A hearse, also called a funeral coach.
In the US, there is no law requiring the casket to be placed in a vault. But many cemeteries make such request because they want to avoid the caving in of graves as a result of either the deterioration of the casket or the use of heavy machinery for maintaing the cemetery.
They are the ones who carry the coffin/casket into the church and then to the cemetery or crematorium..
The expression "a pauper's casket" can relate to a low cost casket provided by the government for indigent people. Sometimes a reusable casket is meant: in former times indigent dead people were taken to the cemetery in a casket with a bottom which could be opened up; then, at the graveside the shrouded corpse was left in the grave while the casket was reused again.
The name for a stone over a grave site is called a headstone as well as a marker. They are usually chiseled with the deceased person's name, birth date, death date, and sometimes pictures and quotations.
Probably, a cart for transporting the casket - for example in the chapel or at the cemetery - is meant. Funeral directors in the US prefer the expression "church truck". Usually these carts can be folded for easy transportation in the hearse.
dark coloured container is called as casket grey
The main benefit is for the cemetery: a vault prevents the grave from caving in as a result of a breakdown of the casket and / or the use of heavy cemetery maintenance machinery. In addition to that, a - hermetically sealing - vault may provide the relatives with the peace of mind that at least for some decades no groundwater and no insects can enter the casket.
No, of course not. Elvis was buried in a casket and cemetery like most folks. He did like cars, but not that fetish-like.
It depends on the laws of your state and county, as well as the regulations of the cemetery in which the casket will be buried (assuming you want to use the casket for burial, and not just for display at a wake or viewing). In most cases, making your own casket is perfectly legal. To find out if any local restrictions apply, try calling a funeral home in your area.
Here are two pictures in the related links below with a view of the casket spray. It would appear this was the casket spray used during both the funeral services in New York City and Arlington National Cemetery for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.
Probably you mean a church truck or a lowering device.
a casket