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150
Years of L.D. Pearson & Sons
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Lorenzo D.
Pearson
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Louisville
published its first city directory in 1832, listing 15,000 inhabitants.
That same year, a young cabinet-maker, Lorenzo Dow Pearson, left
Shelby County to seek his fortune in the boom town on the frontier
of the "New West".
In 1848, the
same year that Cave Hill Cemetery was dedicated, he set up shop
at Second and Main, next to the original Galt House.
Occasionally,
he was asked to construct wooden coffins. Demand created the need
to inventory
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ready made
coffins and provide additional services, and within a very short
time, he was established as an "undertaker", or one who
undertook the arrangements for burial
Within a few
years, he moved to a location between Second and Third on Jefferson.
There business was conducted until 1898,
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Second
and Main, Louisville (1850)
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when it was
moved to a large brick residence on the southeast corner of Third
and Chestnut.
During those
years, the firm witnessed the Civil War and the growth of Louisville
as one of the South's largest cities, growth which was paralleled
by the firm and its profession.
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Third
and Chesnut (1900)
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Edward C. Pearson,
son of the founder, became a leader in promoting the education and
licensing of embalmers, and he himself held the first embalmer's
license issued in Kentucky. He also designed the original wood paneled
hearse. When motor vehicles came into use, one of these bodies was
mounted on a motor-driven chassis and became Louisville's first
motor-driven hearse. Within seven years of that innovation, the
horse-drawn funeral disappeared, and the stable, which had been
a part of every undertaker's equipment, was replaced by the Funeral
Auto Company, of which E.C. Pearson was the first President.
In 1917, the
third generation of Pearsons assumed direction of the business under
E. Clarence Pearson, succeeded in '38 by his brother W. Edward Pearson.
In 1924, one
of Louisville's most beautiful private residences, on Third and
Ormsby, became the home of the Pearson institution. (Currently,
the old Ferguson Mansion houses the Filson
Club Historical Society.)
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Painting of
the Ferguson Mansion (1930)
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same year, Pearson's was invited into membership in the Selected
Independent Funeral Homes (formerly National Selected Morticians),
the premiere association of funeral homes worldwide. Two of the Pearsons,
E.C. Pearson and David F. Pearson have served as directors on the
board of NSM. making them two of only five funeral directors in Kentucky
to ever hold that position. |
Breckenridge
Lane Home (1960)
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Under the leadership
of Clyde, E.C. and Robert A. Pearson, an additional funeral home
was built at 149 Breckenridge Lane in 1951. Pearson's fifth home
has been located in the heart of the City of St. Matthews since
nearly the city's beginning, having incorporated in 1950. The St.
Matthews home became the main office of Pearson's following the
sale of their Third Street Home in 1978.
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Today, the business is in the hands of the fifth generation. David F. and Robert S. Pearson succeeded their fathers in 1986. Robert S. Pearson is currently President of the firm, while David F. Pearson and Larry L. Robbins serve on the Board of Directors.
Seven years
later, in 1993, they opened the Middletown
funeral home in cooperation with the Rattermans family, also
of St. Matthews. |
Looking from
Breckenridge Lane (1956)
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In 2001, the
50 year-old facility on Breckenridge Lane was renovated,
adding a new lounge, visitiation room, additionals restrooms, and
improved parking.
Robert and David Pearson are committed to carrying on the traditions of a vocation which has passed from father to son in an unbroken line since its founding - a tradition of thoughtful, sympathetic, and intelligent service.
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