Cremation Association of North America (CANA)
  • About CANA
    • Staff List
    • Code of Cremation Practice
    • Position Statements
    • History of Cremation
    • Board of Directors >
      • Get Involved with CANA
    • Media >
      • News
    • CANA Member Directory
    • Contact Us
  • Choosing Cremation
    • Transport of Cremated Remains
    • Cremation Process
    • Arranging for Cremation >
      • Memorial Options
      • Cremation Services
      • Planning and Payment
      • Choosing a Provider
    • Find Local CANA Members
  • For Practitioners
    • Why Join CANA? >
      • CANA Member Benefits
      • Member Login
    • Self Care for Funeral Professionals
    • Create Your Profile
    • CANA Publications >
      • CANA Cremationist Magazine
      • Blog
      • CANA's Cremation Brochure Series
      • Industry Statistical Information
    • CANA Marketplace
    • 2025 Media Kit
    • Crematory Management Program
    • CANA PR Toolkit
    • Find Local CANA Members
  • Education
    • Access Your Online Courses
    • Crematory Operator Certification >
      • COCP - In English
      • COCP - en français
      • COCP - en Español
      • Pet Cremation (CPCO)
      • Alabama Refresher Program
      • Illinois Refresher Course
    • Cremation Specialist Certification
    • Business Administration Certification
    • Continuing Education Online
    • Pet Aftercare
    • Natural Organic Reduction >
      • Natural Organic Reduction Operations Certification
    • Digital Certificates & Badges
    • Academic Scholarships
    • Calendar of Events
    • Webinars
    • 107th Convention
    • 2026 Symposium
  • Career Center
  • About CANA
    • Staff List
    • Code of Cremation Practice
    • Position Statements
    • History of Cremation
    • Board of Directors >
      • Get Involved with CANA
    • Media >
      • News
    • CANA Member Directory
    • Contact Us
  • Choosing Cremation
    • Transport of Cremated Remains
    • Cremation Process
    • Arranging for Cremation >
      • Memorial Options
      • Cremation Services
      • Planning and Payment
      • Choosing a Provider
    • Find Local CANA Members
  • For Practitioners
    • Why Join CANA? >
      • CANA Member Benefits
      • Member Login
    • Self Care for Funeral Professionals
    • Create Your Profile
    • CANA Publications >
      • CANA Cremationist Magazine
      • Blog
      • CANA's Cremation Brochure Series
      • Industry Statistical Information
    • CANA Marketplace
    • 2025 Media Kit
    • Crematory Management Program
    • CANA PR Toolkit
    • Find Local CANA Members
  • Education
    • Access Your Online Courses
    • Crematory Operator Certification >
      • COCP - In English
      • COCP - en français
      • COCP - en Español
      • Pet Cremation (CPCO)
      • Alabama Refresher Program
      • Illinois Refresher Course
    • Cremation Specialist Certification
    • Business Administration Certification
    • Continuing Education Online
    • Pet Aftercare
    • Natural Organic Reduction >
      • Natural Organic Reduction Operations Certification
    • Digital Certificates & Badges
    • Academic Scholarships
    • Calendar of Events
    • Webinars
    • 107th Convention
    • 2026 Symposium
  • Career Center

2022 CELEBRITY CREMATIONS

12/21/2022

 
Picture
The purpose of a funeral service is to comfort the living. It is important at a funeral to display excessive grief. This will show others how kind-hearted and loving you are and their improved opinion of you will be very comforting.
--Modern Manners (1983)
by P. J. O'Rourke, author and satirist (November 13, 1947 – February 14, 2022)
Here is CANA’s annual end-of-the year look at the many ways we opt to remember the famous people we’ve lost. For the celebrities who are the focus of this post, remembrance may mean televised concerts, museum retrospectives, and moments of silence in a packed stadium—but it also includes obituaries, flowers, music, and the people who cared about them talking about what made each of their lives special. These are the common things we all do to celebrate a life, grieve a death, and find comfort in one another, whether there are 3 or 3,000,000 people gathering.

As you read, we encourage you to consider the many ways there are to remember a life you want to memorialize—be it a donation in someone's name to a favorite charity, a custom flower arrangement in a meaningful design, or a cremation keepsake necklace with a personal message. Each is a way of capturing a significant memory. As funeral professionals often say, “Memorial options are as unique as the life lived.” That these well-known individuals chose chose cremation speaks to how it can facilitate the story-telling process.

