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Children's Activities (free)
Easter Monday March 24th 2pm - The Great Easter Challenge !
Tuesday April 8th 2pm - Puppet making
Thursday April 10th 2pm - Bird detectives
Guided Walks (free)
Sunday March 30th 10am - Bird spotting guided walk
Sunday April 6th 2pm - General History walk
If you would like to join Friends of the Trust and receive a quarterly newsletter keeping you uptodate with events and our work, please send a cheque for £12 or £6 concessions, to 'Abney Park Cemetery Trust', Stoke Newington High St, N16 OLN. Donations are put towards the maintenance of the site and our free activities. We research memorials for £8 each; we offer a digital photo service for memorial stones for £10; and a susidised maintenance programme for memorials, which comprises four clearances @ £24 a year. Volunteering is a great way to get some fresh air, some exercise, meet new people, learn about trees and wildlife and gain new skills. The Trust holds a drop in day every Tuesday and Thursday from 09.30am to 3.30pm. No experience is necessary. Tools, tea and gloves are provided. For more details click on volunteering in the right hand coloumn. |
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| Author: | Gregory McNeill | |||
| Posted: | 7/26/2001; 12:27:12 PM | |||
| Topic: | WELL KNOWN PEOPLE | |||
| Msg #: | 5 (top msg in thread) | |||
| Prev/Next: | 4/6 | |||
| Reads: | 32407 |
section 1 - Introduction:
All denominations with an emphasis on Nonconformists
Abney Park Cemetery was established on uniquely non-denominational
or ecumenical principles for everyone to share a single chapel and to
be buried side by side.
Moreover, the company's prospectus made great play of the fact that
it would be a cemetery 'which shall be open to all classes of the
community'.
Abney Park was therefore open to the burial of the
labouring classes in common graves; a situation made more necessary
after London's city burial grounds were closed in 1852, but which was
not offered by the other garden cemeteries of the period on account of
the loss of revenue compared to sales to the well to do. nonetheless,
in breaking
the mould, Abney Park Cemetery did not offer its most saleable
plots to those seeking common grave burial; the company allocated the
shady spaces between the boundary walls and the peimeter
arboretum, some distance from the most expensive (pathside) locations.
Today these might well be sought-after as woodland burial locations,
and possibly in that sense too, Abney Park was a pioneer.

Those who Lived or Worked at the Park or Cemetery
Besides interments, Abney Park has historical connections with those who lived at the estate, including:
Those Who Are Interred Here
For information about some of thise who are intered here, please look at the list below and refer to the internet links for additional information
.
Section 2 - Some Important Burials:
Founders of the Salvation Army
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER:
Shield in pennant, sandstone, n/O6 BOOTH, William 1829-1912; Catherine 1829-1890Shield with gilt inscription, n/O6; BOOTH, William Bramwell 1856-1929;Florence 1861-1957;.
William and Catherine Booth founded The Salvation Army in 1865. From
the outset their approach broke strongly from that of traditional
religious movements: they gave equal status to women workers, and
concentrated on fighting poverty with practical help and raising funds.
In addition they repeatedly ran into serious problems with the police
and magistrates by working on the streets. We may wonder ", the author
Arthur Mee wrote in 1937, "if any other man of modern times touched so
many wretched lives all over the world as General Booth".
