Stiff resolve: much Scotland County history is wrapped up in a local funeral parlor that survived war, the Depression and a 61-year-old mummy.

AuthorThompson, Bill
PositionCENTURIONS: Tar Heel businesses that have stood the test of time - McDougald Funeral Home and Crematorium in Laurinburg, NC

Usually, one thinks of funeral homes as gothic, macabre structures that would be suitable for a vacation home for the Addams Family. That's not the case with the McDougald Funeral Home and Crematorium in Laurinburg, one of Scotland County's oldest continuously operating businesses. Despite the cold, rain and wind of a recent winter day, I discovered that this parlor, once the residence of a prominent local family, is not a sad or scary place. Maybe because folks were putting up Christmas decorations, or because owner Sherrill Bumgarner was dealing with an errant squirrel that had gotten inside a heating duct, I felt like I was visiting neighbors.

In 1856, neighbors called on the McDougald and Currie store in Antioch, a community 20 miles north of Laurinburg, which advertised its "Hardware, Furniture and Undertaking." When the Civil War started, co-owner Malcolm McDougald ended his partnership and moved his family to Laurinburg to join the Wilmington, Charlotte and Rutherfordton Railroad, which moved its rail yards inland to avoid Union Army attacks. Following the war, Malcolm left railroading to open his own furniture and undertaking business with older sons William and Daniel.

After a fire destroyed their original Laurinburg building at the intersection of Railroad and Main streets, they built a three-story structure that sold furniture and hardware on the lower two floors and undertaking supplies on the top level. The building included a hand-operated elevator, the first of many innovations implemented by the McDougald family.

After Malcolm died in 1909, his youngest son, John, took over, having attended school to become the only licensed embalmer in the Sandhills area. In 1914, he purchased the first motorized hearse in North Carolina.

Early in his career, John McDougald made a decision that made his business famous. A traveling carnival worker believed to be Concetto "Spaghetti" Farmica was killed in a fight, and his body was...

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