Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Funeral Homes and More Deathcare on Twitter

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Oh for Twitter in 1900!

Oh for Twitter in 1900!

A few months ago we posted a list of Twitter users who focused on deathcare; but, we did not post funeral homes, as only two were listed at the time. As you can see from the list shown below, the funeral home business is catching on to Twitter! Many of these businesses have discovered that Twitter provides a great format to post links to obituaries.

The links lead to the Twitter page for each user. You need a Twitter account to respond to these users, but you do not need an account to read their “Tweets,” or their posts on their Twitter pages. The list is categorized and each link is listed alphabetically to show that we do not favor one resource over another.

Before you get in a huff about not being mentioned in the list below, we posted links to Twitter users who have posted within the past month and who have more than one Tweet on their page…if that description doesn’t fit you, then you weren’t listed.

Funeral Homes

  • Amos Family Funeral: Located in Shawnee, Kansas, this is a family-owned funeral home with on-site crematory. This funeral home also provides ShawneeObits (which we think is a great idea!).
  • Amos Pet Crematory: We had to make this a separate listing, although it seems that Amos is famous for taking care of lifeless bodies (see above).
  • Bannan Funeral Home: You can get all your obits from Alpena, Michigan through this Twitter site.
  • Barranco Funeral: This is a family-owned funeral home located in Severna Park, Maryland.
  • Baue Funeral Home: The folks in St. Charles, Missouri, can count on this funeral home to offer plenty of local news and photos.
  • Corey Gaffney: Mr. Gaffney is the general manager and funeral director at Gaffney Funeral Home in Tacoma, Washington.
  • Fisher Funeral Home: This funeral home, located in Logansport, Indiana, publishes links to obits as well as some great observations.
  • Funeral Queen: Muneerah Warner is the funeral director of Warner Funeral Home and CEO of Eternal Enterprises, Inc.
  • Gaffney Funeral Home: Located in Tacoma, Washington, this site focuses on seminars and holiday observations.
  • Hans Funeral Home: This funeral home also publishes obits. They are located in Albany, New York.
  • Herr Funeral Homes (Sunset Hill): This funeral home puts the “fun in funeral home!” They are located in St. Louis metro east.
  • John W. Evans: This guy goes by the Twitter ID, “Gottagosometime.” He’s currently the owner of Evans Funeral Home in Norwalk, Ohio and Secretary and Treasurer-elect for the Ohio Funeral Directors Association.
  • Miller Funeral Home: Located in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, this funeral home provides some interesting facts and quotes.
  • NewportFunerals: Brown Funeral Home has been serving families in Newport and Cocke County, Tennessee for over 78 years. Now, they’re on Twitter!
  • Roberts Funeral Home: This funeral home is located in Forest Lake, Minnesota, and they post obits.
  • Ryan Funeral Home: This funeral home is located in De Pere, Wisconsin.
  • Searcy Funeral Home: Located in Enterprise, Alabama, this funeral home offers local obituaries.
  • Sunset Funeral Home: Sunset Funeral Homes Memorial Park and Cremation Center is located in Danville, Illinois.
  • The Pet Funeral Home: This Canadian pet funeral home provides readers with pets as well as with pet funerals.

Other Deathcare Twitterers

  • Cross-Lanes Floral: Although not necessarily focused on funerals, it’s nice to see a florist become involved with Twitter. This florist is located in West Virginia.
  • Funeral Home Jobs: If you want to work in a funeral home, you might want to follow this Twitter user.
  • MrFrost71: A Kentucky-based funeral home employee Tweets away (he also Twitters about other things).
  • Sacred Crossings: This Twitter user represents the Los Angeles-based business that helps users practice at-home funerals.

Hospice Care, Funerals and Cemeteries on Twitter

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Do you use Twitter? If not, you probably wonder what the Twitter fuss is all about. If you’re using Twitter, you may think that those who don’t use it just don’t “get it.” Whether or not you use Twitter, you might be surprised to learn that this social media tool has penetrated the death care industry. And, unlike the morbid specters you think you might encounter, these folks are – well – they’re alive and ordinary, with hobbies, families and stories to tell.

We let our fingers go walking through Twellow, the Twitter “Yellow Pages” to discover death care industry folks who are using Twitter. While the numbers weren’t astronomical, we don’t doubt that these figures may change as more death care businesses realize this social media tool’s commercial potential. We only chose a few links from Twellow’s search results to provide you with a taste of what you can encounter on Twitter.

The list below is categorized under the search word we used to find these links, and the links are arranged alphabetically under those categories. This method assures our readers that we do not favor one resource over another; however, we did skip over business-to-business accounts to offer Twitter users who focus on non-industry readers.

Hospice

  1. ctsinclair: Hospice & Palliative Medicine Doctor in Kansas City. Co-editor of Pallimed, a hospice and palliative medicine blog.
  2. hvto: This is Robin Watts, founder of first hospice volunteer training online course. Learn more at Hospice Volunteer Training.
  3. MyCareManager: Edward L. De La Loza is a psychotherapist and geriatric care manager. His interests include hospice, aging and eldercare among other things. His Web site is My Family Care Manager.
  4. SanDiegoHospice: San Diego Hospice and The Institute for Palliative Medicine is a “non-profit leader in the relief of pain and suffering.” Learn more at their Web site.
  5. StAnnsHospice: This user’s name is Catherine Williams, and she is the Director of Fundraising and Communications for St Ann’s Hospice in Manchester, UK.

Funeral

  1. buryorburn: Scott Gilligan is the “Funeral Maverick,” fighting big business death. He mainly posts about his blog entries at his Web site.
  2. funeralogues: Here’s an offbeat Twitter find: One woman off-Broadway show that is a darkly comedic look at the inside of funeral homes, funeral rituals and one woman’s personal obsession with death. Visit the official Web site.
  3. funeralplanner: Funeral planning and resource guide. The Web site is called the Funeral Planning Guide.
  4. funeralqueen: This is Muneerah Warner, funeral director of Warner Funeral Home and Publisher of Funerals Today Magazine, a new publication for individuals interested in funerals and an inside look at the funeral industry
  5. Otrib: Free obituary and funeral planning help and grief support forums and chat rooms at their Web site.

Cemetery and Cemeteries

  1. cemeteryminda: Minda Powers-Douglas is a writer who digs cemeteries (”not literally”). She edits Epitaphs Magazine (The Cemetery Club is Epitaph Magazine’s online venue) and teaches workshops.
  2. CemeterySpot: Hal Stevens is an author of books about end-of-life issues and owner of Web sites that provide free online memorials and free buy/sell cemetery plot services. His main site is named, aptly, Cemetry Spot.
  3. JewishGYrabbit: Schelly Dardashti is part of an international team that writes about Jewish cemeteries, news, burial, mourning, symbols and more at the Jewish Graveyard Rabbit.
  4. RivCem: The historic Riverside Cemetery Conservancy goes online to help “preserve the past for the future.”
  5. southerngraves: ‘S. Lincecum’ is an amateur historian, avid reader, genealogist and family historian, lover of cemeteries, and scrapbooker with a Web site to prove cemetery interests.

Go ahead and give Twellow a whirl. However, if you try “green funeral,” “cremations,” “body donation” or “grief management” you won’t find one tweet (an entry made by a person who uses Twitter). But, if you’re patient for a week or so, you may discover that a business or two will fill those niches.