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"churchyard" Definitions
  1. an area of land around a church, often used for burying people in

1000 Sentences With "churchyard"

How to use churchyard in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "churchyard" and check conjugation/comparative form for "churchyard". Mastering all the usages of "churchyard" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The churchyard will soon be more peopled than the Abbey.
Fortunately, we found ourselves a bench in a nearby churchyard.
"The Old Churchyard" is a hymn that counsels against mourning.
I cradle Ludo in my arms, enjoying the cool churchyard breeze.
It now lies in the churchyard, wrapped in a red shroud.
On the short walk from the churchyard to her car, Mrs.
It is closed off by a gate on the churchyard side.
The nests in the churchyard yews were thickly packed with goldcrest eggs.
On a Thursday in January, Ms. Lamar happened to pass the Trinity churchyard.
A grave awaits her in the churchyard, a hole sliced into the earth.
Amy and Arnold Hardy's ashes were buried side-by-side in plots at a churchyard.
Cahun died nine years later and was buried in the churchyard next to their house.
They will nibble their way through the churchyard between Mott and Mulberry Streets in NoLIta.
He was wrapped in tent canvas and buried in a hasty grave in a churchyard.
Today, South Africa still has the world's largest TB preventive therapy program, Dr. Churchyard said.
Today, South Africa still has the world's largest TB preventive therapy program, Dr. Churchyard said.
The same day, a Brooklyn church removed two plaques that honored Lee from a churchyard tree.
For a bonus, she gets to live rent-free — in the gravedigger's cottage of an old churchyard.
He was buried in or near the churchyard, but the exact location of his remains is a mystery.
Carmelo La Magra, and some residents, along with occasional tourists, have been sleeping in the churchyard in protest.
In the churchyard of St Mary's in the village of Lower Higham there is a scent of cut grass.
He raised his hand, spurred the mare and rode around the perimeter of the churchyard towards the waiting figure.
In Mexico, Mr. Rodríguez's family buried him in a churchyard near his house, after raising money to transport his remains.
The disclosure by the transport ministry came as a procession of empty coffins made their way to a churchyard in Ethiopia.
From the 11th century to 1854, more than 173,000 people were buried inside St Mary-at-Lambeth and in the surrounding churchyard.
On Sunday, empty coffins made their way into the churchyard on black vans while women beat their chests and screamed in anguish.
The story starts in 1790, when my fourth great-grandfather -- a Bleecker -- bought a burial vault in Trinity's historic churchyard off Wall Street.
Forget Hamlet's soliloquies about this mortal coil of ours; forget Hieronymus Bosch's comic hellscapes; forget Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.
He was buried in a sprawling churchyard on the site of what is now Euston, one of the British capital's busiest rail stations.
Grief: Mourners streamed into a vast churchyard in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, waving pictures of loved ones who died in the crash.
In 2015, the cathedral churchyard was equipped with an alarm system and a camera after janitors arrived to find new writings nearly every morning.
Just when you're thinking that the day's bad luck has peaked with an emergency eye amputation, Redcoats emerge from the churchyard, carrying lit torches.
In a churchyard near Henda, Mr Teguh pushes aside some plastic sheeting on a crude bamboo greenhouse, and proudly displays rows of native hardwood saplings.
Those designations include a new Grade II listing for the grave of 19th-century Egyptologist and women's rights advocate Amelia Edwards at St Mary's Churchyard.
In September 2001, his body was taken on a final boat trip around the lake where he died before being buried in a nearby churchyard.
The name change evoked Washington Irving's tale of "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," which has as its backdrop the village's Old Dutch Church and churchyard.
Beaming and smiling as she leans over a wall in the churchyard of Saint John-at-Hampstead (1977), Dench's intensity animates that stony, funereal setting.
The famed 19th century Norwegian folklorist Johannes Skar, who compiled eight volumes about Setesdal folk culture, is buried beneath a monument in the tiny churchyard.
