© 2024 WOSU Public Media
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Coronavirus In Ohio: Ohioans Find Unique And Creative Ways To Celebrate

Madison McHugh McGraw and Grant McGraw greet guests in the parking lot of a Deleware County church.
Courtsey of MADISON MCHUGH MCGRAW
Madison McHugh McGraw and Grant McGraw greet guests in the parking lot of a Deleware County church.

Social distancing and Ohio's stay-at-home order have caused a lot of people to change their plans. But some tenacious Ohioans aren’t letting the coronavirus pandemic get in their way, and are getting creative about finding alternatives.

While many springtime weddings have been postponed, some couples have gone through with their plans after making modifications. In fact, Columbus residents Madison McHugh and Grant McGraw decided to move theirs up a bit.

“We had originally planned for a May 9th wedding and we had invited 250 people and so it was totally different than what we had been planning for the last year but it ended up being better than what we could have imagined," McHugh McGraw says. "It was a lot more intimate, smaller, a lot less stressful so overall, I’m super happy with how everything turned out. I’m happy that we moved it up and did it this way."

Instead of a flower girl, Grant McGraw’s best friends spread those petals like men who had entered a money machine.

And in lieu of a traditional reception, their friends gathered while maintaining social distancing in the parking lot of the Delaware County church where the couple was married.

On the other end of life celebrations, funerals cannot be delayed but they are being modified as well.

In Jeromesville, near Ashland, more than 50 of Bill Cameron’s fellow farmers led the tractor processional from the funeral home to the cemetery.

And in Springdale, the community was still able to come together to honor police officer Kaia Grant, who was killed in the line of duty on March 30. Some people are considering holding memorials later, but that can bring back the initial shock and pain of the loss.

Melissa Sullivan, the executive director of the Ohio Funeral Directors Association, says funeral directors and their communities are coming up with unique ways to express their grief.

"Another way I heard was there was a portico, a protected area of the funeral home where the family could step out and have visitors actually stay in their cars to pull up and offer their condolences from the safety of their vehicle," Sullivan says.

But it’s still difficult to not have a chance to say goodbye publicly.

It seems like every day, neighbors are reaching out and connecting in big and small ways by putting up artwork, painting windows and sidewalks, and even holding driveway concerts, including one featuring retired Ohio Public Radio and TV Bureau Chief Bill Cohen.

Retired Ohio Public Radio and TV reporter Bill Cohen plays (right) plays music for his neighbors.
Credit RANDI COHEN / Facebook
/
Facebook
Retired Ohio Public Radio and TV reporter Bill Cohen plays (right) plays music for his neighbors.

Some of these new online activities are popular and might become permanent parts of Ohio’s new normal when the COVID19 pandemic is over.

Do you have questions about the coronavirus in Ohio? Ask below as part of our Curious Cbus series.

_

Jo Ingles is a professional journalist who covers politics and Ohio government for the Ohio Public Radio and Television for the Ohio Public Radio and Television Statehouse News Bureau. She reports on issues of importance to Ohioans including education, legislation, politics, and life and death issues such as capital punishment.
Related Content