
Foos and Foos Funeral Service
- Home
- United States
- Bellevue, OH
- Foos and Foos Funeral Service
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Foos and Foos Funeral Service, Funeral service & cemetery, 151 Yorkshire Place, Bellevue, OH.
Address
151 Yorkshire Place
Bellevue, OH
44811
Telephone
Website
Alerts
Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Foos and Foos Funeral Service posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.
Contact The Practice
Send a message to Foos and Foos Funeral Service:
Shortcuts
Category
Why We Do What We Do
The Foos Family’s proud heritage of providing professional and compassionate funeral care to the 4 county area has been a tradition for over 165 years. Through 5 generations of family ownership, we have continued to give outstanding and attentive care to those we serve. We believe that our longevity is due to our adaptive approach to funeral customs and ceremonies over the decades. We create experiences that heal the entire grieving family. Our many years of experience and belief in the therapeutic importance of a ceremony of your choosing guides us to planning a service as unique as the person being remembered. No two funerals are ever the same. Our funeral directors are great listeners and are able to glean important information to help plan the perfect service to fit your family’s emotional needs and budget. Helping people to remember and honor the life of their loved ones in their own way, is the highest priority of our family. Unique remembrances such as cinematic video production, modern interactive web site available across all platforms and very personal and individualized printed memorial products sets us apart. These permanent tributes are unmatched anywhere in the area.
Everyone has an idea of what we do but many don’t realize why we do what we do.
Why do we have gatherings at the time of a death?
For thousands of years humans have marked the passing of the death of a loved one with ceremonies. The ceremonies have changed a lot over the years, from building pyramids to today’s celebrations of life. No matter the type of gathering and ultimate disposition of the body we as humans have the basic instinctual need to gather with each other to acknowledge our collective pain and grief. We help each other as a group to move on.