Cremation Services

Cremation Services with Care and Compassion

If your family has chosen cremation, we offer affordable services that help celebrate the life of your loved one while giving you several options for a public gathering and a final resting place.

A black silhouette of a decorative urn or jar with a rounded lid and flared base.

Traditional Funeral Service followed by Cremation

Many families find meaning and beauty in a traditional funeral service. With a traditional service combined with cremation, you can still choose to have a final viewing, visitation or wake, and a funeral service. However, instead of in-ground burial, the funeral will be followed by cremation. Depending on your wishes, the cremated remains may be either returned to your family for storage in an urn, scattered, or interred in a columbarium. This option will include fees for the funeral services as well as the fees associated with the cremation itself.

A black silhouette icon of a decorative vase or urn with a scalloped top rim.

Memorial Service

The funeral service can be held in a church or any other venue the family chooses. We work with our families to design a service that honors their loved one with stories, music, or scripture. We also have life celebrants who lead services where clergy may not be chosen. Our celebrants are trained in creating experiences that help start the healing process.

A black silhouette icon of a lidded urn, typically representing cremation or a memorial vessel.

Graveside Service

A graveside or committal service is typically held immediately following the funeral service, but it can also be a small, intimate gathering of those closest to you.

Permanent Memorialization


A matte black cylindrical cremation urn sits on a white table next to a bouquet of tulips in a vase.

Keeping an Urn at Home

This is a common choice. Families can select the perfect urn for their loved one.

A close-up of a granite columbarium wall with an open, empty burial niche labeled 19 next to a closed niche labeled 20.

Placing the Urn in a Columbarium (aka, a "niche")

Many families find comfort in having a final resting place that they can visit.

A blue funeral urn rests on a green velvet cloth alongside several yellow roses.

Burying the Urn

Similar to a casket, an in-ground burial of the urn allows for a final resting place.

A gloved hand releases fine gray sand or ash against a soft, pastel-colored sunset sky and a vast, hazy horizon.

Scatter the ashes

Some families find comfort in scattering the cremated remains at a place that was special to their loved one.