Green Bay Funeral Home
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Wisconsin Funeral Home and Crematory
Preplanning, funeral pre-planning
1630 E. Mason St. • Green Bay, WI 54302 • 920-468-4111 or 1-800-750-4222
© 1999-2003 Proko-Wall Funeral Home and Crematory Inc

Cremation is a method of final disposition where the deceased remains are reduced by intense heat in a device called a "retort" until only bone fragment is left. The bone fragments are processed into smaller pieces called cremains. Cremains may be buried in the ground, entombed in a mausoleum, scattered or kept by a family member/ members.

Obtaining Authorization

In most states, the county coroner or medical examiners office must authorize a cremation. This authorization assures the deceased did not die for any reason other than natural causes or accident. If the death was not for those reasons, the medical examiner will authorize a cremation but only after all legal and/or physical evidence has been secured. There is a 48-hour waiting period after death has occurred before a body may be cremated given that all paperwork and services have been completed.

Individual or companion (two people) urns are available in hundreds of designs made from wood, glass, cast or sheet bronze, ceramic, plastic, marble, copper, marbleon or cultured stone. Many urns have the ability to be engraved or an engraved plate may be attached to them. Memento urns and necklaces allow one to keep a small portion of their loved one’s cremains.

You can still have a service

Being cremated does not prevent one from having traditional funeral services. Whether the visitation and funeral service is one day or over a two-day period in the funeral home or at a church, the cremation can take place after the services. Cremation caskets are available but are not required by state law. A rental casket is available for visitation purposes or a casket may be purchased. When the casket is purchased, the deceased remains in it for the cremation process. For those not requesting visitation, an alternative container (cremation tray) is available.

Which religions approve?

Most religions approve of cremation as an acceptable final disposition while there are some, such as the Orthodox Jewish faith, that do not.

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