Can’t sell your house? Bury St. Joseph for an offer & publicity

With a glut of houses on the market and few buyers, here’s an almost guaranteed way for you to get free publicity for a house you’re trying to unload—and maybe even a quick sale.

This is just one of several great publicity ideas for real estate agents, too.

An old superstition says that burying a St. Joseph statue upside down near your house will result in a sale. I first heard about this back in the mid-90s when my husband and I had trouble selling our house on the Pennsylvania-New Jersey border. I had already moved back to Wisconsin to take a job as editor of The Business Journal in Milwaukee, and he was stuck on the East Coast until we sold the house. 

Just as we were getting desperate, a co-worker told me about the St. Joseph trick. Willing to try anything, I bought a statue and shipped it back to Pennsylvania. While we waited for results, I wrote a column about it for The Business Journal. While searching through some old files this week, I found the column, as well as the follow-up column describing feedback from readers.

No other column I have ever written in my 22 years as a newspaper editor and reporter resulted in as many responses as these two did. In fact, Google “St. Joseph statues” and you’ll even find website after website of St. Joseph statues, including one site that sells the St. Joseph Statue Home Sale Kit shown in the photo above.  

So what does this have to do with getting publicity for your house sale? Or for your real estate office? The old cliche “desperate times call for desperate measures” was never more relevant than it is right now, after a tumultous few months of foreclosures. 

If you’re a real estate agent or a seller, and you’re willing to discuss your experiences with the St. Joseph statue, local, regional and national media might pounce on the story. It’s quirky. It’s fun. And it brings a little levity to an otherwise grim housing market.

Here’s the first column I wrote in 1995:

House sellers call on St. Joseph     

I’m beginning to think I’m the last house-seller on earth to finally succumb to the superstition of the St. Joseph statue.

When I complained to a friend a few months ago that my house in Pennsylvania still hadn’t sold, she gave me advice that apparently everyone else has heard.  That is, bury a St. Joseph statue upside down in your backyard and the house will be sold.

Yeah, sure.

Then I heard it again from a co-worker who admitted he cheated by burying a picture of St. Joseph upside down just when he was feeling desperate.  But he sold his house anyway.

I’m not superstitious. Besides, I reasoned, the interest rates and our asking price were so low that surely somebody would bite.

That brings us to July 1995—some 13 months after we listed our four-bedroom Colonial that sits in the shadows of the Pocono Mountains near New Jersey.

We’ve dropped the price five times.  We’re offering a bonus, on top of the commission, to the real estate agent who brings us an offer we accept.  And we’re doing our best to survive the commuter marriage we’ve struggled through since October last year when we moved back to Wisconsin to join The Business Journal.

So there I was about a week ago on one of the hottest days of the year, fighting a traffic jam during my lunch hour on the way to Janzer’s store on Capitol Drive to buy a statue.

“Do you sell St. Joseph statues?”  I asked the woman behind the counter.

“We do,” she said.

She led me down an aisle to a display case, carefully removed a tan, 5-inch statue, and turned it upside down to check the inventory number.

Then she went to a nearby storage cupboard and took a small cardboard box from among dozens of other boxes stacked there.

“Do you sell many of these?”  I asked as she rang up my $3.98 purchase.

“We do,” she said.

“Do you know what they are used for?”  I asked.

“We do,” she replied, the corners of her mouth breaking into the tiniest of grins.

“Well, do they work?”  I asked.

“Based on what our customers tell us, they do,” she said.

Not another word was exchanged.  I raced back to the office.  Within hours, St. Joseph was on a UPS truck, headed for Pennsylvania.

Now, here’s the dilemma.

My husband is standing by, ready to bury this thing.  But we’re getting conflicting reports from all quarters on the proper protocol.  Those offering advice are almost passionate about explaining the exact way it should be done.

Frankly, we’re confused.

Should my husband start digging in the front yard or backyard? Should he bury the statue upside down, right-side up, or on its side?  Head pointed away from the house or doesn’t it matter?

