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Foundation & Footing

Six feet down, or it doesn't hold.

The foundation under a monument is the part you cannot see — and it's the only part that decides whether the stone still stands a hundred years from now. We dig six feet. Most don't.

We have walked into hundreds of cemeteries across eastern Nebraska to straighten leaning monuments — almost always set by other companies. The cause is the same in nearly every case: a foundation poured 12 to 18 inches deep, well above the frost line, with no real chance of holding the stone level once a few hard winters cycle the ground.

A guarantee that isn't backed by the work behind it isn't worth the paper it's printed on.

That is why every monument we set rests on a 6-foot reinforced concrete footing, hand-poured to match the footprint of the stone, and dug below the frost line. The cost is included in our quote. There is no upgrade, no add-on, no “deluxe” tier. It is the only way we set a monument.

The 6-foot foundation footing depth diagram

What You Get

Three reasons our stones don't move.

  • 1.Below the frost line. Six feet is well past where Nebraska soil freezes — the freeze-thaw cycle that lifts shallow footings can't touch ours.
  • 2.Reinforced and hand-poured. Squared to the monument footprint, with rebar throughout. No template forms, no half-measures.
  • 3.Re-leveled free, forever. If a stone we set ever settles or leans, we come out and straighten it. No charge. No expiration date.
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Why It Matters

The evidence is in the cemetery itself.

Leaning headstones, sunken markers, monuments that have shifted out of plumb — these are what happens when a foundation is too shallow, too narrow, or too thin.

Leaning headstones repaired by West Point Monument A monument restored by West Point Monument

No deposit. No quote pressure. No surprises.

Let's talk about the stone you have in mind.