请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Warstone Lane Cemetery
释义

  1. History

  2. Notable burials

  3. Sources

  4. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2013}}{{Use British English|date=October 2013}}{{Infobox cemetery
|name = Warstone Lane Cemetery
|image = Warstone Lane Cemetery Lodge.jpg
|imagesize = 260
|caption = Entrance lodge
|map_type =
|map_size =
|map_caption =
|established = {{Start date|1848}}
|closed = 1982
|country = England
|location = Jewellery Quarter, Birmingham
|coordinates = {{coord|52.488|-1.914|type:landmark|format=dms|display=title,inline}}
|latitude =
|longitude =
|type = Church of England
|style =
|owner = Birmingham City Council
|size = {{convert|8.2|acre}}
|graves = 92,979 (including interments)
|interments =
|website = {{URL|jqrt.org}}
|findagraveid= 2425682
}}

Warstone Lane Cemetery, ({{gbmapping|SP059877}}), also called Brookfields Cemetery, Church of England Cemetery, or Mint Cemetery (from the adjacent Birmingham Mint), is a cemetery dating from 1847 in Birmingham, England. It is one of two cemeteries in the city's Jewellery Quarter, in Hockley (the other being Key Hill Cemetery). It is no longer open to new burials.

A major feature is the two tiers of catacombs, whose unhealthy vapours led to the Birmingham Cemeteries Act which required that non-interred coffins should be sealed with lead or pitch.

History

The foundation stone for the chapel (demolished 1954) was laid on 6 April 1847. The blue brick gate lodge building, designed by J. R. Hamilton and J. M. Medland and built in 1847–8, survives, and is a Grade II listed building.[1][2] The cemetery is itself Grade II on the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest.[3] The cemetery was originally reserved for members of the established Church of England, whereas Key Hill (opened in 1836) was non-denominational, and was therefore favoured by nonconformists.

On the night of 11 December 1940, all but the tower and classical west portico of St Thomas' Church, Bath Row, was destroyed by German bombs. The church was not rebuilt. The grounds were laid out for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953 when the gravestones were removed and the dead reinterred at Warstone Lane Cemetery. The gardens were re-designed as the St. Thomas's Peace Garden in 1995 in commermoration of the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II.

A comprehensive list of memorial inscriptions is being prepared by The Jewellery Quarter Research Group, to be published on its website.

A campaign group, The Friends of Key Hill and Warstone Lane Cemeteries, seeks to preserve and protect the cemetery.

Notable burials

  • Joseph Allday – radical politician
  • John Baskerville (1706–75) – manufacturer, reinterred here in 1897 - was an atheist
  • Dr Pye Chavasse (1810–79) – medical author
  • James Cooper, VC (1840–89) – soldier
  • John Postgate (1820–81) – surgeon and food safety campaigner
  • Clement Mansfield Ingleby (1823–86) – solicitor and poet
  • Harry Gem (1819–81) – lawn tennis pioneer

There are also buried in the cemetery 51 Commonwealth servicemen of World War I and 13 from World War II. A Screen Wall memorial, by a Cross of Sacrifice, lists those whose graves are not marked by headstones.[4]

Sources

1. ^{{harvnb|Foster|2005|p=168}}
2. ^{{NHLE |num=1034370 |desc=Cemetery Lodge |grade=II |accessdate=9 November 2015}}
3. ^{{NHLE |num=1001545 |desc=Warstone Lane Cemetery |grade=II |accessdate=9 November 2016}}
4. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/45006/BIRMINGHAM%20(WARSTONE%20LANE)%20CEMETERY |title=Birmingham (Warstone Lane) Cemetery |work=Cemetery Details |publisher=Commonwealth War Graves Commission}}
  • {{cite book |last=Foster |first=Andy |year=2005 |title=Birmingham |series=Pevsner Architectural Guides |place=New Haven, CT |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=0-300-10731-5 |page= |ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book |last=Haddleton |first=Marie Elizabeth |year=1987 |title=The Jewellery Quarter – History and Guide |place=Birmingham |publisher=Y.B.A. Publications |isbn=0-9513108-0-1 |ref=harv}}

External links

{{commons category}}
  • {{Images of England|409878|Photograph and details from listed building text}}
  • The Jewellery Quarter Research Trust - includes plan of graves at Warstone Lane
  • [https://friendsofkeyhillcemeterywarstonelanecemetery.wordpress.com/ Friends of Key Hill Cemetery & Warstone Lane Cemetery]
{{BirminghamBuildings}}{{Birmingham parks}}{{Cemeteries in England}}

4 : Anglican cemeteries in the United Kingdom|Cemeteries in Birmingham, West Midlands|Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemeteries in England|Grade II listed buildings in the West Midlands

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/20 15:44:44