A comb grave is a type of grave that features two slabs of rock, sandstone or sheet metal that form an empty inverted v-shape, or comb, over the length of the grave.[1] They are also referred to as tent graves, as the slabs of rock resemble a camping tent.[2][3] Comb graves may also have triangular end stones or iron rods to support the slabs, and sometimes do not have a headstone nor an inscription.[4]
Origin
The exact origin of comb graves is unknown. According to oral tradition, the graves were first built in the 1800s to deter grave robbers and to protect sunken graves from being exposed to the surface.[2][5] It also may have been a purely stylistic choice that became popular in the region.[6] The oldest comb graves were made in the 1820s, with the practice surviving in Overton County, Tennessee until the 1960s.[4][2]
^Jabbour, Alan (2010). Decoration day in the mountains : traditions of cemetery decoration in the southern Appalachians. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 68. ISBN9780807895696.
^ abcBirdwell, Michael E.; Dickinson, W. Calvin (2004). Rural life and culture in the Upper Cumberland. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. pp. 68–72. ISBN9780813171890.