Celebrity entries appear in alphabetical order.

SHINZO ABE

SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 – JULY 8, 2022
Picture
Shinzo Abe was first elected to Japan’s political office in 1993. Abe occupied several governmental seats before becoming Prime Minister in 2006 and again in 2012. The longest-serving Prime Minister in Japanese history, he retired during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, claiming he was in poor health. In July of 2022, Abe was campaigning on behalf of his political party when he was assassinated – a rare and shocking event in an otherwise peaceful country with strict gun laws.
​
Abe’s family held a private service before his cremation on July 12th, and people lined the streets as the hearse drove from the temple to the crematory. As is traditional, his urn was then kept at home for a period of mourning before burial. On September 27th, Abe's widow carried his urn from their home to the state memorial service. State funerals are rare in Japan and Abe’s controversial legacy led to nationwide protests, but Prime Minister Fumio Kishida wanted to honor Abe’s tenure in office and presence on the national stage. More than 4,300 gathered in the arena for the first state memorial since 1967, including leaders from across the world.

photo source POOL / VIA REUTERS - The Japan Times: Japan bids farewell to former PM Shinzo Abe with controversial state funeral

mike bossy

JANUARY 22, 1957 – APRIL 15, 2022
Picture
Michael “Mike” Bossy started his National Hockey League career by winning the 1978 Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year and broke the previous record for most goals scored by a rookie. He spent his entire career with the New York Islanders, helping them win their four consecutive Stanley Cup wins from 1980-1983. Recounting the rest of his awards and achievements is best left to other publications, but he is still considered one of the best scorers in the league. In 1991, he was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame, and then named one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players in history in 2017. After his retirement, he moved to broadcasting but stepped away after his lung cancer diagnosis last year.

In his memory, the New York Islanders wore a memorial patch on their sweaters featuring his No. 22 which was permanently retired in 1992. At their game against the Montreal Canadiens in Bossy’s native Montreal on the night of his death, the arena held a tribute and observed a moment of silence in his honor. His funeral, packed with hundreds of fans, friends, family, and hockey personalities featured his jersey, signed by fellow hockey greats, and his number in flower arrangements.

photo source Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press - CBC: Quebec premier remembers Islanders star Mike Bossy as a 'fighter'

Frida

​APRIL 12, 2009 – NOVEMBER 15, 2022
Picture
During her career in the search and rescue division of the Mexican Navy, Frida assisted first responders in major disasters in Haiti and Ecuador and across Mexico. The canine’s heroism during the 2017 Puebla earthquake made her a symbol of Mexico’s resilience and a celebrity across the world. During her career, Frida helped rescue 12 people and recovered 43 others, whose remains were returned to their loved ones.
​
In June 2019, Frida swapped her signature goggles and boots for a toy. Even in retirement, she continued her service by training other dogs before she died on November 15, 2022. #HastaSiempreFrida trended with videos, fanart, and posts, thanking her for her life-saving heroics. On November 24, 2022, the Navy held a memorial service attended by Frida’s human and canine colleagues. Her urn was placed in the base of her statue at Naval headquarters, serving as a monument to her memory.

photo source Cuartoscuro - El Heraldo de México: "Las emotivas imágenes de la última despedida a Frida, la perrita rescatista: 'Hasta la próxima misión'"

taylor hawkins

FEBRUARY 17, 1972 – MARCH 25, 2022
Picture
Oliver Taylor Hawkins was the drummer for rock artists like Sass Jordan and Alanis Morrisette before finding a permanent home with The Foo Fighters. For 25 years, Hawkins played the drums and contributed vocals and songwriting to the band’s success. Hawkins died while touring with The Foo Fighters in Colombia, just hours before they were to take the stage at the Festival Estereo Picnic in Bogotá. That night, the stage turned into a candlelight vigil instead, and the screen projected “Taylor Hawkins Por Siempre.” In his hometown of Laguna Beach, California a week later, fans gathered in his honor to host a drum circle on the beach where he would surf.
​
On September 3rd, The Foo Fighters and Hawkins’ family hosted a tribute concert in London, live-streamed to the world. Their first live performance since his death, the event lasted more than six hours and featured artists like Sir Elton John and especially his fellow drummers from Blink-182, The Pretenders and Metallica. Afterward, at the band’s hometown event on September 27, Alanis Morrisette, Joan Jett were featured, along with Hawkins’ 16-year-old son Shane, who drummed for The Foo Fighters’ “My Hero.”

photo source CNN: Foo Fighters pay tribute to drummer Taylor Hawkins at emotional London concert

ARTIS LEON “COOLIO” IVEY JR.