Slavery Abolitionists
DR WATTS' WALK: stone pedestal monument, VASSA, Joanna, daughter of Olaudah Equiano alias Gustavus Vassa (the African salve who became a famous Author and abolitionist). Joanna, who inherited a sizeable fortune from her father when she reached teh age of 21, is interred here with her husband, the Rev. Henry Bromley, with whom she ran a Congregational chapel at Clavering near Saffron Walden and later in North London. See 'the Abney Park link' Also see 'the Soham connection' . The 150th anniversary of the death of the second daughter of Olaudah Equiano, Joanna Vassa (10th March 1857) will be Sunday 25th March 2007, with further events June 3rd, August 23rd and October 14th. Joanna's father was partially financed in the late C19th by the patronage of Selina, Countess of Huntingdon who in her youth had been a friend of Lady Mary Abney, by then deceased. Joanna was buried at Abney Park Cemetery on 16th March 1857, aged 61. Her husband Henry was buried with her on 12th February 1878 aged 79. Further details: Joanna was Equiano's second daughter by his English wife; her elder sister having died young. Joanna was born on 11th April 1795 and baptised in St. Andrew's Church, Soham on 29th April 1795. ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: Tall pink granite obelisk, BINNEY, Rev. Dr Thomas1798-1874, Congregationalist divine and pastor affectionately known as 'the archbishop of nonconformity' active in the cause of slavery abolition (images at National Portrait Gallery).Baptist Missionaries who were also Slavery Abolitionists
S. side of PATH L, north of Abney Park Chapel (almost next to Leota the Samoan):BURCHELL, Thomas Baptist missionary and slavery abolitionist. Today Burchell's house in Jamaica is owned by the Jamaica National Heritage Trust. See: ' Jamaica National Heritage Trust website' also 'Thomas Burchell'
For many more slavery abolitionists see the specific page accessed from the right hand side of the home page menu. 'click here'
The Loddiges Nursery family (link to further information)
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: Pedestal Monument, [Fawcett-Pyle family vault] n/O6; FAWCETT-PYLE nee LODDIGES, Evelyn 1841-1913;FAWCETT-PYLE Rev. James 1844-1893.
Elegant
pink and grey polished granite memorial to Evelyn Fawcett-Pyle nee
Loddiges and her husband, Rev. James Fawcett-Pyle,Wesleyan Minister.
Evelyn was the daughter of the last of the famous line of nurserymen,
Conrad Loddiges who is buried in Dr.Watts' Walk with his Susanna Bowes.
DR. WATTS' WALK: Stone Chest Tomb, [Bowes family vault] w/L6 LODDIGES, Conrad 1821-1865;Susanna Agar 1819-1897. Conrad was the son of George Loddiges and grandson of Joachim Conrad Loddiges, both great horticulturalists. He inherited the famous nursery on Mare Street when its lease was almost expired and nursery land in Hackney was becoming worth far more as housing land. As the nursery closed its famous palms and orchids were found good homes, sometimes attracting huge public interest as they were transported away.
Eminent Horticultural Writer
SOUTH BOUNDARY ROAD: White gothic headstone very weathered, with kerb, e/K10 HIBBERD, James Shirley 1825-1890.
Experimental horticulturalist who lived in Stoke Newington until the
1880's. Author of both popular and specialist illustrated books and
editor of "Floral World" 1858-75 and of the Gardener's Magazine -1890.
Vegetarian and teetotaller.
The First Fire Chief of London
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER/DR WATTS' WALK, branch b: Pedestal Monument in White Stone, w/N6 BRAIDWOOD, James 1800-1861. Superintendent of the London Fire Engine Establishment 1832-61 who had earlier established an efficient fire service in Edinburgh. Died in June 1861 at a fire in Tooley Street, Southwark when a falling wall crushed and buried him. It took two days to recover his mutilated body. The funeral at Abney Park was a major public spectacle, the subject of a feature in the Illustrated London News.
Policeman
off DR WATTS' WALK, statue path: Baroque Monument with Policeman's Helmet, n/K6
TYLER, William 1877-1909.
Edwardian baroque triumphal arch to a murdered police constable, killed
in the course of duty whilst making an attempted arrest at Tottenham on
23 January 1909. Compelling story of anarchists associated with the
infamous Tottenham Outrage.
Congregational Ministers
W. BOUNDARY ROAD B, e/m5: Grey granite celtic crossALLON, Rev. Dr Henry 1818-1892. Congregational hymnologist, author, and Minister of Union Chapel, Compton Terrace, opposite Highbury & Islington underground station. Founder and client for its late Victorian rebuilding, employing the design skills of James Cubitt as architect to create today's impressive chapel. Contributed a chapter to 'Life of William Ellis' (see burials of missionaries below), the famous biography written by Ellis's son, John Eimeo Ellis. Allon's second son ALLON, Henry Erskine is also buried here and was a composer. See 'Henry Allon website' and 'Union Chapel website'
Dr. WATTS' WALK: Plain Stone Chest Tomb with hipped top, e/M6 CLAYTON, Rev. John 1754-1843; Rev. William 1785-1838; Rev. John 1780-1865; Rev, George 1783-1862.The elder Rev John and his third son Rev. William, buried first at Bunhill Fields, were transferred here to Abney Park when the family tomb was brought here in 1857. The father was an Independent divine, pastor of The King's Weight House Chapel the City 1778-1826, William was pastor at Saffron Walden 1809-31 and later chaplain to the pupils at Mill Hill Grammar School.Rev. John was pastor of a chapel in the City and Rev. George of a chapel in Walworth.
