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londonburials.co.uk |
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Mile
End Old Town |
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Parish of St Dunstan's Stepney covered a huge area of the East
End. Stepney was still fairly rural at the end of the eighteenth
century, but over the next fifty years building, and the population,
exploded, and the area became increasingly poverty stricken. From the
seventeenth century onwards many dissenting congregations sprang up here,
many with their own burial grounds. Some, such as the Stepney
Meeting House ground in White Horse Road, still survive. The Beaumont
ground (East London Cemetery in Shandy Street) and the Globe Fields
burial ground were commercial
speculations, only nominally dissenting. They provided cheap burials in
overcrowded and insanitary conditions. Plague struck this part of London frequently, and the extensive acreage of St Dunstan's churchyard is a good indication of the mortality in outbreaks such as that of 1625. By the time of the Great Plague of 1665 the situation here was critical, and the parish resorted to plague pits scattered around the parish. Daniel Defoe says that 'Stepney parish, extending itself from the east part of
London to the north, even to the very edge of Shoreditch Churchyard, had
a piece of ground taken in to bury their dead close to the said
churchyard, and which for that very reason was left open, and is since,
I suppose, taken into the same churchyard. And they had also two other
burying-places in Spitalfields, one where since a chapel or tabernacle
has been built for ease to this great parish,* and another in Petticoat
Lane.
'There
were no less than five other grounds made use of for the parish of
Stepney at that time. One where now stands the parish church of St Paul,
Shadwell, and another where now stands the parish church of St John's at
Wapping, both of which had not the names of parishes at that time, but
were belonging to Stepney parish.'
STEPNEY.
- The burial ground adjoins the church, and is crowded to excess;
footpaths cross through it in every direction. The soil, largely imbued
with the products of putrefaction, is also extremely moist; many of the
tomb-stones have sunk deeply in the earth. Here the peculiar
putrefactive odour may be frequently distinguished, - as indeed it may
in many of the burial places I have described.
The
church is a very ancient one, of the gothic structure; in the centre,
below the east window, is placed a marble tablet, which is known in the
neighbourhood as the Fish and Ring (a fish and ring are cut on the top
of the tablet.) The
following is a copy of the inscription engraved upon the tablet :.-
“Here
lieth interred the Body of Dame Rebecca Berry, the Wife of Thomas Elton,
of Stratford Bow, who departed this life April 26th, 1696, aged 52 " Come, ladies, you that would
appear |
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(Walker 1839) |
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The St Dunstan churchwardens met in February 1625/6 to decide where sand and gravel could be dug so 'that the churchyard may be speedilie earthed over, and shall then conclude when and att what times after to meet for the forwarding and more speedie execution of the said worke. And likewise shall use the same Care and diligence for the spedie purchasing of a new place of Buriall.' The Stepney churchyard was by then more than overfull. The vestry in the same month put the situation even more plainly. 'the old Churchyard will affoord no more convenient place of Buriall without danger of Infection by reason of the noisomenes of the ground there so opened by reason of so many bodies formerlie enterred there.' In April the vestry,
still concerned by the number of burials taking place near the church,
decided to restrict the sexton. Recent burials had been 'to the
great annoyance of the parish and danger of future infection, and that
there is space enough in other places with lesse inconvenience where
fewer bodies have bene buried.' Graves were to be dug at the north
side of the church beginning at the elms and 'so range along
westward by the pales and as neere as convenientlie may be not presuming
to come or digge within seaventeene yards of the church wall.' When
those places were filled the graves were to be dug on the south side
beginning on the east part to range along westward by the mud wall on
the south part of the church keeping the same distance from the
wall. The sexton was to be fined if
he dug graves anywhere else. |
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| In 1736 it was discovered that Thomas
Jenkins, a grave digger of St
Dunstan, Stepney, had sold bodies to a private surgeon, Cesar
Hawkins, surgeon at Pall Mall
Court, and he was sentenced to be
publicly whipped. A mob of sailors and chimney sweeps met in Stepney
Churchyard and he was tied to a cart. The cart horses were walked slowly
so that he received many hundreds of lashes from the hangman, John
Hooper, encouraged by the mob who
shouted that he was not to spare him. (Albion's Fatal Tree) |
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Stepney Meeting House Burial-ground, White Horse Road The Almshouses dates from 1644, though the burial ground was first used in 1779. Not obsessively tidy (good!) but well preserved, with a number of monuments. The almshouses themselves were lost in the war. It is pleasing that historical information is posted up at the site. Some exhumations took place here post war. Originally White Horse Street - many East End streets have become roads, or 'ways', or even avenues in a doomed attempt at gentrification. Also called the Almshouse ground and Ratcliff Workhouse ground). - There are many tombstones and the ground is fairly tidy. The gate is generally open, as the entrance to the almshouses is through it. Size ½ acre. (Holmes) |
