Our core values center around celebrating every life with dignity and respect while serving every family with the highest levels of attention, care, and compassion. We are a local family-owned and operated business having been established in 1974. Here at Frazier Funeral Home, Baytown, Texas. We serve all religious faiths and walks of life.
We treat every family with the same level of compassion and caring, whether it is a large traditional funeral service or a direct cremation. We take pride in our commitment to assist and support families as they make their personalized choices to honor their loved one for the life he or she has lived.
We treat every family with the same level of compassion and caring, whether it is a large traditional funeral service or a direct cremation. We take pride in our commitment to assist and support families as they make their personalized choices to honor their loved one for the life he or she has lived.
Services
Mr. Joe Frazier attained his Funeral Director's License in 1960 and began his second career with Collins & Johnson Funeral Home. Mr. Joe Frazier continued to work both jobs Humble Oil and the funeral home for many years. After retiring from Humble Oil (Exxon Mobile) he purchased the Collins half of the Funeral Home in the late sixties, the funeral home then became Johnson & Frazier Funeral Home.
Most of us plan ahead in life. We plan for our wedding, our children's education, family vacations, and other significant expected life events. We also plan for the unexpected events of life by purchasing home, auto and medical insurance. Understanding the benefits of pre-planning has prompted many to take the step to plan their own arrangements.
Many who have undergone the emotional strain of arranging a funeral within hours of losing a loved one have made the choice to pre-plan their own funeral. Doing so lifts the burden from their loved ones by relieving decision-making pressure at a time of grief and emotional stress. Funeral arrangements are a deeply personal choice.
Most of us are not prepared to plan and carry out a funeral ceremony for someone we love. And so much of the information available on this critically important subject fails to focus on what is most important: having a personalized, meaningful funeral that helps families and friends begin the healing process of mourning after the death of someone we love.
Someone you love has died. You are now faced with the difficult, but important, need to mourn. Mourning is the open expression of your thoughts and feelings regarding the death and the person who died. It is an essential part of healing. The following articles provide many practical suggestions to help you move toward healing in your unique grief journey.