A sculptor is suing Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan for moving his bronze re-creation of a huge sycamore tree that once stood in the churchyard.
The churchyard cross is grade II listed, as are two chest tombs in the churchyard.
The church is in the middle of a churchyard which is almost square with rounded corners overlooking the River Alun. In the churchyard is the shaft of a churchyard cross which was converted into a sundial in 1774. The churchyard also contains the war grave of a soldier of World War I.
Around 1590, Anna founded the St. Anne's churchyard in Heidelberg. In 1596, a stone monument in her honor was erected in this churchyard. When the churchyard was closed in 1845, the monument was moved to the Bergfriedhof churchyard. Anna died in 1591 and was buried in the Lutheran Church of Meisenheim Castle.
In the churchyard is a cast iron gravestone dating from the middle of the 19th century. The railings, gates and gatepiers to the churchyard are listed at Grade II, as is a cottage in the churchyard.
He was buried in Saint Mary's Episcopal Churchyard in Burlington.St. Mary's Churchyard at The Political Graveyard. Accessed August 21, 2007.
Some of the walls of the churchyard and gate piers are listed Grade II, as is a table tomb in the churchyard. Also in the churchyard is a sundial with an octagonal shaft dated 1754. In addition the churchyard contains the war grave of a First World War soldier of the King's Liverpool Regiment.
She is buried in the churchyard of St James, Finchampstead. The grave of Catherine Bramwell-Booth in the churchyard of St James, Finchampstead.
Churchyard Arsenal Football Club manager Herbert Chapman St Mary's Churchyard, Hendon or Hendon Churchyard is the churchyard of St Mary's Church in Hendon in the London Borough of Barnet. It adjoins Sunny Hill Park, and it is part of the Sunny Hill Park and Hendon Churchyard Site of Local Importance for Nature Conservation. The churchyard is important archaeologically, as Roman artifacts have been found on the site and there is evidence of Anglo- Saxon settlement. A church may have existed on the site as early as the ninth century, and there is an eleventh-century font still in use in the existing building.
Yew tree in churchyard In the churchyard is a sundial dated 1798. It is listed at Grade II. Also in the churchyard is an ancient yew tree which was reported to have been in existence in 1152. In addition the churchyard contains the war graves of fourteen service personnel of World War I, and a Merchant Navy officer of World War II.
In the churchyard east of the chancel is the shaft of the 14th-century churchyard cross, standing about high. Its head has been lost.
The north aspect of the church from the churchyard The churchyard covers some two acres. Most of the headstones in the churchyard are modern – many of them are from the nineteenth century – but the churchyard, which is now closed to new interments, contains some old monuments. The whole churchyard and church is surrounded by what was once a typical sign of an early Celtic church; an oval formation of trees.Some of the trees are certified as being over 500 years old.
The churchyard is extensive and on a slope: the Chapel of St Thomas Becket is a ruin of a 14th- century building in the south-east of the churchyard. St Guron's Well is a small building of granite at the western entrance to the churchyard.
In the churchyard is the shaft from a 15th century hamstone cross. Thomas Purdue, of the famous Purdue bell-founding family, is buried in the churchyard.
Many of the Gurney family are buried in the Gildencroft Quaker Cemetery, Norwich, some in Keswick All Saints churchyard and some in Intwood churchyard, both near Norwich.
Churchyard There are several Grade II listed structures, enlisted 7 February 1986, in and by the churchyard. The Gillet Monument is a late-18th-century altar tomb with an obelisk made of hamstone and it is located in the churchyard, southwest of the tower. The Swain Travers Monument is also located in the churchyard, just east of the chancel; it is a 19th-century chest tomb, a possibly reuse of an 18th-century tomb. An unidentified late-17th-century monument in the churchyard is located just south of the chancel.
