Skip to main content

Highgate Cemetery

This week Deceased Online adds burial records for the magnificent 
Highgate Cemetery in north London 
We are very excited to announce the release of records for Highgate Cemetery, one of London’s 'Magnificent Seven'. A total of 160,000 records have been uploaded to the database of this significant collection, which dates from 1839 to 2010. They include coverage of the first three decades: 1840 to the early 1870s, with a gap in the records from 1863 to 1865.

Highgate’s original burial registers are held at the cemetery itself and at Camden Local Studies and Archives Centre in Holborn but are available online only through Deceased Online

Pages from the Highgate Cemetery Register showing burials from 1839-1843
History
Like the other ‘Magnificent Seven’ cemeteries, Highgate Cemetery is world-renowned, contains hundreds of notable burials, has several listed monuments, and provides a haven to inner-city wildlife. EnglishHeritage has designated the cemetery as a Grade I park. Highgate is the third oldest of these cemeteries, opened in 1839 by the Bishop of London, two years after Victoria ascended the throne. Victorians needed these cemeteries as, by 1832, the burial grounds of London had become overcrowded and insanitary. Parliament responded to the crisis by passing bills, allowing the creation of commercial cemeteries in what were then the more rural suburbs of the city. Private cemetery companies were created which went on to build the following cemeteries over the next nine years: 
The records for Kensal Green, Nunhead, Brompton (including the first set of records), and now Highgate, can all be exclusively searched on Deceased Online. And a fifth's cemetery's records will be added to Deceased Online in 2017.

The London Cemetery Company, created in 1836, planned Highgate Cemetery’s layout on seventeen acres of the former Ashurst Estate by Highgate Village. The areas lies on a steep hillside, facing the centre of London, and winding down Swain’s Lane past Waterlow Park towards Hampstead Heath, Dartmouth Park and Kentish Town. Garden designer, David Ramsey, created exotic, formal planting. Stephen Geary, the architect, and surveyor, James Bunstone Bunning designed the stunning monuments and chapels of what soon became London’s most fashionable cemetery. Perhaps the most unique aspect of this is the celebrated Egyptian Avenue, a walkway bordered by sixteen vaults that leads to the Circle of Lebanon, created by earth taken from around an ancient Cedar of Lebanon. Close by the Terrace Catacombs was built in 1842. Along with seventy other monuments, these gothic wonders have all been listed by English Heritage. 

Like the other Magnificent Seven cemeteries, Highgate is associated with nonconformist burials. Initially, 15 acres were consecrated for Anglicans while 2 acres were allocated for dissenters. There is one Church of England chapel and another for Dissenters. The first burial took place on 26 May 1839 of Elizabeth Jackson, a resident of Soho. In 1854 the area to the east of the original area across Swains Lane was bought to form the eastern part of the cemetery. This part is still used today for burials, as is the western part. Most of the open unfrosted area in the new addition still has fairly few graves on it.

In the late 20th century, the cemetery fell into decline, but thanks to the work of The Friends of HighgateCemetery, formed in 1975, the landscape is now regularly maintained, memorials repaired and tours undertaken.
View of the West Cemetery from the gates of the East Cemetery
Famous Graves
The cemetery is divided by a main road between the East and West Cemeteries.
The West side is dominated by gothic architecture, much for which is crumbling. As a result this side can only be visited by regular guided tours. The West Cemetery is home to Victorian notables such as the boxer Tom Sayers (1826-1865), Charles Dickens’ wife (1815-1879), younger brother and parents, and the pre-Raphaelites, Christina Rossetti (1830-1894), Elizabeth Siddal (1829-1862), William Rossetti (1829-1919) and Frances Polidori Rossetti (1800-1886). Owner of The Observer newspaper, Julian Beer (1836-1880), and publisher of the London Standard, George Samuel Bentley (1828-1895) lie here along with criminal mastermind, Adam Worth (1844-1902), scholar of the Orient, Robert Caesar Childers (1838-1876) and scientists, Jacob Bronowski (1908-1974) and Michael Faraday (1791-1867). The world of entertainment is represented by Charles Cruft (1852-1938), founder of the eponymous dog show, menagerie exhibitor George Wombwell (1777-1850), theatrical magician, David Devant (1868-1941), and actor, Patrick Whymark (1926-1970). Among the many writers here are Beryl Bainbridge (1932-2010), Radclyffe Hall (1880-1943), John Galsworthy (memorial only), and Stella Gibbons (1902-1989), author of Cold Comfort Farm, who lived for many years within walking distance of the cemetery.

The most famous resident of the cemetery as a whole is Karl Marx (1818-1883), who resides in the East Cemetery. Visitors flock continually to his enormous memorial. Other renowned political thinkers and activists in this part of the cemetery are:
  • -       Farzad Bazoft (1958-1990)
  • -       Yusuf Dadoo (1909-1983)
  • -       Paul Foot (1937-2004)
  • -       George Holyoake (1817-1906)
  • -       Mansoor Hekmat (1951-2002)
  • -       Claudia Jones (1915-1964)
  • -       Anatoly Kuznetsov (1929-1979)
  • -       Ralph Miliband (1924-1994)
  • -       Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
Malcolm McLaren's unconventional headstone reflects his attitude to life
Politically active artists, novelists, actors and musicians here include:
  • -       George Eliot (1819-1880)
  • -       George Henry Lewes (1817-1878)
  • -       Carl Mayer (1894-1944)
  • -       Malcolm McLaren (1946-2010)
  • -       Dachine Rainer (1921-2000)
Beautiful roadside monument for the Friese-Greene family
The East Cemetery is renowned for its beautiful sculptures, many designed by those lying beneath them, and unique memorials, such as pen pots. If you are able to visit the cemetery, look out for the graves of:
  • -       Douglas Adams (1952-2001)
  • -       Patrick Caulfield (1936-2005)
  • -       William Friese-Greene (1855-1921; and son Claude)
  • -       Anna Mahler (1904-1988)
Striking headstone for the popular television presenter, Jeremy Beadle.
Other famous names on this side of the cemetery are Jeremy Beadle (1948-2008), Lou Gish (1967-2006), Sheila Gish (1942-2005), William Kingdon Clifford (1845-1879), Lucy Lane Clifford (1846-1929), Henry Gray (1827-1861), Sir Ralph Richardson (1902-1983), Anthony Shaffer (1926-2001), Sir Donald Alexander Smith (1820-1914), Leslie "Hutch" Hutchinson (1900-1969), Sir Leslie Stephen (1832-1904), Sir George Thalben-Ball (1896-1987), Feliks Topolski (1907-1989), Max Wall (1908-1990) and Opal Whiteley (1897-1992).