If we accept an offer, what do we do?  Unearth St. Joseph and bring him back to Wisconsin for good luck?  Don’t touch him, somebody warned, or the whole deal will fall through.

So now what?

I’ll bet lots of you have your own stories to tell.  Surely real estate agents know about this stuff.  My own agent here in Wisconsin swears by the powers of the statue, but she isn’t sure about the burial etiquette.

As for the clerk at Janzer’s, I suspect she knows plenty.  But at the time, I was too embarrassed to ask.

Here’s the column I wrote a few weeks later:

Faith moves mountains, homes

Centuries from now, when archaeologists sift through the ruins of southeastern Wisconsin, can’t you just picture them scratching their heads as they begin unearthing hundreds—maybe even thousands—of St. Josephs statues?

I now they’re out there, because you told me so.

They’re buried inside shoeboxes, empty mayonnaise jars, plastic bags and pieces of aluminum foil.

They’re concealed beneath garden plots, flower beds, shrubbery and patches of crabgrass in front yards, backyards and every plot of land inbetween.

If there’s a desperate house-seller like me, chances are good there’s a St. Joseph statue buried nearby.

Sorry I haven’t gotten back to you earlier to report on the results of my little survey from several weeks ago.  But I’ve been busy taking your calls and reading the yellowed newspaper clippings you sent about how this whole thing got started.

I’ve also been on the phone with my husband, who’s still living in Pennsylvania, making sure he follows the directions you gave me so we can finally unload our house after more than a year.

The protocol, I’m told, goes something like this.  Bury the St. Joseph statue upside down in your backyard and then wait for the offers to start rolling in.  Some of you follow that ritual with a seven-day novena to St. Joseph, the patron saint of households, families and laborers.  Others spend a few bucks on a newspaper ad that says something like, “St. Joseph, we pray to you,” thus also making him the patron saint of newspaper classifieds.

After the house sells, unearth the statue, take it with you to your new home and display it prominently as a way to thank the fellow who made it all possible.

Is that easy, or what?  Best of all, you told me, it works.

Marion Nelson of Milwaukee sent me an old newspaper clipping about a New Jersey woman whose husband was laid off from his job at a stone quarry near the turn of the century. The women owned a small St. Joseph statue, tied a long piece of string around its neck and hung it from her roof in the middle of winter, with the vow that she wouldn’t remove it until her husband was called back to work.

The statue got quite a beating from those wicked East Coast winds.  A few months later…well, I’m sure you can guess how it all ended.  In fact, the statue worked so well that the woman started burying it everywhere and reaped the benefits of one miracle after another.

Someone else told me the practice started when a group of nuns from way back couldn’t afford a plot of land on which they wanted to build a convent.  So they buried a St. Joseph statue there and—voila!—a convent was erected.

The most incredible story I heard—some might say right out of the Twilight Zone—came from Marie Cutraro, who was desperate to sell her home near North 48th Street and West Villard Avenue in Milwaukee about four years ago.  It was a frigid March day when she wanted to bury her statue, but the ground was still frozen.

So her husband piled charcoal on the ground, started a fire and kept dousing it with gasoline to keep it going until the ground finally thawed.  Then he dug a hole and dropped St. Joseph inside.

A few days later, the couple left on vacation.  While they were away, they got a call from their real estate agent.

“She told me to break out the champagne because we got an offer in our price range,” Mrs. Cutraro said.

Here’s the kicker.  The buyers made the offer on March 19, the feast of St. Joseph.  I can just see all you good Catholics nodding in unison and saying “I told you so.”

As for me, I’m still waiting.  My husband buried our statue in a shoebox a few weeks ago in our backyard.  The next morning, he found it laying on top of the ground, with little chips in the base, and the shoebox ripped to shreds.  We figured the neighborhood raccoons dug it up, hoping there was food inside.