​AUGUST 1, 1963 – SEPTEMBER 28, 2022
Picture
Artis Leon Ivey, Jr. topped charts and won Grammy Awards as Coolio in the 1990s for his rap and hip-hop tracks. Millennials will also know him for the theme song for Kenan & Kel and “Rollin’ with the Homies” featured in Clueless, but “Gangsta’s Paradise” was his breakthrough success internationally, earning Coolio awards and a rare billion-plus YouTube views.
​
After Coolio’s unexpected death due to cardiac arrest, his family held a private memorial service with custom airbrushed shirts: "He wanted a party and for everybody to celebrate his life, play music, just fill up the room and smile, have a good time.” Each of the artist’s children will receive a keepsake necklace with his cremated remains, inscribed with a personal message from their father. As his eldest son explained, “our father always prepared us for things that might happen. My father was a very spiritual person. He didn’t fear death at all. It was another step to paradise.”

photo source @mimi513

​THIERRY MUGLER

DECEMBER 21, 1948 – JANUARY 23, 2022
Picture
Manfred Thierry Mugler launched the Mugler fashion house in the 1970s. Known for his exaggerated approach to haute couture, Thierry Mugler designed for David Bowie, Beyoncé, Demi Moore, Kim Kardashian, and Cirque du Soleil. He revolutionized the perfume industry with Angel in 1992, as a new category of gourmand fragrance. After stepping back from leading Mugler, he reclaimed the name Manfred Mugler as a bodybuilder following a disfiguring motorcycle accident in 2010.

In September 2021, le Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris launched a retrospective exhibit of his career in Thierry Mugler: Couturissime in his honor during fashion week, and the Mugler fashion house hosted a star-studded opening party. By contrast, his funeral was private, restricted to his closest family and friends, and lacking in any theatrical elements. The service was a “thanksgiving for life” and left an emotional imprint on those who attended. His urn was placed in a private mini-columbarium in Paris’s Cimetière du Père Lachaise.

photo source Alex Ricardo via findagrave.com

​DAME OLIVIA NEWTON-JOHN

SEPTEMBER 26, 1948 – AUGUST 8, 2022
Picture
Olivia Newton-John considered becoming a veterinarian until the coursework steered her toward the performing arts instead. An actor and singer from her youth, she found success as a country star before the movie musical Grease established her as a pop icon who could pull off a yellow poodle skirt or tight leather pants with equal grace. Her multiple cancer diagnoses spurred her to open the Olivia Newton-John Cancer and Wellness Centre in Melbourne, Australia in 2012, dedicated to treatment, wellness, and research. In recent years, her own cancer returned and spread, but she remained active in supporting her various causes.
​
Newton-John’s family held a private service just before what would have been her 74th birthday. In an interview, she explained that she wanted her cremated remains scattered on her property in Byron Bay, Australia, the same place where her mother and sister’s ashes had been dispersed, so they would all be together. She hoped that some portions would also be scattered in California and other places that meant something to her, but admitted that “I don’t think I’ve really thought about it that deeply. We all should.” A state memorial is being planned for Melbourne's Royal Botanic Gardens, a favorite spot of Newton-John’s, where her mother already has a memorial bench.

photo source Olivia Newton-John Cancer Wellness & Research Centre: Olivia's Walk for Wellness​

NICHELLE NICHOLS

DECEMBER 28, 1932 – JULY 30, 2022
Picture
Grace Dell “Nichelle” Nichols broke barriers as Lieutenant Nyota Uhura in the original Star Trek series from 1966 to 1969. As a black woman leading the communications department and fourth in command of a spaceship in the 23rd century, Nichols’ represented what the contemporary Civil Rights Movement strove to achieve. For that reason, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said Star Trek was the only show his children were allowed to stay up to watch. When her role concluded, she continued her acting career, as well as assisting NASA in recruiting women and people of color to join the space program.

