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2 unusual facts about Funeral home


Cardiff Rift

This episode takes place in 1869, when the Gelth, gaseous humanoid organisms, pass through the Rift into a funeral parlour, where they are able to 'possess' the corpses.

National Hall of Records

The National Hall of Records has over 300 contributing Funeral home members.


Michael J. Devlin

Before his arrest, Devlin worked as a manager for Imo's Pizza and as a part-time funeral home worker at Bopp Chapel in Kirkwood, Missouri.

Peter Chiodo

In 1987, Chiodo became a made man in the Lucchese family in a ceremony held in an apartment over a funeral home in Queens.


see also

American GI Forum

Upon the return of his body to Texas, he was denied funeral services by a White American-owned funeral home.

Amerigo Bonasera

In The Godfather: The Game, Aldo Trapani, instead of Clemenza, is ordered to punish the two perpetrators, who are found in the graveyard outside Bonasera's funeral home harassing Bonasera's daughter.

C. J. McLin

McLin's family moved to Dayton, Ohio in 1931, where he attended Dunbar High School and worked at the family business, the McLin Funeral Home, founded by his father.

Elmo Patrick Sonnier

The service, which was presided over by the bishop of Baton Rouge, Stanley Joseph Ott (typically unheard of for non-well respected members of the Catholic Church), was held at a Baton Rouge area funeral home.

Ford City, Pennsylvania

The television show American Pickers aired an episode on August 21, 2012, that consisted of a visit to the Mantini Funeral Home in Ford City as well as several other locations owned by the Mantini brothers.

Hans Hacker

Additionally, a number of East Liverpool institutions and businesses such as the Museum of Ceramics, the Carnegie Library and the Dawson Funeral Home have Hacker's work on display.

John William Warde

Warde was buried in Cemetery of the Evergreens, Brooklyn following a private funeral service at the New York and Brooklyn Funeral Home, located at 187 South Oxford Street in Brooklyn.

Murder of Jason Gage

His wake in Oelwein was attended by hundreds, and his funeral drew a crowd too large for the funeral home where it was held.

Roy Head

George Frazier would pursue real estate investment interests, and Bill Pennington followed in his mother's footsteps and become a successful owner of Pennington Funeral Home in San Marcos.