I shall explore some of these lives in more detail in my next blogs.

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission maintains 257 First World War and 59 Second World War graves here. The names of other service personnel from across the Commonwealth whose graves could not be marked by headstones are listed on a Screen Wall near the Cross of Sacrifice in the West Cemetery. Other notable military graves are those of Robert Grant VC (1837-1874) and that of Edward Richard Woodham (1831-1886), one of the few survivors of the Charge of the Light Brigade [another survivor features in Deceased Online's Stapenhill Collection].
The renowned memorial above the grave of Karl Marx
Summary
The records available now on Deceased Online include digital scans of original registers, grave details indicating all those buried in each grave, and section location maps for graves (unfortunately, maps for a few graves are not available).
Highgate Cemetery is managed by Friends of Highgate Cemetery Trust, a not for profit organisation which depends on any revenue generated through visitors to the Cemetery and other sales including records now online. However, please note: restricted access! Avoid a wasted journey: Highgate Cemetery West is closed to the public. You cannot visit a grave without an appointment. See www.highgatecemetery.org/visit/searches.
Finding graves in the open East part of the cemetery is also very difficult. Please either read further notes on the Deceased Online website about Highgate Cemetery or visit the Cemetery's website www.highgatecemetery.org for all the cemetery rules.
There are now records for four of London's Magnificent Seven cemeteries available exclusively on Deceased Online; the others being Brompton, Kensal Green and Nunhead. Across London, we have nearly 5 million burial and cremation records for 54 cemeteries and 4 crematoria available on Deceased Online.
In next week’s blog I shall be exploring the history of Highgate Cemetery through the Victorian era and highlighting some of the most notable interments of that period. In the meantime, if any of your ancestors were buried in Highgate, please do let us know. There are a many common graves in the cemetery, and we would love to hear about the lives any of the lesser-known residents. Do get in touch via the Comments Box below, or on our Facebook or Twitter pages!


Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

London's Spa Fields

Deceased Online has just uploaded around 114,000 burial records from Spa Fields in the modern London borough of Islington Spa Fields today, with the Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer in the background Spa Fields Burial Ground became notorious in the 19th century for its overcrowded and insanitary conditions. Located in the parish of St James, Clerkenwell, the grave yard was not far from the ever-increasing City of London. Spa Fields was known also as Clerkenwell Fields and Ducking-pond Fields in the late 18th century, hinting at a dark side to what was then a summer evening resort for north Londoners. What would become a cemetery was a ducking pond in the rural grounds of a Spa Fields public house. It was here in 1683 that six children were drowned while playing on the ice. In his History of Clerkenwell (1865) William J. Pinks wrote that visitors, "came hither to witness the rude sports that were in vogue a century ago, such as duck-hunting, prize-fighting, bull-baiting

Haslar and Netley Military Hospital Cemeteries

Following on from last week's post, I'm looking further into Deceased Online 's latest collection of burials. These military burials were digitized in partnership with The National Archives .  Two notable institutions in the collection are Haslar Royal Navy Cemetery and the Royal Victoria Hospital in Netley. Both Haslar and Netley (as it was more commonly known) were Britain's foremost military hospitals during the bloodiest years of war in the western hemisphere The Royal Hospital Haslar and Clayhill Royal Navy Cemetery, Gosport, Hampshire The Royal Hospital Haslar dates from 1753. For over two hundred and fifty years Haslar served as one of main hospitals caring for sailors and marines of the Royal Navy and merchant services. Patients came from ships as well as from naval and seamen institutions in nearby Portsmouth and Gosport. The hospital closed as the last official military hospital in 2007. The Haslar Cemetery closed in April 1859 but the neighbouring Cl

Wakefield Collection: Cremation Records now available on Deceased Online

Records for both crematoria in Wakefield, Yorkshire have been added to the Deceased Online database Above: Pontefract Crematorium The two sets of crematoria records have been added to Deceased Online 's Wakefield Collection .  Wakefield district contains nineteen cemeteries and two crematoria. Many of the records go back to the mid and late 19th century when the cemeteries opened, and range across a wide geographical area. The full list of  Wakefield  cemeteries live on Deceased Online,  with opening dates in brackets,   is as follows: 1.  Altofts Cemetery  – Church Road, Altofts, Normanton  (1878)   2.  Alverthorpe Cemetery  – St Paul’s Drive, Alverthorpe, Wakefield  (registers from 1955) 3. Castleford Cemetery  – Headfield Road, Castleford  (1857) 4.  Crigglestone Cemetery  – Standbridge Lane, Crigglestone, Wakefield  (1882) 5. Featherstone Cemetery  – Cutsyke Road, North Featherstone  (1874) 6. Ferrybridge Cemetery  – Pontefract Road, Ferrybridge, P