St. Joseph since has been returned to his cardboard coffin where he rests, safe and sound, one foot under.

I visit Pennsylvania every few weekends.  And we always discuss whether to lower the price of our house once again.  But from now on, I’m not taking any chances.

On my next visit, I’ll have another statue in tow, and an extra long piece of string.

The rest of the story

We buried the second statue. After only a few weeks, we got not one, but THREE offers within 24 hours. We accepted an offer at a ridiculously low price and, 14 months after we listed it, took a huge loss on the house. 

The world is filled with so many stories similar to mine that in 2003, Stephen  Binz wrote the book St. Joseph, My Real Estate Agent. It includes lots of those stories.

But not everything works out for the best.

One home seller who wasn’t seeing any results moved his statue from the frontyard to the backyard to the side of the house. Eventually, he threw it in the trash.

A few days later, he opened the newspaper and saw the headline “Local Dump Has Been Sold.”

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Comments (22)
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  • Christine Buffaloe

    There are so many superstitions like that, such as a St. Christopher medal in your car is to keep you safe. If you lose something you pray to St. Anthony to help you find it. I can’t remember all of them, but being brought up Catholic, we were always praying to some saint to aid us with something.

    • Donna

      I’m not Catholic but saw that if you pray to St. Anthony he will help you find something that has been lost. It has always worked for me.

  • Nancy Bleeke

    This brings back memories! In the 1990s our house in Racine, Wis. was on the market for 4 months. Our new house was nearly compelted and I heard about burying the St. Joseph statue from my older Italian-Catholic relatives. I made lots of phone calls (this was before the internet) and found the “kit” in Milwaukee. As I proudly followed the rules and then recited the prayer to St. Joseph each evening, my husband kept making fun of the whole thing (he is a German-lutheran after all). I told him to stop working AGAINST it. We did sell that house within 2 weeks!!! The offer was the good, the timing for when we had to move couldn’t have been better. Was it good ole’ St. Joe? Who cares?

  • Christopher Petersen

    I wish (or should I say pray) that this works for us. I have St. Joseph buried in my yard in Colorado right now. He’s been there in the front, side, back, upside down, right side up, facing east-north-west-and south and every which way possible… what ever makes him comfortable.

    We moved ourselves and our company to Chicago over a year ago and the house still sits unsold in CO.

  • Debra Gould, The Staging Diva

    Joan, It’s ironic that you wrote about this as I posted a business dilemma for home stagers about 2 weeks ago about what to do about a home seller who is relying on a buried St. Joseph statue to sell their home. My reply to the challenge is coming out Monday.

    Unfortunately, if a home isn’t decorated to sell quickly (otherwise known as home staging, house fluffing and real estate merchandising) it will just sit there.

    Clear out the clutter, get rid of all the problems that will turn off buyers and decorate to look like a model home and you’ll stand a better chance of competing with the hundreds of other homes in your price range and target market.

    Prayers and statues are fine, but St. Joseph might need a little help!

  • Oscarson

    Hi

    I think its not only a fine tradition but also one of the best presents to give, I really dont think that it must be for religious reasons that you buy or give away a statue

  • Louise

    Hi

    My cousin who’s home (Ireland) on holidays from Maine, told me the story yesterday about burying St. Joseph upside down in the garden saying it works if you are trying to sell your house, i have to admit i laughed so much… I never heard of it & with being an Irish Catholic i thought i had heard them all!! I’m am totally sceptical about all this stuff & am in no way superstitious so lets see…
    So here i am checking it out on the net. & really surprised to see so many stories about it. I just phoned the angel shop to see if they had any St. Joseph statues, after the girl looking in the shop & not being able to find any she informed me she could order one in for me but it would take a few weeks, after reading the stories etc… and very anxious to sell my apartment i didn’t want to wait the few weeks so she was giving me details of another shop where i could get one, in the middle of it all she started to laugh & seemed a little shocked & start to tell me that, there on the counter was a St. Joseph…! She couldn’t believe it she said, as she doesn’t recall seeing him there before & was certain that they were all sold out of St. Josephs for a while, anyway we both laughed at the whole thing & she is going to hold on to the St. Joseph which i will collect on my lunch break today. My apartment went up for sale last Friday 11th March, we have a viewing scheduled for next Wednesday 23rd, I will bury St. Joseph before that & lets see him work his miracles. I will keep you all posted, i’m very interested to see how all this will go, wish me luck!

