Evergreen Cemetery in Paris, Texas is the final resting place for over 40,000 souls. Founded by charter in 1866 by some of Paris’ most influential personalities, it was established in response to the growing needs of the growing city. The original cemetery was composed of only 16 acres and was sold to the cemetery association by George Wright for $320. When it was chartered, it had already had a history as a family cemetery, and since the original land sale, it has grown through grants and additional sales of land.
Today, Evergreen Cemetery is best
known for the poignant headstones; the beautifully carved tributes to the loved
and lost. They are emblems of history, art, and a window into the lives of
those buried and their families. Among these markers are a variety of angels,
both winged and not, young and old, each carved with a care and elegance that
is increasingly rare in this modern world. There are also plants; leaves, ivies
and broken trees. Perhaps these are a testament to the love of the natural
world that someone once had. In addition, there are anchors and chains, a
carved newspaper front page, a variety of sheep, and a resting buffalo.
With over 40,000 graves though, it’s
the headstone of a small-town furniture maker which gets most of the attention.
People come from near and far to see the grave they’ve heard about. Most don’t
know the person buried there, they really just want to see what’s above him –
Jesus in cowboy boots.
Jesus in cowboy boots? |
Still other locals report Willet and his wife
were atheists and the whole thing is just their tongue-in-cheek
tweak-of-the-nose toward the ultra-religious conservatives in town. It is a
long-held tradition, especially in the south, for people to be buried with
their feet to the east. The east is the direction of Jerusalem, of the 2ndcoming,
and Archangel Gabriel’s horn will sound from that quarter. In order to be
facing Christ when they rise from their graves on Judgment Day, the dead must
lie with their feet to the east. A posthumous punishment given to those who
have extraordinary sins (murder, suicide) is to bury them on a north-south axis
so the poor soul will rise facing in the wrong direction. The Babcock’s is the
only statue in the cemetery that does not face east. Also, carved into the
pedestal base are inverted torches and anything upside down is a sure sign of
godlessness. The boots are simply a kicker, the final act of blasphemy, sort of
like putting a Stetson on Noah.
What do you think? |
The superintendent of
Evergreen Cemetery has his own theory however. He thinks Willet simply had a
sense of humor about the whole thing and that’s why he set it up that way, so
it would give everybody something to cogitate on. He postulates that had Willet
died today, we would probably see the same statue up there wearing Nikes. Maybe
he was, after all, just a pretty cool guy.