The parish church of St Peter is part of the Dorset Wildlife Trust's "Living Churchyard Project" and manages the churchyard for the benefit of wildlife. Part of the churchyard grass remains uncut to allow the growth of wildflowers, over 70 different species of which have been identified. A 1994 survey identified over 50 species of lichen. In 2011 the church won Best New Entry in the "Living Churchyard Competition".
Woodgate later fell into a coma and died at Mooi River, Natal on 23 March 1900, aged 54. He is buried in the churchyard of St John's Anglican Church just outside Mooi River. Medieval churchyard cross in Belbroughton churchyard, Worcestershire, restored as a monument to Woodgate Woodgate left a fiancée, Gladys Newbolt. At his birthplace in Belbroughton his father had the Medieval churchyard cross restored as a monument to him.
Sundial in churchyard In the churchyard is a sundial of ashlar buff sandstone dating from the 18th century which was restored in the 20th century. It is listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war graves of a soldier of World War I, and two of World War II.
The oak lych-gate to St Cuthbert's churchyard, Ormesby, Redcar and Cleveland. In 1883 the attractive oak lych- gate was added to the Church Lane entrance to the churchyard.
He is buried against the southern wall of the churchyard of St Johns at the west end of Princes Street, backing onto the north section of St Cuthberts Churchyard.
Bloomfield died in Burlington, New Jersey on October 3, 1823, and was buried in Saint Mary's Episcopal Churchyard in Burlington.St. Mary's Churchyard at The Political Graveyard. Accessed August 21, 2007.
The gates, gatepiers and churchyard walls, which are almost complete, are listed at Grade II. In the churchyard is a red sandstone sundial dated 1731 which is also listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
They probably represent an area of early churchyard subsequently encroached upon by private building. It is not clear whether this early churchyard would have extended as far south as Cheapside. In addition to those in the churchyard, there were some burials within the church. A vault near the chancel is also mentioned.
The D'Este Mausoleum in the churchyard St Laurence has a large churchyard covering three and a half acres. It contains over 1400 graves, the earliest of which is dated to 1656.
An area of the churchyard was excavated in 1990–91 by the Cornwall Archaeological Unit.Nowakowski, Jacqueline A.; Thomas, Charles (1990) Excavations at Tintagel Parish Churchyard ... interim report. Truro: Cornwall Archaeological Unit.
In the churchyard are graves of the Bromley-Davenport family from nearby Capesthorne Hall. Also in the churchyard is a 16th-century cross base which has been listed at Grade II. In addition the churchyard contains the war graves of a Tank Corps soldier and two Royal Air Force officers of World War I.
In the churchyard is a sandstone sundial dating possibly from the 18th century. It is a Grade II listed building. Also listed Grade II are the churchyard walls and the gateway to the church, and a table tomb. A doorway in the churchyard dating from Georgian times gives access to the grounds of Backford Hall.
The family vault is under the chancel. Theodora Jane Cowper (d. 1824), the cousin of the poet William Cowper, is buried in the churchyard. John Darbourne (1935–1991), architect, is buried in the churchyard. Richard Edgcumbe, 2nd Earl of Mount Edgcumbe (1764–1839), is buried in a Grade II-listed tomb in the churchyard.
Tomb of Sir William Hillary, St George's Churchyard, Douglas, Isle of ManHillary died at Woodville, near Douglas, Isle of Man, on 5 January 1847. He was buried in St. George's Churchyard, Douglas.
In the churchyard are three structures which are listed at Grade II. These are the base of a cross which is probably medieval, a sundial probably dating from the 18th century, and the churchyard wall. The churchyard also contains the war graves of sixteen service personnel, ten of World War I and six of World War II.
There are also two Wesleyan Methodists chapels at Treen (1834) and Trethewey (1868). The cross in the churchyard The cross at Rospletha There are five Cornish crosses in the parish; one in the churchyard, one on the churchyard wall and the others at Rospletha, Sawah and Trebehor.Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses. Truro: Joseph Pollard; pp.