Suitably, Nichols will visit the final frontier as part of the Celestis Enterprise Flight in early 2023 aboard the United Launch Alliance Vulcan Centaur rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida. A portion of her cremated remains will be sent to the far reaches of space with other memorials and messages. Making the trip with Nichols is Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry who died in August 2021; "the First Lady of Star Trek," his wife Majel Barrett Roddenberry who played Nurse Christine Chapel and died in 2008; and James Doohan who played Lt. Commander Montgomery "Scotty" Scott who died in 2005. A lock of hair DeForest Kelley’s hair will also be on board. Kelley played Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy and died in 1999.

photo source Albert L. Ortega/Getty Images - Variety: Nichelle Nichols, Uhura in ‘Star Trek,’ Dies at 89

ANDRÉ LEON TALLEY

OCTOBER 16, 1948 – JANUARY 18, 2022
Picture
André Leon Talley was a fixture in the fashion world, standing out from the crowd because of his 6’6” frame, signature personal style, and because he was frequently the only Black man in the room. Talley broke barriers as creative director of American Vogue—the only Black person to hold that position. Talley worked with other fashion publications and served as a mentor to many. No stranger to grief, Talley found comfort in food after the deaths of his grandmother and fashion mentor Diana Vreeland, and changed his bespoke suits for caftans and capes. In his memoir, he remarks “Caftans are my wellness retreat… I intend to leave in my will that I am to be cremated in a caftan.”
​
Talley’s loved ones waited to remember him during his favorite season, spring, with a memorial service shared by more than 700 fans, friends, and family. While the style icon never specified plans for his own service, his mourners could not pass up an opportunity to share memories about this fashion leader. Filled with flowers, music, and stories, a two-hour service celebrated his life as his loved ones remembered him. While this author cannot be certain Talley was cremated, it is believed he rejoins his grandmother, Mrs. Bennie Frances Roberson Davis, with a new monument added to her gravesite reading Beloved Grandson Andre.

photo source David Morgan via findagrave.com

ARCHBISHOP DESMOND MPILO TUTU

​OCTOBER 7, 1931 – DECEMBER 26, 2021
Picture
Archbishop Desmond Mpilo Tutu lent his voice and pulpit to the civil rights movement in South Africa to end apartheid. His legacy was cemented in 1984 when he won the Nobel Peace Prize "for his role as a unifying leader figure in the non-violent campaign to resolve the problem of apartheid in South Africa." In his later years, he continued his activism on behalf of causes such as marriage equality and world peace.
​
Tutu’s death made headlines, not just for his passing but also for his disposition. To carry his values in life into his death, he requested simplicity at his state funeral on January 1. The only flowers were a bouquet of carnations for his family and his casket was made of unvarnished pine. He also chose alkaline hydrolysis, sometimes known as water cremation. This is a relatively new disposition method, particularly in South Africa. Tutu’s cremated remains were placed behind the pulpit of St. George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa, where he served as Archbishop for 35 years.

photo source REUTERS/Mike Hutchings - Reuters: Mourners pay respects to South Africa's anti-apartheid hero Tutu

betty white

​JANUARY 17, 1922 – DECEMBER 31, 2021
Picture
Betty White’s television career spanned more than seven decades, leading to a Guinness world-record for the longest TV career for a female entertainer and recognition as The First Lady of Television. Across all formats and genres—with comedy, drama, game shows, and soap operas via television, film, and radio—Betty White covered a lot of Hollywood ground and became an international treasure. On January 17, 2022, she and the world would have celebrated her 100th birthday, with a special film retrospective. Unfortunately, she died on New Year’s Eve at the age of 99.
​​
What had been planned as a party instead became an international memorial service as the “Betty White: A Celebration” film expanded to more than 1,500 theaters. While her funeral was private and she asked that her final resting place not be disclosed, her hometown of Oak Park, Illinois took the opportunity to commemorate her legacy. On January 15th, to avoid conflicts with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the village hosted “Betty White Day” with Cindy Fee, who originally voiced the Golden Girls theme, leading attendees in singing, “Thank You for Being a Friend,” cutouts of the star for photo opps, and a pet adoption event in support of White’s lifelong cause of animal welfare. Across the world, people joined the #BettyWhiteChallenge to donate to nonprofit organizations that support animal causes, an effort which is estimated to have raised more than $12.7 million in her name.