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: Polished red granite with pierced octagonal cross, n/N6 FLETCHER, Alexander, Rev. Dr. 1787-1860. Rising above all, against the luxuriant textures of a tall old swamp cypress, is the noble granite cross in memory of 'The Children's Friend', Rev Dr Alexander Fletcher1787-1860, of Finsbury Chapel, Finsbury Circus; a memorial paid for by his congregation.
PATH L: White marble neo-Grecian sarcophagus with splayed sides, n/F6
MATHER, Rev. James 1775-1840
Rev. Dr. Robert 1808-1877
The
Rev. James Mather, Congregationalist minister of Upper Clapton Chapel,
was the first to be interred at Abney Park Cemetery (3rd June 1840).
His son, MATHER, Rev Dr Robert, Congregationalist missionary at
Mirzapore, India 1838-73, is also buried here. He wrote several
religious books and translated the bible into Hindustani.
Dr. WATTS' WALK: Simple Granite Obelisk w/K6 WELLS, Algernon 1793-1850.
Simple, elementally proportioned headstone to a Congregationalist
divine, pastor, and joint Secretary of the Congregational Union and the
Colonial Missionary Society 1837-50.
DR. WATTS' WALK: Plain Pedimented Chest Tomb e/L6 PYE-SMITH Rev. Dr. John, FRS, FGS 1774-1851; Ebeneezer, FRCS 1807-1885. The Rev. Dr. John Pye-Smith was a notable Congregationalist theologian and scholar; minister at the Old Gravel Pit Chapel in Hackney 1811-50, and tutor at the dissenting college, Homerton College 1805-50. Practically self-taught, he rose to become the first Dissenter to be formally allowed to become a Fellow of the Royal Society, and also became a Fellow of the Geological Society. His ideas about geological time caused controversy amongst thoe who took the bible literally.
Menagerist
ROAD F : Sculptured Lion in White Marble, n/J5 BOSTOCK, Susannah 1865-1928; Frank 1866-1912. Menagerists whose life is commemorated by a spectacular sleeping lion; one of the best known landmarks in the cemetery.
Painter & Engraver
MOUNT ROAD: Self-effacingly plain headstone, E ranks/C7 CALVERT, Edward 1799-1883. Painter and wood engraver, part of a group of English romantic artists who gathered around Salmer palmer at Shoreham in the 1820's. A disciple of William Blake.His finest works include exquisite miniature wood engravings.
Sensory Sculpture for the Blind
PATH N: Sculptured figure in White Stone DELPH, Harriet 1862-1944; GARLIC, Francesca 1879-1949. Attractive sculptured figure to Francesca Garlic and Harriet Delph of Clapton Square, Hackney, erected in 1946. Who might the sculptor have been? Who were these two ?
City of London Alderman & Sheriff
ENTRANCE DRIVE: Imposing Domed Classical monument of White Marble n/J11 BRIGGS, George, JP 1848-1925. Monument in celebration of the distinguished City career as Alderman and Sheriff of the City of London and Member of the Court of Common Council.
Notable Women of Abney
LITTLE ELM WALK: e/B6 Plain Headstone GOSSE, Emily. In the far north is a simple headstone to the evangelist and naturalist Emily Gosse who, together with her husband Philip, introduced the Victorians to seashore natural history and developed the aquarium. Their son, Edmund Gosse became a famous literary figure and his works included the autobiographical 'Father ad Son' about Emily and her husband's strict religious upbringing.
BRANCH E& F GREAT ELM WALK: Barly Legible Plain Headstone, n/E5 HILLUM, Mary 1759-1864. Mary Hillum died in her 105th year, having lived in the same house in which she had been born, having never travelled by omnibus or railway, and indeed never having ventured more than 15 miles from her home !