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Holy Trinity Churchyard, Tredegar Square. Church built 1836-1839 so ground probably in use for less than 20 years. The churchyard has a few scattered monuments. All very tidy (someone was busy with a mower when I visited) which is more than can be said for the church, which was closed and dilapidated looking. According to Holmes it was once full of monuments, most of which have gone to allow for mowing. This is regrettable, but understandable - keeping the undergrowth down around crowded tombstones is expensive and time consuming. The vaults were cleared post war. ¾ acre. Laid out by the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association in 1887, and maintained by the London County Council. The gravestones have not been moved, and some of the graves are still occasionally used, though no new ones are dug. (Holmes) |
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Wycliffe Chapel Burial-ground, Philpott Street, Stepney. Records of burials from 1734 - 1840, which contradicts Holmes below. Now a recreational area behind a block of flats called John Harrison House. ¾ acre. This dates from 1831, and is behind the chapel and the Scotch church. It is full of tombstones, closed and untidy. Chadwick divides it into a part belonging to the chapel and a larger part belonging to the Scotch church, but it appears to be all one now, and is in the hands of the elders of Wycliffe Chapel. (Holmes) |
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Globe Road Chapel Burial-ground, At some point a Weslyan Methodist chapel. Burial ground in use 1820 -1857. Also known as Globe Fields burying ground. Now called 'Globe Memorial Gardens', though it is not clear who or what is being commemorated. Not much of a memorial - the whole place is pretty down at heel and scruffy. The ground originally stretched further to the south, under the railway viaduct, and probably to the south of that, into an area now covered by some run down garages. There is a building on the site of the chapel but it's not clear what happened to the vaults. Also called Mile End Cemetery. The chapel is now Gordon Hall, and belongs to Dr Stephenson of the Children's Homes. The burial-ground is in private hands. The ground was very much overcrowded, and there were vaults under the chapel, the schools and the sexton’s house, but all the part south of the chapel was taken by the Great Eastern Railway Company. The existing piece is about 670 square yards in extent, is closed and most untidy, quantities of rubbish lying about amongst the tombstones. (Holmes) |
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Evidence of tidying up, June 2005 |
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East London Cemetery, Shandy Street, A private speculation, opened c. 1830s, so in use for only twenty years or so. Laid out as a pleasant if rather bland park, but with no indication of its history. A few decaying tombstones lean up against the north wall. A church, St. Faith, was built just to the north of the ground in 1891 but it was bombed in the war - traces of it are still visible. Also called the Beaumont Burial-ground.- 2¼ acres. This was much crowded. It was laid out as a playground by the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association in 1885, and is maintained by the London County Council. (Holmes) |
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Burial-ground of the Bancroft Almshouses, Mile End Road Now Queen Mary's College covers most of the ground. The burial ground is partly preserved in the grassed space between college buildings and the Jewish Cemetery wall. At its northern tip, the stones remain, including one to “the second master of Bancroft’s School” The People's Palace is on the site of the almshouses, and part of the burial-ground has been merged into the roadway on the east side of the palace. St. Benet's Church, Hall and Vicarage were built in this ground, the church being consecrated in 1872. Three pieces still exist, in all less than ½ acre; one is the vicarage garden, another is open to the road, and the northern point is closed and roofed over, forming a little yard where flag-staffs, &c., are stored. The open part is also a store-yard, having heaps of stones in it besides much rubbish. There are gravestones against the wall. (Holmes) |
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Jewish Burial-ground, 70, Bancroft Road. Opened 1810 so not shown on Horwood. Damaged by bombing during WW2. Recent reports speak of neglect, vandalism, abandoned supermarket trolleys, etc. About 1,650 square yards. This ground belongs to the Maiden Lane Synagogue, and is crowded with upright gravestones. The grass is neglected. Burials still take place. It is in a densely populated district. (Holmes) |
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All photos by kind permission of Mr Ken Russell. |
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Jewish Burial-ground, Alderney Road. The oldest Ashkenazi cemetery in the UK. Acquired 1696. 1 acre. Formed in 1700, enlarged in 1733. Belongs to the United Synagogue. The tombstones are upright, and they are not so thick as in most of the Jewish grounds, while the grass is kept more neatly. (Holmes) |
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Old Velho Sephardi Cemetery, Mile End Road. Behind Queen Mary's College. The oldest known Jewish cemetery in the UK, open 1657 - 1742. This ground is nearly ¾ acre in extent, and is at the back of the Beth Holim Hospital. It belongs to the Spanish and Portuguese Jews, the tombstones are flat, there are several trees, and the ground is very neatly kept. Part of the graveyard (where it is said that there have been no interments) has some seats in it, and is used by the patients of the hospital as a garden. (Holmes) |
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| Information on, and photographs of, the three Jewish Cemeteries above from Phillip Lachman, to whom many thanks. To visit Phillip's site on Jewish history in the East end go to the links page. | |
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Rose Lane Chapel Ground Burials recorded 1786-1833. Shown on Horwood (Below). Stepney Station is now Limehouse Station, Docklands Light Railway. Built over by East London Railway, public house and shops close to Stepney Station. (Holmes) |
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Possible vaults or church burials: St Peter's Cephas St Built 1837-8. this large and imposing church still stands, but has been converted into flats. Click here for a note on church and vault burials. |
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