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Spring Hill Memorial Park

Markers & Monuments

Spring Hill TN Cemeteries

MARKERS


Spring Hill Memorial Park and Williamson Memorial Gardens offer a full line of memorial markers to reflect your loved one's legacy. Our staff has many years of experience helping families choose the perfect memorial. These memorials may be highly customized or as simple as you desire.

Chapel Hill TN Funeral Home And Cremations

MONUMENTS


Williamson Memorial Gardens & Spring Hill Memorial Park offer a full line of granite monuments. We also install these monuments in all outside cemeteries in the middle Tennessee area. With many designs, colors, and shapes our knowledgeable staff is here to assist with the perfect monument for your loved one. We also can assist you with a special granite project for your business, park, or church.

General Rules

The staff and maintenance of Spring Hill Memorial Park and Williamson Memorial Gardens strive to preserve and maintain the beauty of the cemetery. So that the entire cemetery may present a neat and orderly appearance, your adherence to the regulations listed will be appreciated. These regulations are also necessary to ensure the safety of visiting families and employees.


  • Any floral arrangements - will be removed when they become discolored, wilted, seasonally inappropriate, or unsightly.
  • Any time of year - cut flowers and artificial flower arrangements may be placed only in regulation bronze vases. No other objects will be allowed on markers or graves except as stated herein.
  • Holiday Season - (Nov. 20 - Jan. 30) artificial arrangements, such as Christmas trees, pots, wreaths, sprays, or easels may be placed on graves. (All holiday arrangements not removed by Jan. 30 will be discarded)
  • Potted Plants - are permitted one week before and one week after Easter, Memorial Day (observed), Mother's Day, and Father's Day.
  • Flags - are permitted on graves one week before and one week after Memorial Day (observed), Fourth of July, and Veterans' Day.
  • Burial Service Flowers - will be removed by cemetery personnel five (5) days following the service.
  • Mausoleum Flowers - funeral flowers will be displayed for five (5) days after burial, as close to the entombment as possible. Any other floral arrangements must be placed in regulation vases only.
  • Cremation Niches - No arrangements or decorations will be allowed, except those placed at the time of inurnment and then limited to five (5) days.


The cemetery is not responsible for flower arrangements.

The following ARE NOT PERMITTED and if placed will be removed and disposed of immediately, as they present unsafe or damaging conditions:


  • GLASS OR BREAKABLE CONTAINER
  • ANY OBJECT PLACED OR FIXED ON A MARKER OR GRAVE
  • BALLOONS


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

If you need additional information regarding the rules and regulations of our cemeteries, please contact us during normal business hours, which are listed below. Please feel free to stop by our office if you need assistance locating a grave within our cemeteries.


Cemetery Office Hours

8:30 am. - 5:00 pm. MON - FRI

8:30 am. - 12:00 pm. SAT

Below is a list of terms that we feel are important when it comes to knowledge about a cemetery. These will help you understand a little bit about the important factors involved in a cemetery. 

  • Cemetery Services: opening and closing graves, crypts, or niches; setting vaults; setting markers; and long-term maintenance of cemetery grounds and facilities. 
  • Crypt: a space or compartment in a mausoleum or other building to hold human remains.
  • Mausoleum: a building in which human remains are buried (entombed) in compartments or crypts.
  • Entombment: burial in a mausoleum.
  • Niche: a space or compartment in a columbarium, mausoleum, or niche wall to hold an urn. 
  • Columbarium: a structure with compartments or niches (small spaces) for placement of cremated remains in urns or other approved containers. It may be outdoors or part of a mausoleum.
  • Cremated Remains: The product of reducing the human body through cremation.
  • Cremation: exposing human remains and the container holding them to extreme heat and flame and processing the resulting bone fragments to a uniform size and consistency.
  • Urn: a container to hold cremated remains. It can be placed in a columbarium or mausoleum, or it can be buried in the ground.
  • Casket/Coffin: a decorative enclosure for viewing, transporting, and burying of human remains. 
  • Vault: a cover that completely encloses a casket in a grave.
  • Grave: a space in the ground in a cemetery for the burial of human or cremated remains.
  • Graveside Service: a service to commemorate the deceased held at the cemetery before burial.
  • Interment: burial in the ground, inurnment, or entombment. 
  • Inurnment: the placing of cremated remains in an urn.
  • Perpetual Care Fund: Money collected from cemetery property purchasers and placed in trust for the maintenance and upkeep of the cemetery. The State of Tennessee Department of Burial Services establishes the minimum amount that must be collected; however, the cemetery is permitted to collect more than the minimum to build the fund. Only the interest earned by such funds may be used for the care, maintenance, and embellishment of the cemetery.
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