Politically Active People
PATH B: Stone Chest Tomb, e/L7 O'BRIEN, James Bronterre 1805-1864.
A much revered Chartist leader and protagonist for socialism. O'Brien,
the political activist, journalist, and intellectual leader of the
Chartist movement was an Irish born graduate of Dublin University who
completed law studies at Gray's Inn, London. He was an early advocate
of land nationalisation who was imprisoned for 18 months in 1840 for
'seditious speaking' at a meeting in Liverpool.
During 1851 he
became editor of the "Poor Man's Guardian", a radical newspaper of the
day. In later life he lectured in London. After his death his influence
was carried forwards by his followers into the 1870s socialist revival.
MOUNT ROAD: Plain neoclassical headstone, w/H7 HONE, William 1780-1842. Bookseller and author, with friends in literary circles, Hone was prosecuted for blasphemy in his "Political Litany". He was acquitted after a historic three-day trial. The huge £3,000 cost of his defence was met by public subscription. Charles Dickens attended his funeral at Abney Park.
Dr WATTS' WALK: White Stone Chest Tomb with Pediments at each end w/M6m MORLEY, Samuel, MP 1809-1886. MP for Nottingham and Bristol, and a campaigner for Nonconformist emancipation, slavery emancipation and other social and political causes, who endowed Morley College for adult education.
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: Arcaded Gothic Shrine complete with Stone Ridge-roof, s/O6 RICHARD, Henry, MP 1812-1888. MP for Merthyr Tydfil 1868-88. Formerly Congregationalist minister of Marlborough Chapel, Old Kent Road, London 1835-50 who relinquished the ministry to become Secretary to the Society for Promoting Permanent and Universal Peace 1848-84, enabling him to concentrate on anti-war campaigns. Henry Richard's splendid shrine was erected by public subscription.
Musicians & Music Hall
LITTLE ELM WALK: Grey Granite Plinth with obelisk, e/C6 HUNT, C.W. -1904.
Inscription reads: "He wrote many of the people's songs and one that
during the Russo Turkish war of 1878 so stirred public enthusiasm as to
greatly strengthen the policy of the government of the day and may
therefore justly claim some influence on the disposal of power in
Eastern Europe: not always Kings and Cabinets shall guide a people's
fate, a rhyme may wreck an empire, a song may save a state".
NEW ROAD: Headstone with gabled top, n/Ranks/J8
LEYBOURNE, George 1842-1884; CHEVALIER Albert 1861-1923.
Music Hall artiste alias 'Champagne Charlie', who lived and died in
Islington. His daughter married Albert Chevalier in 1895. he is also
buried here.
Cemetery Founders & Associates
DR. WATTS' WALK: Ornate baroque sarcophagus of stone mounted on four lion's paws, w/L6 JAY, John 1805-1872. Builder of the chapel at Abney Park Cemetery, under the direction of William Hosking.
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: n/O6 Mausoleum ROGERS Dr.Nathaniel 1808-1884.
This is the only personal mausoleum in Abney Park. Dr Rogers was a
doctor of medicine who obtained his MD from the University of Edinburgh
in 1832 - see 'UCL website for Dr Rogers' lecture notes'.
He was a wealthy man and donated expensive stained glass memorial
windows to the nationally important St.Paul's Cathedral and Westminster
Abbey, and then ensured the Abney Park Chapel receieved equally
impressive designs of the same quality, putting it on a par with the
height of Anglican design. His mausoleum is perfectly aligned on the
important axial vista between Abney House gate, Dr Watt's Monument, and
the Abney Park Chapel's steeple, and even incorporates a through-view.
That Dr Rogers' monument was permitted to be situated in such an axial
location may be a reflection of a wish for visitors to be able to see
through this monument to the chapel to which he contributed stained
glass, and possibly also to his significance in non-denominational
circles (Abney Park being a uniquely non-denominational cemetery and
this being closely associated with Dr Watts' approach too). Certainly
Nathaniel Rogers took this ecumenical approach in his lifetime,
contributing stained glass windows to the Congregationalist Union Chapel at
Highbury as well as to Anglican churches. At the union Chapel his gift
of a rose window is situated above the organ; a gift to the chapel in
1876 designed by Frederick Jake that shows angels playing - see 'Union Chapel website'.