photo source: AP - Variety: ‘Betty White Challenge’ on Facebook, Instagram Raises $12.7 Million for Animal Shelters

Catch up on posts from other years: 2019 ● 2021 ● 2022 ● 2023 ● 2024
This post only captures a few of the many people we've loved and lost this year. For a list of celebrities and notable peoples' deaths and dispositions, we suggest FindAGrave.com.

5 NEW RULES FOR THE NEW ECONOMY

12/7/2022

 
Picture
Ever wonder what it was like to be a buggy whip maker during the rise of the automobile?

Look in the mirror.
​
Numerous trends are converging to create the dramatic change we’re experiencing today, including the generational shift away from Boomers, the splintering of cultural norms, and the unnerving impact of late-stage digital industrialization literally changing how everything is made, sold, and delivered.
We may not be buggy whip makers anymore, but we’re experiencing a similarly historic change in the fundamentals of our economy. And just as businesspeople in the 19thcentury bespoke economy had to learn the new rules of industrialization, we must learn a new way of conducting modern business.
Below are five new rules for our new economy. Together, they are a foundation for generating momentum for businesses and value for customers in our transforming world.

​1. SYSTEMS BEAT SWITCHES

Western civilization champions individualism and the use of the scientific method to parse out discrete problems, identify “control” variables, and pursue solutions by manipulating one variable at a time. This perspective views problems as if they are light switches in a home that can be isolated and manipulated room by room.

Silicon Valley, on the other hand, champions a worldview more prevalent in the East that sees reality as a series of interconnected networks in constant flux. Think Butterfly Effect minus Ashton Kutcher’s 2004 film of the same name. Winners in our digital economy (not coincidentally, built by those Silicon Valley engineers) embrace a view of business rooted in Systems Thinking. It’s not just a light switch, but a house filled with wires, a city-wide infrastructure, a regional power source, and a national electrical grid.

The truth is that business and life are dynamic. Reality is a complicated web of interconnected systems. It’s unrealistic to isolate variables and turn them on and off like a light switch in the real world. So don’t pretend to.
​
20th century companies think in switches. 21st century companies think in systems.

​2. FLEXIBILITY BEATS SYNCHRONICITY

Business models that thrived under mid-stage industrialization were built on synchronicity. Break the product into its component parts, get everyone and everything set up perfectly on an assembly line, then keep everything running as smoothly as possible. Like a symphony, when this model worked, it was beautiful.

But late-stage digital industrialization has changed the game. The internet fragments everyone and everything, creating many little pockets of change occurring simultaneously at incredible speed. This new world requires an entirely new approach to business that emphasizes flexibility over efficiency.
​
Ditch the assembly line and burn the conductor’s baton. As I’ve written before, the future belongs to jazz.

​3. VELOCITY BEATS SPEED

Fast. Faster. Fastest. Speed is on everyone’s mind because technology is enabling such rapid change. According to our latest research among business leaders across the country, nearly 30% of companies today are suffering from stalled growth or commoditization. Companies (and even industries) are moving through the Disruption Cycle so quickly it’s making everyone feel dizzy.

But trying to stay competitive by just running faster isn’t enough. Speed is simply a measure of how fast something is moving. But speed alone can just as easily hasten decline as keep one competitive.
Velocity, on the other hand, is the measure of speed with direction. You can move quickly in circles, but it gets you nowhere. Add direction to your efforts.
​
Speed is only part of the solution. Growth requires velocity.

​4. CONFIDENCE BEATS CERTAINTY

The comparably slow rates of change enjoyed in the past enabled a powerful illusion. Because one could count on culture and technology gradually changing over years or even decades, looking back at historical data had some value in predicting the near future. This illusion provided confidence by removing uncertainty. And now it’s going away.