    Louise – Malahide – Ireland

  • Theresa

    Moved from Philadelphia to San Francisco 7 months ago for my husband’s job. We have a lovely house and never thought it would take this long. Until it sells, we have to live with family which is never easy. We will be burying St. Joseph tomorrow. We are hoping he will help us. We will have faith in him until we do sell the house.

  • Kathy

    My home has been on & off the market since 2006, FSBO and with realtors. I’ve painted, done upgrades, landscaping, lowered the price, etc. with not one offer until about a month ago, which then all fell through. St. Joseph was buried upside-down in the front yard, facing the house several years ago. A conversation at my son’s graduation the other night has prompted me to find, dig up and move St. Joseph to the backyard, upside-down, facing the house. That’s my one task today. Another open house is scheduled for tomorrow. I’ll let you know how it goes! Dear St. Joseph, please help me sell this house.

    • Joan

      Let us know if it works!

  • Amanda

    Well, our house has been on the market for over a year, with no offers! We’ve had a volly of realtors come through and they’ve all said we’re priced right at or below where we should be, but still nothing. My husband had a friend tell him of this practice a few years ago but we had forgotten about it. Today a friend of mine that I had not seen in quite some time came by and at the end of our visit she said “Hey, don’t forget to bury a St. Joseph in your yard, it’ll help!” as she drove away. So off to the internet I go to find all the details….. Husband is bringing a statue home tonight and we’ll bury him out front with a few prayers and lots of crossed fingers and toes. We have another open house this Saturday, so we’ll let you all know if it sells soon!! And if nothing else, we can actually say we’ve tried everything:)

  • Tamara

    We are living in a very depressed area and to top it off we have a “three bit house in a two bit town” Currently two houses on our street have been for sale for years. One for nearly three years and the other over four. We had little hope of selling our beautiful home as there were a lot of other beautiful homes in our area also for sell (this is October no sales in our area since the previous March). Well six weeks ago we buried a St. Joseph statue (thanks to the suggestion of a friend) and I completed the novena (nine days) twice and the second time asked St. Jude for some additional help. We accepted an offer on our house today from the first people to view it (we have been negotiating back and forth for nearly three weeks). Say what you will but I am convinced that we received the offer due to the intercession of the saints. I am told the key is to have faith in the saints and in God.

    • Joan

      People think I’m nuts when they hear me tell them about St. Joseph. Your story, Tamara, is just one of many–living proof that this works. Thanks for sharing.

  • Allison

    The last line cracked me up

  • Pamela

    I purchased the St. Joseph and place it in the ground and it’s been two years and my house has not sold yet what am I doing wrong

    • Joan Stewart

      No one can know for sure if you’ve done anything wrong, Pamela. Try lowering the price.

  • Mary Kaye Slonaker

    Can I share your column to social media?

    • Joan Stewart

      I wish you would, Mary Kaye. Thanks for stopping by and sharing.

  • Angela

    What IF the ground is frozen and you can’t bury st. JOSEPH?

    • Joan Stewart

      Get a nig bag of soil, dump it in an area like a flower bed, and bury the statue. That’s what I’d do.

  • Barbara Caminiti

    i bured st joseph in my yard of my business it sold very fast was on the market for 4 years .I sold it went back to dig hin up and couldnt find him .I have had a number of bad things happen at my home since i could”t find him .Is this something i should worry about ?

    • Joan Stewart

      I wouldn’t worry about this. The statue could have been dug up by an animal.