Dr Rogers' donation to Westminster Abbey was of a small window in the
east aisle of this transept, given in 1869 to represent the poets of
the Old and New Testaments - see 'Westminster Abbey website'
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: Imposing Polished Red Granite Obelisk Monument, s/N6 REED, Andrew Rev. Dr. 1787-1862. Imposing Celtic Cross in Grey Irish Granite, Ireland 1893, n/O6; REED, Talbot Baines 1852-1893; Andrew Holmes 1848-1892; Polished Grey Granite Obelisk Monument , n/N6 REED, Sir Charles, MP, FSA 1819-1881.
The central feature on the south side of Abney House Corner is a slim
red granite obelisk to the relentlessly philanthropic Dr Andrew Reed a
notable Congregationalist and hymnwriter who founded five major
charitable institutions including the London Orphan Asylum at Clapton.
His son, Sir Charles became an eminent lay Congregationalist, printer,
typefounder, educationalist, antiquary and member of the Liberal Party.
He has the unique distinction of having been the first MP for Hackney
1868-74. A tireless improver, he also Chaired the School Board for
London 1873-81 which provided the first publicly funded education for
children who could not afford private schools in the capital and, being
the first elected body for government in capital, was the fore-runner
of the GLA.
Finding time amongst his many other duties, Sir Charles
took a close interest in the development of Abney Park Cemetery,
becoming a Trustee and Director of the original partially philantropic
Joint Stock Company 1866-81, during which period he was appointed by
the Corporation of London to Chair the Bunhill Fields Preservation
Committee, Abney Park's predecessor a a place of burial for
nonconformists in the capital. Two of his sons, Talbot Baines Reed a
novelist whose best known book was "Fifth Form at St. Dominic's", and
Andrew Holmes Reed, share a nearby memorial.
Landmarks
ENTRANCE DRIVE: Tall Column of White Marble, s/J11
KING, Robert Scarborough 1859-1860; Ethel Rosa d.1860.
Surmounted by an urn, this imposing marble column forms a landmark in
memory of Robert Scarborough & Ethel Rosa, two young children of
Robert King who died within a fortnight of each other during October
1860.Their surviving sister, Mary Jane, married Frederick Janson
Hanbury with whom she worked on botanical publications, contributing,
on his death, an enormous herbarium for the British Museum.
Missionaries - London Missionary Society
PATH K: Headstone with kerb, s/E6 LEOTA [Missionary Grave]. In memory of Leota, native of the Island of Samoa in the south seas and a Christian evangelist who died in Hackney aged 40.
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: ELLIS, Rev William (1804-72) Gardener,
born into straightened circumstances, became a LMS missionary and
ethnographic, topographical and botanical author of pioneeering studies
of Polynesia and Madagascar much praised by the poet and author
Southey. It is said, that he, more than any other missionary, changed
the perception of missionaries, gaining enormous respect against their
critics who portrayed them as naieve people by trying, through
education, to raise the status of natives and slaves to equals with
westerners. Became a Congregational minister in Hoddeston,
Hertfordshire. See 'William Ellis (author)'
CEDAR CIRCLE: Mrs Williams Famous missionary wife sailing in
the early C19th with her husband John Williams, to the South Seas; and
working at times in the company of William Ellis and his wife. Her
husband was killed and eaten by canibals. Their son, born in Polynesia,
is interred here with her. Biographies have tended to concentrate on
the husband's roles in such voyages and missions but the London
Missionary Society sent out husbands and wives who both had to endure
the many months at sea and work for the cause. See 'Mr & Mrs John Williams'
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER, branch A: MEDHURST, Rev, Dr Walter Henry (1796-1857)
Congregational minister and famous missionary to China. Translated the
bible into Mandarin. Wrote a Chinese-English dictionary. See 'Dr Medhurst'
GREAT ELM AVENUE: DAVIES, Rev. Evan (1805-64) Author of a biography of Rev. Samuel Dyer, missionary to the Chinese in Penang (Betel Nut Island) Malaysia. See 'Welsh Biography Online website'
Architects
PATH L: Rare wooden deadboard pegged in Arts & Crafts fashion e/M5 MATTHEWS, Joseph, FRIBA, FS 1838-1923. Architect and surveyor in practice in the City of London.
