For Towns & Commissions

Planned, phased, and accountable

Larger restoration projects need structure, not just labor. We work with towns, cemetery commissions, and municipalities to assess conditions, organize work into phases, and execute consistently across budget cycles.

Assessment & prioritization

On-site review and written conditions report, suitable for grants and committee planning.

Phased scopes

Urgent stabilization, structural repair, and cosmetic work organized to move with budget cycles.

Consistent methods

Repeatable approaches across the cemetery for consistent results and easier maintenance.

Documentation

What was done and how, kept on record for the commission.

Crew using a tripod hoist for a multi-stone cemetery restoration project

What we restore

Most cemetery deterioration comes down to movement, failed foundations, breakage, long-term exposure, and accumulated biological growth. We assess the condition of the memorial and recommend the approach we believe is best suited to the stone, the setting, and the long-term result. Where budget, scope, or the wishes of the overseers call for it, practical alternatives are also presented clearly for review.

A leaning slab memorial being straightened and restabilized

Leaning and Displaced Tablets

Straightening and restabilization of slab memorials using methods suited to the stone, the setting, and the degree of movement. The preferred approach is usually the one that restores stability while minimizing unnecessary disturbance to the stone.

A broken tablet memorial being repaired

Broken Monument Repair

Broken slab memorials and other damaged monuments are repaired using methods suited to the type of break, the condition of the stone, and the level of rebuilding required. Some repairs are straightforward; others involve reinforcement or full resetting. The repair approach is chosen for the soundest long-term result.

A monument being releveled and stabilized

Releveling and Stabilization

Memorials that have shifted, sunk, or settled over time can often be re-leveled and stabilized in more than one way. Depending on the lot and the monument, options range from crushed stone and granite shims to precast or full-depth replacement foundations.

A tall fluted monument being reset onto its base with a tripod hoist, lifting straps in place and a crew member steadying the stone by hand

Resetting and Replacement Bases

Resetting work covers tablets, dies, and other monument pieces that have shifted or come loose from their bases. Where a base is too far gone or never suited the stone, we make a new base or a slotted base built to fit the piece. The right move depends on the type and condition of the stone.

A new poured concrete foundation set in place, with the displaced monument and base pieces it will receive resting alongside it on the lot

Foundation Replacement

Failed or insufficient foundations are removed and replaced to the proper depth and size for the monument and the lot. This is often the right course when repeated movement or settlement cannot be corrected by surface adjustment alone. Proper base work is what keeps a memorial standing true over the long term.

Cemetery-wide cleaning in progress on weathered marble headstones

Cleaning and Surface Treatment

Cemetery-wide cleaning has to be approached with realistic expectations. The right method depends on the material, the buildup, and what the overseers are trying to accomplish. More on our cleaning approach →

A monument tablet shattered into multiple pieces on the ground, beyond what can be reassembled or restored

On the limits of restoration

Not every memorial can be saved

Some stones are past the threshold where restoration returns enough — extensive erosion, fractures beyond reinforcement, or structural breakdown of the underlying material. When that's the case, replacement is often the right call. We help make that decision clearly.

  • Honest evaluation

    We will tell you when a stone is past the point of meaningful restoration — even when it means less work for us.

  • Replacement memorials

    We offer a range of replacement options to work with budgets of all sizes.

  • Originals preserved

    Where possible, original tablets are kept on the lot or in the cemetery's archive at the family's wishes.

Working With Us

What to expect when working with Champlain Monuments

A clear understanding of the work involved, the condition of the memorial, and the practical options available. We assess what's there, identify what has failed, and recommend the course of action we believe is best suited to the stone, the setting, and the long-term result.

No commitment is required to start the conversation.

  • Clear assessmentUnderstanding the condition of the memorial, what has failed, and what the work is likely to involve.
  • Useful proposalsScope and options written clearly enough for families, towns, commissions, and overseers to use in real planning and budgeting.
  • Practical recommendationsThe best course of action recommended first, with alternatives presented where budget, scope, or overseer priorities call for them.

Cemetery Restoration FAQs

Common questions about larger-scale cemetery restoration projects.

How do we get started on a town or commission project?

A site walk is usually the best starting point. We come out, assess conditions, and put together a written scope with categories of work and estimated costs. That gives you something concrete to bring to a committee or budget conversation.

Can you help us apply for grants or funding?

We can provide documentation, scopes, and cost estimates in whatever format the application requires. We've worked alongside towns navigating the grant process and understand what's typically needed to support a submission.

How do you prioritize what gets done first?

Safety and structural risk first: stones that are actively falling or pose a hazard to visitors. Then significant lean or instability. Cosmetic work and cleaning come after. We'll walk you through the logic and you can adjust priorities based on your budget and community concerns.

Do you work in cemeteries with historic or older stones?

Yes. Older cemeteries — particularly those with slate, marble, or early granite — require careful handling. We adjust methods based on stone type and age, and we won't do anything that risks irreversible damage to a historic marker.

Can families hire you for individual monument repair in a larger cemetery?

Absolutely. Individual repair and restoration work for families is a separate service. You don't need a town project to get a single stone reset or repaired. See our repair page for more on that.

What areas do you serve?

For cemetery restoration projects, we work throughout Vermont, New York, and New Hampshire. That's broader than our usual service area for single-stone work, which stays closer to home in Vermont. Reach out with your location and we'll confirm whether it's within range and what timing looks like.

Start with an assessment

Send a location and a brief description of the site. We'll follow up to schedule a site walk and put together a written scope you can take to a committee or budget conversation.

Request a site walk