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MADISON, GA'S HISTORIC CEMETERIES

Artisans

MICHAEL MACDONALD MULDOON

by Deneice Rice of Madison, GA

Colonel Michael MacDonald Muldoon: Master Monument Maker for Madison and the Nation

 

Michael Muldoon, acclaimed as one of the “finest memorialists that the world has ever seen” by one of the current owners of the monument company that continues to bear Muldoon’s name, also left his mark on Madison with the creation of the Kolb Family and Jessup Family monu-ments in Old Cemetery. 

 

Muldoon was born in 1836 in Kingscourt, Cavan, Ireland and came to the United States in 1849.  He learned the marble-cutting trade working as a journeyman marble-cutter in New York, Baltimore, and West Virginia before settling in Louisville, Kentucky. 

 

In 1854 he, along with George Doyle and Charles Bullett, started

the Muldoon Monument Company.  The business expanded in

1863 to include a studio and workshop in Carrara, Italy, under the

direction of Bullett.  It is believed that most of the actual carving

was done there.  The company also operated offices in Chicago and Memphis, which was unusual for that time.  Muldoon maintained

quarries in Italy; Barre, Vermont; and Tate, Georgia.

The company was known not only for personal memorials, but also for public and civic monuments.  According to a Kentucky Education

Obituaries: About

Television program, Muldoon Monument Company made 90 percent of the Confederate monuments erected in Southern cities after the Civil War.  

 

But Muldoon is well regarded for the quality and beauty of his work as well as the quantity. He believed monuments should be more than nameplates; they should be “lasting expressions of a family’s love.” His work can be found throughout the United States. 

 

One of his most famous is the Mackay Mausoleum (right)

in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.  This

masterpiece, built in 1898 at a cost of $250,000, inclu-

ded a heating system and electric lights.  It was the largest, 

private monument in the United States at that time. 

 

After Muldoon’s death in 1911, the business continued

under his name and is still thriving today as Muldoon

Memorials, Kentucky’s oldest memorial provider. 

Resources:

“Southern Graves,” blog by Stephanie Lincecum, June 12, 2012, http://blog.southerngraves.net

 

“Adventures in Cemetery Hopping,” blog by Traci Rylands, January 20, 2017,

adventuresincemeteryhopping.wordpress.com

 

“The Reporter,” Vol. XLIV, No. 5, published by Nichols & Co., Chicago, Illinois, May 1911

 

“Granite, Marble and Bronze,” Vol. XXIII, No. 4, published by A.M. Hunt Co., Boston, Massachusetts, April 1913

 

Nomination form for Michael Muldoon’s home, National Register of Historic Places, March 25, 1977

 

Louisville’s Historic Black Neighborhoods – Images of America Series, Beatrice S. Brown, Ph.D., author, published by Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, South Carolina, 2012

 

“Find A Grave,” website, www.findagrave.com

 

Muldoon Memorials website, muldoonmemorials.com

 

Ancestory.com

Telephone conversations with Cullen McBroom and John Keith, Muldoon Memorials, January 5, 2018

 

Kentucky Educational Television, “Louisville Life” program, March 29, 2014

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