rufous tail as it also opens and closes its wings on a nearby perch.
 
Look for the Hermit Thrush at Mount Auburn in or near any fruiting trees - they especially like
holly trees and some viburnums.  At times they can be seen competing with Robins in the two Cork Trees at Halcyon Lake.
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Birds and Birding at Mount Auburn Cemetery: An Introductory Guide by
Christopher Leahy and Clare Walker Leslie, is regularly available for purchase at the Cemetery
from 8:30 AM to 4 PM everyday (except holidays). The cost is $8.00. Copies are available by
mail order by sending payment to the Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery, ATT: Bird Guide,
580 Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge, MA 02138. Please include the cost $8.00, plus $2.00
for mailing and handling (total $10) for each copy ordered.
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St. John's Public LotMount Auburn: September History Highlight
 
As Mount Auburn developed, it set aside four public
lots containing single graves.  Victorians of modest
means were then able to afford a final resting place
in pleasant proximity to generous family lots.
 
Named after Saints, these lots embraced such notables
as Peter Banner, the architect of Boston's Park St Church,
Thomas Grundy, a hardworking brass finisher from Stoneham and the genteel Austin sisters of Garden Street in Cambridge. 
 
Join us on Saturday, September 19th at 2:00 PM for "Modest Spaces: Mount Auburn's
Beautiful Public Lots" - a walking tour with Social Historian, Dee Morris - to learn more
about some of the fascinating individuals buried in these public lots.  Meet at the Entrance Gate.  $5 for members of the Friends, $10 for non-members.
 
* Image of St. John's Lot above (Lot 1736) located on Fir Avenue between Crocus and Mistletoe Path, established 1848, courtesy of Mount Auburn's Historical Collections.

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You can now join or renew your membership in the Friends of Mount Auburn
quickly, securely and easily online! 
 
The Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery was established in 1986 as a non-profit educational
trust to promote the appreciation and preservation of Mount Auburn. Join the Friends of 
Mount Auburn.  Learn about volunteer opportunities at Mount Auburn.
 
Mount Auburn Cemetery is still a unique choice for burial and commemoration. It offers
a wide variety of innovative interment and memorialization options for all. Learn about
Mount Auburn's many burial and memorialization options.
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Friends of Mount Auburn Cemetery
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email: friends@mountauburn.org
phone: 617-547-7105
web: http://www.mountauburn.org
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