ROAD I: White Gothic Stone Chest Tomb, s/I9 ROBINSON, Samuel 1751-1833; Martha 1756-1836. Architect and surveyor who designed and founded the Retreat Almshouses in Hackney (1812). He also designed the Paragon and Homerton Dissenters' College (1823). He and his wife were originally buried in the Retreat's forecourt but were removed here with their white gothic stone chest tomb when the building was demolished in 1901.
Re-interments From Bunhill Fields & elsewhere
ROAD D: Severely Plain Stone Chest Tomb over family vault, w/M6 MILLS, John Remington 1798-1879. Possibly the least demonstrative millionaire's tomb in existence, reflecting John Mills' reticent and thrifty Puritan character. He became one of the wealthiest commoners in England, a millionaire before inheriting his brother's fortune. His tomb was brought here from the Nonconformist's earlier burial ground at Bunhill Fields, in 1856.
ROAD C: Table slab in granite BAGSTER, Samuel 1772-1851; Eunice 1778-1877. Samuel Bagster was founder of a publishing house in The City of London specialising in religious works. He was first buried at Tottenham Court Chapel in 1835, but his remains were afterwards transferred to this spot in Abney Park where his wife, who outlived him is also buried. She survived to the ripe old age of 99yrs!
People from Africa
MOUNT ROAD: Hedstone unidentified as yet (we will looks agin this winter !), e/I5 CAULKER, Thomas Canry 1746-1859. Son of Canrah Bah Caulker, King of Bompey (syn: Bumpe) in Sierra Leone, Western Africa - see 'raising funds for Bumpe today'. Sent to England in the early 1850s for an evangelical nonconformist Christian education; died at Canonbury in the care of Rev. Jacob Kirkman Foster. His father, ruler of an independent West African Kingdom, drew up an abolition agreement with British officials, later enacted by the British Parliament, to allow ships from his kingdom to be intercepted by the British navy to ensure their captains were not engaging in the transporting of slaves
Merchants
ROAD C: Rectangular Pedestal with Kneeling Female Mourner, w/J7 MECHI, Fanny 1799-1845. First wife of John Joseph Mechi of Stamford Hill, a City merchant turned agriculturalist of Bolognese extraction, who founded the Tiptree Hall Farm, Essex in 1841.
CHAPEL LAWN: Chunky, four-square Limestone Monument, n/G6 SPREAT, John 1799-1865. John Spreat was a prominent Congregational businessman with business interests in Manchester. His monument sits below the tall-form or cultivar Indian Bean tree behind Abney Park Chapel, and counts as the only design in the cemetery which was commissioned from a nationally renowned architect (the leading Quaker architect Alfred Waterhouse -1830-1905- who had been educated nearby at Grove House School in Tottenham). For Waterhouse, architect of such grand buildings as the Natural History Museum in South Kensington and Manchester Town Hall, this is clearly one of his smallest surviving commissions.
Welshman & Educationalist
PATH C: Worn, Half-missing Headstone with Kerb, n/L10 OWEN, Sir Hugh 1804-1881. Methodist philanthropist and longstanding advocate of access to higher education for nonconformists. Became the prime founder of Aberystwyth University (University College of Wales at Aberystwyth). A biography is published by the university.
Methodist Ministers
W. BOUNDARY ROAD: w/N5 Pedestal Monument PERKS, Rev. George, MA 1820-1877. President of the Wesleyan Conference in 1873, and Secretary of their Foreign Missionary Society.
ABNEY HOUSE CORNER: Pedestal Monument, [Fawcett-Pyle family vault] n/O6 FAWCETT-PYLE Rev. James 1841-1913; FAWCETT-PYLE nee LODDIGES, Evelyn 1844-1893. Elegant pink and grey polished granite memorial to Evelyn Fawcett-Pyle nee Loddiges and her husband, Rev. James Fawcett-Pyle, Wesleyan Minister. Evelyn was the daughter of the last of the famous line of nurserymen, Conrad Loddiges who is buried in Dr.Watts' Walk with his Susanna Bowes.