He died in East Lothian on 1 December 1873 and was buried in Inveresk parish churchyard. The grave lies in the centre of the section of the original churchyard west of the church.
The sandstone 19th- century churchyard wall is a Grade II listed building. In the churchyard, north west of the tower, is the war grave of a Royal Navy sailor of World War II.
He died in Sheffield and was buried in Ecclesall churchyard.
He is buried alone in the churchyard of Sharnbrook, Bedfordshire.
It is located in the churchyard of the Skårby church.
He was buried in Grace Episcopal Churchyard in Jamaica, Queens.
He was buried at St Andrew's Parish Churchyard, Ryton, Shropshire.
He was buried in the churchyard of Holy Trinity Avonside.
John and Mary Nicholson are buried in the churchyard cemetery.
He was interred at St John's Episcopal Churchyard in Edinburgh.
He is buried in All Saints' churchyard, Milford on Sea.
He was buried in the family vault in the churchyard.
'Churchyard' is not known to be in cultivation beyond Australia.
The churchyard is accessed via a lychgate from the town.
He is buried in Cambrin Churchyard Extension (Grave L1 10B).
He was buried in the Old Swedes Churchyard at Wilmington.
He is buried in the churchyard at St Mary's, Merton.
Outside the church, the large lychgate at the west of the churchyard dates from the early 19th century. Inside the churchyard, the gravestones have been moved to the side, possibly for ease of maintenance.
He lived at Inveresk Lodge, south of Musselburgh. He is buried in St. Michael's churchyard in Inveresk. The grave lies midway along the western boundary of the original churchyard, backing onto the Victorian cemetery.
The churchyard contains seven war graves, comprising four soldiers and two Royal Navy sailors of World War I, and a soldier of World War II. Train driver Wallace Oakes, GC is buried in the churchyard.
The Lychgate was built in 1715 and re-sited to its present position in 1728.St Peter's Churchyard The outstanding feature of the churchyard is the Norman Chapel.Prestbury Cheshire Website. Retrieval date: 26 September 2007.
In the churchyard is the 18th-century base of a sundial, which is listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war graves of a British and a Canadian soldier of World War I.
He died in Great Wigborough, Essex on 5 August 1999 at the age of 85 and was buried in the churchyard of St Stephen. The grave of Leonard Crossland in the churchyard of St Stephen.
He is buried in St Mark's Anglican Churchyard in Mandeville, Jamaica.
The Dukes of Westminster are buried in the adjacent Old Churchyard.
He is buried in Collace churchyard close to his Dunsinnan estate.
She died in 1702, and was also buried in Dalston churchyard.
He was apparently buried with St. Cadfan in the local churchyard.
He died there in 1869, and was buried in Brislington churchyard.
Its churchyard became the parish graveyard, as St Mary's was full.
His body was cremated and his ashes interred in Rampton Churchyard.
Haddington War Memorial stands at the west entrance to the churchyard.
The churchyard was the most shamefully kept he had ever seen.
The churchyard remains in use.Colston Bassett site Retrieved 5 October 2016.
He was buried in the ancient churchyard of St. Mary's, Paddington.
She is buried in the churchyard of Theydon Bois in Essex.
She is buried in Restalrig Churchyard, just north of the church.
He was later buried in the adjacent churchyard, surrounding the building.
A total of 1,383 people were buried at St Luke's between 1825 and 1894, either in the churchyard or on the vaults under the building. The churchyard has been legally closed, so no further burials may take place there apart from cremated remains. Burials at St Luke's church and churchyard The northern (i.e. lower level) part of the Churchyard was given to Lambeth Council soon after the Second World War and converted into a memorial garden to remember those who died in that conflict.
War memorial on the south side of the churchyard Below the east window is a memorial to 64 victims of the Clifton Hall Colliery disaster who were buried in the churchyard. The churchyard also contains war graves of twelve service personnel of the Great War and four of the Second World War. CWGC Cemetery Report. Breakdown obtained from casualty record.
