It’s right there in the vows uttered at innumerable weddings each year: “Till death do us part.” So it should come as no surprise that some couples want to highlight their (hopefully) eternal bond by marrying in a cemetery.
Cemetery weddings are nothing new. Jews living in Eastern Europe and in the United States sometimes held weddings in cemeteries during times of mass disease, like during the 1918 influenza, in the belief that having the ceremony in the presence of the dead might bring about better times.
In the United States, Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California, became a popular site for weddings after it opened in 1906. In 1940, Ronald Reagan chose it as the venue for his marriage to his first wife, actress Jane Wyman.
For most of the 20th century, though, cemeteries were cordoned off in the American imagination as morbid spaces one didn’t visit unless necessary. This has changed with the recent “positive death” movement, which has sought to remake the cemetery as a place of exploration, and even celebration.
“Every year, we get more and more requests,” said Richard Harker, the executive director of the foundation that operates the Oakland Cemetery in Atlanta. He said that last year Oakland hosted 36 weddings and 25 funerals.
But holding a cemetery wedding does present challenges that marrying in a hotel ballroom or chapel might not. Below is some advice from those who have been through the experience.
The reasons vary
The decision can be deeply personal. This was the case for Sabrina Gandara, 38, of Portland, Oregon, who works in a retirement community. In 2019, she married Andrew Rodriguez, 37, a service writer for a car dealership, while standing over the grave of her grandfather, Joe Gandara II, at the Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana, California.
“Growing up, I was my grandpa’s baby,” Gandara said. She and her grandfather used to talk each evening on the phone, she said, and he had promised to walk her down the aisle when she got married. But he died in 2007.
Marrying at his gravesite was a way to stay true to his vow. “If my grandfather couldn’t walk me down the aisle, then I could walk down the aisle to my grandfather,” Gandara said in a text message.
Sometimes, the decision comes out of the blue. Shelby Prevatt, a 30-year-old therapist in private practice, was scouting for wedding locations in Richmond, Virginia, when her mother offered a surprising suggestion: the historic Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, the 135-acre final resting place of two former U.S. presidents, James Monroe and John Tyler.
Prevatt was intrigued. The first trip she had taken with her husband-to-be, Zak Cowell, 31, a director of digital marketing, was to a music performance at the Congressional Cemetery in Washington. The couple, who now live in Bangor, Maine, had their wedding ceremony at Hollywood Cemetery in 2022. “We think about our wedding all the time,” Prevatt said. “It’s one of the most special moments that we’ve had. I don’t have any regrets.”
An affordable option
The restrictions that a cemetery is likely to place on the size and scope of events may make it a perfect option for couples on a budget who want to have an intimate but memorable ceremony. “More and more people are realizing they want to save money for a down payment on a house, and they’d rather have a small, simple wedding,” said Caroline DuBois, the president of the New York Marble Cemetery in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan.
It costs $5,000 to rent out the cemetery’s intimate garden, DuBois said. Prevatt said that to hold her wedding at Hollywood Cemetery, she donated $2,500. In comparison, the average wedding venue in 2023 cost $12,800, according to a survey conducted by the Knot.
Research the history
“I would recommend that the celebrants focus on the historic aspect of the venue,” said Paul K. Williams, the superintendent of the Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington, where longtime Washington Post publisher Katharine Graham is buried. Weddings and other private events are held in the cemetery’s Renwick Chapel.
History can be complicated — and painful. The Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond is home to many Confederate leaders, including Jefferson Davis and J.E.B. Stuart. The cemetery does not advertise that fact, but Prevatt said she knew they were interred there.
“That was always something we were wanting to make sure we were mindful of — not in any way making that history a part of our day/celebration,” Prevatt said in an email. “Our way of doing so was to ensure we remained in a different part of the cemetery.”
Learn the rules
“Logistically, there are challenges,” said Lauren Purcell, who plans high-end weddings in the Washington area. In 2018, she worked with a couple who married at the Congressional Cemetery, whose 70,000 permanent residents include notorious FBI director J. Edgar Hoover and Marion Barry, the former mayor of Washington.
Cemeteries aren’t hotels — each one will have unique facilities, quirks and rules for a prospective wedding party to consider. Oakland Cemetery in Atlanta has seven wedding venues. They include a bell tower dating to 1899, two lawns able to hold 200 guests each, a former “women’s comfort station” built in 1908 and remodeled into an indoor venue, and three mausoleums. “We have a coordinator who works with the bride and groom,” Harker said.
Some couples may hold their ceremony at a cemetery and then move the reception elsewhere. Done right, a cemetery wedding can refresh a rite that often succumbs to logistical anxieties or the need for one Instagram-worthy moment after another. There’s nothing like death, after all, to focus the mind on what matters in life.
“There’s so much love and life” in a cemetery, Laura Lavelle, who works at Oak Hill in Washington. “It can hold sadness and happiness. It can hold grief and joy.”