Because the modern economy moves exponentially faster, looking at historical data has limited predictive power. To avoid losing their nerve, organizations need to find ways to get their swagger back. Agile methodology, customer-centeredness, and prototyping are all techniques to stay in the now and make confident bets. As an executive of a Fortune 100 corporation recently stated to a colleague of mine, “It used to be test, test, test, test, then rollout,” he said. “[Now it’s] test, rollout, learn, modify…”
​
Certainty was yesterday’s illusion. Confidence is today’s way of doing business.

​5. MOMENTUM BEATS PERFECTION

During Facebook’s rise it famously painted “Done is better than perfect” across its walls. As digital technology transforms the economy and increased speed-to-market becomes a price of entry for business, it’s imperative for leaders to throw off the fading luxury of perfection and embrace a new ethos.

Today’s leadership must foster a shared feeling of growth and improvement in their organizations best referred to as momentum.

Businesses that pursue momentum instead of perfection are more concerned with customer problems than internal navel-gazing, appreciate the power of organizational health, and understand that if a group of people feel like they will win, they often do.

Perfection was last century’s lie. Momentum is this century’s imperative.

The incredible change we’re living through doesn’t have to lead to doom and gloom. If you research a little more about the horse and buggy industry, you’ll learn that many companies actually successfully transitioned to the automotive industry.

But it wasn’t easy. Just as our forebears navigated the Industrial Revolution a century ago, it is our turn to navigate change. With the proper focus on systems, flexibility, velocity, confidence, and momentum, you can ditch the horse and buggy too.

Few organizations understand the internal dynamics that can keep them from maintaining momentum. Take the 60-second self-diagnosis survey (based on research conducted among thousands of companies) to diagnose your company’s trajectory and give you a sense of what factors are helping, or hindering, your momentum.

How do company culture and employee relations effect earnings and financial success? Jonathan Lewis leads a compelling discussion on understanding the holistic picture of your company's health during his Culture Compass workshop session at CANA’s Cremation Symposium this February 8-10 2023!

The 2023 Symposium is here to energize passion and purpose in the new year with a focus on staffing retention and efficiencies. Plus, Jonathan serves as event emcee, offering insights and activities that keep ideas and conversation flowing. See what else we have planned and register to attend: goCANA.org/ignite
​

This post originally appeared in the McKee Wallwork Insights blog in November 2018, reprinted with permission.

Picture
Jonathan David Lewis is the author of Brand vs. Wild, a Forbes contributor and a turnaround expert at McKee Wallwork, a marketing advisory firm that helps stalled, stuck and stale companies through tough transitions.

As president of MW+C Jonathan led his firm to be recognized by industry purveyor Advertising Age as a national leader in branding and marketing, winning the Southwest Small Agency of the Year, national B2B Campaign of the Year, and national Best Places to Work awards.
​
A business and branding strategist, Jonathan honed his skills during the lean years of the Great Recession, helping brands navigate today’s unforgiving new business paradigms. Jonathan’s opinions are highly sought by numerous business and marketing publications, including Forbes, Digiday, and Advertising Age, where he explores the factors that lead to stalled growth and the principles proven to help companies navigate the ambiguities and dangers of the business wilderness.

    RSS Feed

    The Cremation Logs Blog

    Cremation experts share the latest news, trends, and creative advice for industry professionals. Register or log in to subscribe and stay engaged with all things cremation.

    Categories

    All
    Aftercare
    Alkaline Hydrolysis
    Arranging
    Body Preparation
    Business Planning
    Celebrants
    Cemetery
    Communication
    Consumers
    Covid19
    Cremation Specialists
    Education
    Embalming
    Events
    Green Practices
    Grief
    Guest Post
    History
    Hr
    Inspiration
    Installation
    Leadership
    Manufacturers
    Marketing
    Memorialization
    Personalization
    Pets
    Preplanning
    Processes And Procedures
    Professional Development
    Public Relations
    Safety
    Selfcare
    Services
    Statistics
    Storytelling
    Suppliers
    Technology
    Tips And Tools
    Transportation

    Archives

    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017

Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Copyright 2000-2025 Cremation Assoc. of North America. All rights reserved.
499 Northgate Parkway, Wheeling, IL 60090-2646
v 312.245.1077 f 312.321.4098
[email protected]
Privacy Policy | Liability Disclaimers

Quick Links

home
about
media
statistics
contact us
login
Picture