Jerome Badot PC 鈥18 in Sweet Auburn magazine

March 3, 2026

Preservation Carpentry graduate Jerome Badot PC 鈥18 was profiled in Sweet Auburn, the magazine of , where Jerome currently works. The article explores how Jerome got into preservation work, what led him to NBSS, and how he now works in a team to care for the Cemetery鈥檚 50,000+ monuments.

View an excerpt of the article below by Andrew Gambardella, Associate Director of Grants & Communications at Mount Auburn, and read the .


One of six members of Mount Auburn鈥檚 Preservation Team, Jerome Badot helps maintain and repair hundreds of monuments each year. I walked with Jerome on a sunny Friday morning in September to learn more about everything he and his team do to preserve Mount Auburn鈥檚 monuments and the historic character of the Cemetery.

Jerome (back row, center) in front of the Hancock Mansion recreation at the Old State house
Jerome (back row, center) with his Preservation Carpentry class in front of the Hancock Mansion recreation at the Old State house in 2018.

…From 2016鈥18, Jerome attended the 无码天堂 (NBSS)鈥攖he first trade school in the country, founded in Boston in 1881鈥攖o specialize in preservation carpentry. His class鈥檚 final project was to recreate the facade and entryway of the Beacon Hill mansion belonging to John Hancock, Massachusetts鈥檚 first governor and iconic signer of the Declaration of Independence, centered around the original door that [was] in storage. (Hancock鈥檚 mansion was torn down in 1863, an outrage that is said to have ignited the historic preservation movement in Boston.)

I was curious how Jerome went from carpentry to masonry, which is mostly what he does now at Mount Auburn.

鈥淚 was looking for weekend work after my time at NBSS and an opportunity came to me to assist with masonry for incredible sites all around Boston, and I thought, 鈥榳hy not give it a shot?鈥欌 That opportunity was with the renowned restoration mason, Fabio Bardini of Florentine Renaissance Masonry.

Jerome learned all about stone, lime, mortars, and traditional Italian restoration techniques, and from there he hasn鈥檛 looked back. Seeking a more stable work schedule, he joined Mount Auburn鈥檚 Preservation team in the spring of 2023. Alongside his teammates Julia, Juan, Julio, Greg, and Gus (no, J and G names are not a prerequisite for employment in Mount Auburn鈥檚 Preservation department to my knowledge!), Jerome helps care for the Cemetery鈥檚 over 50,000 monuments via a rigid prioritization process.

Read the full article here.