Sterne died in 1768 and was buried in the churchyard of St George's, Hanover Square. It has been alleged that Sterne's body was stolen after burial and sold to anatomists at Cambridge University. After being recognised, he was reinterred. His alleged skull was found after the churchyard was redeveloped and was transferred to Coxwold churchyard in 1969 by the Laurence Sterne Trust.
In the churchyard is the base of a churchyard cross, dating from the medieval period. It is constructed in ironstone and consists of an octagonal base and two steps and a square socket stone. It is listed at Grade II. Also in the churchyard are ten tombs, headstones, and groups of headstones, all of which are listed at Grade II.
One feature of oddness is at the west side of the churchyard, where Lothian Road has been widened over the churchyard (in 1930) by the City Architect, Ebenezer James MacRae, but due to its greater height over the churchyard, has been done so on pillars, so the graves still remain beneath the road surface. The eastern pavement therefore traverses these graves.
The lychgate at the entrance to the churchyard, and the adjoining churchyard wall, are listed at Grade II. The lychgate is in stone with a slate roof, and is dated 1909. There are gargoyles at the corners, and a cross on the ridge. The churchyard contains the war graves of three service personnel of World War I, and seven of World War II.
In the churchyard is an ashlar sundial consisting of three round steps and a baluster shaft. It dates probably from the 18th century, and is listed at Grade II. Also in the churchyard, and listed at Grade II is a monument dated 1780 consisting of a carved headstone. The churchyard cross, dating from 1897 was designed by Paley, Austin and Paley.
Mee, Arthur (1937) Cornwall. London: Hodder & Stoughton; p. 212 The two Trethewy Monuments in St Hermes' churchyard > In the churchyard, approximately 5 Metres South Of Tower, lie the Grade II > listed buildings of Two Trethewy Monnuments.
The main churchyard contains the Commonwealth war graves of three British service personnel of World War I and two of World War II, and its churchyard extension three war graves of British soldiers of World War I.
It was set up in the churchyard in 1879 but moved to a different position in the churchyard in 1893.Langdon, A. G. (2002) Stone Crosses in Mid Cornwall; 2nd ed. Federation of Old Cornwall Societies; p.
The major sight is a Romanesque church of SS Peter and Paul from late 12th century with a churchyard. The walls of the churchyard have a unique arcade decoration with paintings and moralizing verses from 19th century.
In the churchyard, there are the remains of a medieval sandstone cross. It has a rectangular base and shaft. The churchyard also contains the war graves of a British and an Australian soldier of World War I.
He is buried in the churchyard of Crosthwaite Parish Church in Cumbria.
The medieval cross in the churchyard has its own Grade II listing.
There are approximately 166 marked graves listing 367 names in the Churchyard.
He was buried in St. Helena's Episcopal Churchyard at Beaufort, South Carolina.
She is buried in the churchyard of St. George's Church in Kelmscott.
The entrance gate to the churchyard is a Grade II listed building.
The churchyard is well maintained, however, and is still used for burials.
He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's, Great Bealings, Suffolk.
He is commemorated by a monument in St. Lawrence's parish churchyard, Lechlade.
He is buried with his parents in St Nicholas Churchyard in Aberdeen.
He died in 1750 and was buried at Viskinge churchyard in Kalundborg.
In the churchyard is the remains of a 15th century stone cross.
He was buried in his family vault in the churchyard at Wellington.
Father Weston is buried at SS Peter and Paul Churchyard, Crosby, Merseyside.
He is buried in the churchyard of All Saints at Selworthy, Somerset.
He was a slaveholder himself. Stringfellow is buried in the Stevensburg churchyard.
The churchyard contains war graves of three soldiers of World War I.
He died in 1832 in Lewes. His tomb is in Glynde churchyard.
He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary, Thornham Parva, Suffolk.
