The Commercial Appeal

Chicago tombstone maker endures during pandemic

- Charles Rex Arbogast

CHICAGO – Elmo’s has been making tombstones on the South Side of Chicago for more than half a century, hand-carving grave markers for the bereaved families of everyone from local celebritie­s to victims of the gang violence that has become a hallmark of that part of the city.

“Be 4 You Go, See Elmo,” the catchphras­e coined by Elmo’s Tombstone Service’s original owner, Robert Williams, still graces the small shop’s awning. The line underneath, “Tombstones made while you wait,” might be the final hook that gets through the door of the Black-owned business.

Like its counterpar­ts throughout the state, Elmo’s had to close briefly early on during the coronaviru­s pandemic – deemed nonessenti­al despite the high numbers of COVID-19 cases and deaths in Chicago, particular­ly on the South Side. The pandemic has slowed funerals and cemetery operations, but it’s current owner, Hosea Knox, said Friday that Elmo’s should be fine.

“It’s going really well, I have sold more expensive stones this year than the year before,” he said, noting that it was too soon to tell whether the uptick in business was due to the pandemic.

Knox’s industrial arts education at Grambling College – now Grambling State University – led him to work for Williams more than four decades ago. Knox and his wife, Bobbie, bought the business from Williams in 1987.

“It was an opportunit­y to stop working for someone else,” Knox said.

Knox, 81, lost his wife to cancer in 2012. He inscribed “WIFE, MOTHER, GRANDMOTHE­R, IN GOD’S HANDS” on her blue pearl granite stone, and Bobbie remains listed on his business cards.

The process of transcribi­ng begins as a collaborat­ion between the deceased’s family and Knox. Once lettering and design are agreed upon, Knox and assistant Leon Brown begin transformi­ng a standard stone into a piece of memorial art.

An average stone can cost $700 to $2,000.

Knox and Brown take pride in distinguis­hing themselves from the modern “computeriz­ed laser” cut, a technique that Knox claims is just a “skin” cut that will fade over time.

“It is just like a photograph, it is not cut in there deep,” Knox said, “When I cut a stone, it is down in there and will withstand the weather.”

The South Side has seen more than its share of tragedy, including its many gang-related shootings and now the pandemic.

Roebuck “Pops” Staples, patriarch of The Staples Singers, brought the family to Knox’s shop to select his monument before he died in 2000. Staples was buried in the Oak Woods Cemetery along with journalist/activist Ida B. Wells, nuclear scientist Enrico Fermi, Olympic champion Jesse Owens and Chicago Mayor Harold Washington.

Knox has thought about his own stone.

“I will have to eventually do it, my name, birthday, deceased date, and I might put a little thing that says, ‘Elmo’s Tombstone Service’ on the bottom.”

 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP ?? With a stencil only exposing the sandblaste­d letters, Leon Brown spray paints the letters on a stone at Elmo's Tombstone Service on Chicago's South Side in May.
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP With a stencil only exposing the sandblaste­d letters, Leon Brown spray paints the letters on a stone at Elmo's Tombstone Service on Chicago's South Side in May.

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