History of Our
Funeral Home

Celebrating 79 Years |
In the 1800s, funerals were held in
homes, churches and social halls, however in the middle of the
century, the tradition began to change. In 1845 the Truesdell and
Townsend Furniture & Undertaking Company began operating on
Fulton St., Warren. The reason for the furniture and undertaking
combination was that pioneers who moved into the area needed
furniture, being new to the area, and when a death occurred during
those difficult years, they also needed caskets.
Early furniture makers also
"undertook" difficult & emotional tasks for the family, thus
the name Undertaker. Also during the 1850s the trend was to have
funeral services in homes or in churches and chairs were needed in
addition to caskets so the alliance between furniture manufacturing
and caring funeral services were linked from the beginning.
In the 1870s Clark and Raider would
buy the business from Mr. Townsend and it would become strictly a
funeral service operation. They would operate their funeral service
company until it was purchased by William W. McFarland.
On July 4, 1897 William W."Will"
McFarland bought the Clark and Raider Undertaking and McFarland
Funeral Services Company was born.
The first location for the new McFarland business was at 112 Park
Avenue in Warren, on the Courthouse Square. This location, which
currently houses Gene's Jewelers, would soon prove to be too small
for the rapidly expanding business and a move was in order. The
McFarland family served some of Warren's finest citizens and
conducted services for the Packard family, Perkins and Kinsman
families along with many other significant individuals such as
Halsey Taylor and R.J. Wean.

An article noting the funeral home's 90th
anniversary
|
In 1903, The McFarland's moved to
their present location the "Grand Old Lady" at 271 North Park
Avenue in Warren. W. W. McFarland bought the present historic
structure as a home for his family and had an addition built on the
south side to serve as the professional funeral offices. W.W.
McFarland also had a barn built in the back to house the area's
finest Morgan horses for the hearse and a storefront to display
caskets. The barn still stands today, although it has been
converted to and it still is home to a restored Horse Drawn
Hearse.
McFarland Funeral Services, always
on the forefront of professional funeral service technology, was
the first funeral profession, in the area, to switch from
horse-drawn carriages and hearses to motorized ones in 1914. They
were the first in Trumbull County to have embalming facilities,
with updated innovations and are the standard for sanitation and
dignity.
Later, in 1927, W.W. McFarland had
additions placed on the front and back of the "Grand Old Lady" to
accommodate even more growth. As the business rapidly expanded,
W.W. McFarland moved his family upstairs and devoted the entire
first floor to the funeral service profession. In this respect, he
owned and operated the first "proper" funeral home west of
Pittsburgh.

Celebrating 100 Years: 1897 - 1997 |
In 1919, William R."Bill" McFarland
would join the "family business" and it would become known as it is
today, The McFarland and Son Funeral Home. McFarland's again set
the standard for quality and comfort and added state of the art
sound system and air conditioning to better serve the
community.
In 1946, after fighting in World
War II, David F."Dave" McFarland would join his father at McFarland
and Son Funeral Home to become the third generation McFarland to
own and operate the family business. As usual the McFarland lead
the way meeting the needs of the Warren area and provided the
highest educated Funeral Directors and Emergency Ambulance
Personnel. During this time Dave was the first to provide Trumbull
Co cremation services which is now 50 years later the choice of
many families.
The funeral service also operated
an ambulance service until 1977 when McFarland and Son and other
funeral directors in the area decided that new government
regulations and requirements proved to be too much. Early ambulance
services were linked with funeral homes because, originally,
funeral directors were the only businesses with a vehicle large
enough to accommodate someone lying on a stretcher comfortably.
In 1978, James D. "Jim" McFarland
became the fourth generation of McFarland to join the profession
and become its new owner and progressive operator. In 1984,
McFarland & Son Funeral Home raised the bar on funeral services
with the introduction of insurance funded "pre-planning." McFarland
& Son Funeral Home was one of the first funeral homes, in Ohio
able to offer this service to their customers. As always in the
leadership of funeral service, McFarland and Son Funeral Home
designed the first funeral-based website in the Trumbull County
area.
Various renovations and
restorations to McFarland's historic home the "Grand Old Lady" in
Warren has served to keep the business at the forefront of funeral
services. while retaining personal service and classic
elegance.