Medical Doctor
PATH T: Headstone with Kerb, n/E3 SIEVEKING Sir Edward, MD, FRCS, LLD 1816-1904; n/E3
SIEVEKING, Lady Jane 1825-1915. Cruciform Gothic Coffin Tomb, n/E3 SIEVEKING, Edward Henry 1816-1868; Emerentia Louisea Francisca 1789-1861.
Sir Edward, author of several medical books and an excellent colour
illustrator of anatomical figures was physician in ordinary to Queen
Victoria 1888-1901. He later became physician extraordinary to the
Prince of Wales, afterwards King Edward VII 1873-1904. His wife, Lady
Jane, is buried nearby. The parents of Sir Edward, Edward Henry and
Emerentia Louisa Francisca, are also buried nearby. Emerentia was the
daughter of Senator Meyer of Hamburg.
Scientists & Inventors
ROAD I: Stone Pedestal with Urn, n/H8 SWAN, John 1787-1869. Engineer and inventor of Hackney. Credited by his daughter as the originator of such revolutionary devices as the steamship screw propeller (1824) and the self acting chain messenger (1831) he never patented his inventions under his own name - they were published under the names of his superiors.
Eminent Scholar
Dr. WATTS' WALK: Plain Stone Chest Tomb, e/M6 SHARPE, Samuel 1799-1881. Eminent Egyptologist, author of The History of Egypt, and translator of numerous Hebrew texts.
Potters
For genealogical information for the Cole, Colley and Dean potters interred at Abney Park Cemetery please 'click this link'
.
Publications Available from the Trust
A partial list of important burials (those researched and known by the mid 1980s) can be found in Paul Joyce's 'Guide to Abney Park Cemetery' which is available from the Visitor's Centre at £4; £6 surface mail included). Some additional burials of importance are shown on the map and poster: "A Selection of Burials of Famous and Notable People in Abney Park Cemetery" by David Solman which dates from the mid 1990s. Since that date literally scores of aditional burials of important people have come to light.
============================================ >Supplementary NotesThe Salvation Army "Work for all Social Campaign" raised money and
campaigned vigorously for new co-operative farms in Britain, new
housing in out-of-town "suburban villages" more widely available legal
services "poor man's lawyers", new businesses in carpentry, tailoring,
building and cobbling, and greater opportunities for emigration for the
poor. Money poured in from many quarters following the publication of
"In Darkest London and The Way Out" written by William Booth in 1890.
William Bramwell Booth, second General of the Salvation Army, was as equally strong willed, radical and unorthodox, as his parents. His publicising of the trade of buying and selling of children into prostitution in London met with official approbation. Deploring such bad publicity for the capital, the Attorney General zealously prosecuted him. Bramwell escaped a penal sentence but his colleague, the editor of the Pall Mall Gazette, in which the trade had been exposed, was less fortunate.
Besides their campaigning work the Booths were fond
animal-lovers. William Booth's house at Gore Road had a large garden in
which the number of pets increased in relation to his son Bramwell's
interest. Catherine Bramwell Booth recalled that "there were rats,
mice, guinea-pigs, silkworms, cats and dogs, of course, always" and
that mice shared Bramwell Booth's study and still interested him when
sixty years old as much as when six! In Bramwell Booth's adult life
every member of the household understood that living things were his
special interest: he continued to take a particular interest in the
first hatched chickens of the year, strange grubs in the vegetables and
unidentified caterpillars found by the children !
Just as thousands had followed the procession for General William Booth's funeral at Abney Park Cemetery in 1912, so huge crowds gathered to pay their respects to the funeral of General Bramwell Booth in 1929. To accompany such a large event a platform was built in Abney Park Cemetery, upon which the service was led by Bramwell's daughter Catherine who died only recently, in October 1987 aged 104.
Re: WELL KNOWN PEOPLE, Christopher Hobe Morrison, 8/19/06; 2:14:58 AM
family history (burial searches & membership)
architecture - Chapel & Lodges


London Borough of Hackney voluntary sector grants (ALG)