The churchyard contains a war grave of a World War II airman.
The churchyard wall dates to 1839 and is also Grade II listed.
The grave is immediately on the right as one enters the churchyard.
He was buried in Ipsden churchyard, Oxfordshire, close to the family home.
John is buried in the churchyard, along with some other family members.
He died in Doylestown, Pennsylvania and was buried in the Presbyterian Churchyard.
His grave lies in the churchyard of St Mary's, Thorpe Morieux, Suffolk.
On ca. three barrels of land around the church was landscaped a churchyard, which was surrounded by a wall of shaped stones towards south and west, a stone dike towards north and east, and planted with coniferous trees along the rest of its northern rim. After the newly buried coffins from the old churchyard which could stand it were moved there the night before, the new churchyard was consecrated November 28, 1872 by Bishop Brammer and the parish's priest Alfred Hjalmar Elmqvist. A mortuary was built on the churchyard in 1930.
Truro: Joseph Pollard; pp. 211 & 357-59 Andrew Langdon (1994) records four crosses. These are the Lanherne cross, the churchyard cross, Bodrean Cross and Mawgan Cross. The churchyard cross is the best preserved medieval lantern cross in Cornwall.
Etretat Churchyard is a war grave in Étretat, Normandy, France, maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. It was originally the civil graveyard of Église Notre-Dame (the Church of Our Lady) in that town. Etretat Churchyard itself contains 264 Commonwealth and one German burial from the First World War. Etretat Churchyard Extension contains 282 First World War burials and four from the Second World War.
Llangelynnin Church, from outside the walled churchyard The walled Holy Well, with stone bench visible on the left The churchyard is walled, with an arched entrance in the eastern wall. Today it is almost devoid of tree growth, but this was not always so. The churchyard contains a fair number of gravestones, dating back to the 14th century. These graves were not dug in any uniform layout.
The old east window of St Enghenedl's now faces west, and the bellcote is in the middle of the roof. The churchyard, gravestones, and lychgate of St Enghenedl's remain in their original location, but the churchyard is now overgrown.
Old crosses 1896, p. 259 Fig. a4: the cross in Quethiock churchyard There is a Cornish cross in the churchyard of Quethiock. An account of its discovery was published in the Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall; vol.
Alfred Gibbs is buried in Saint Mary's Episcopal Churchyard in Portsmouth, Rhode Island.
The churchyard contains the "unusually fine" base and stump of a medieval cross.
In 1823 he died near Weaversville; interment was in East Allen Presbyterian Churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War II.
The churchyard contains the war grave of an airman of World War II.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two airmen of World War II.
The structure has a large churchyard and with a low wall and cross.
He died 25 November 1767, and was buried in Heigham churchyard, near Norwich.
He died at Rochford, Essex and is buried in St. Margaret's Churchyard, Downham.
He is buried in the churchyard of the Episcopal Church at Leesburg, Virginia.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I.
He was buried in St. Peter's Episcopal churchyard in Perth Amboy, New Jersey.
On his death he was buried in the churchyard of St Mary, Tarleton.
Loxton is buried, next to his son Peter, in Bere Regis churchyard, Dorset.
Hayne died in Charleston in 1867; interment was in St. Michael's Churchyard, Charleston.
He died in Columbia in 1870; interment was in the First Presbyterian Churchyard.
He died on 23 February 1815 and is buried in St Gluvias Churchyard.
Both men are buried in the churchyard of St. Mary the Virgin, Upavon.
The churchyard contains the war grave of an airman of World War II.
A mausoleum to the Grace family was built in the churchyard in 1818.
The churchyard contains the war graves of five soldiers of World War I.
He, and his wife Margarita, are buried in the churchyard in Battle Abbey.
Steve Churchyard was featured in the book Behind the Glass by Howard Massey.
The Duke's body was buried in the churchyard at Edensor, Derbyshire, near Chatsworth.
In the churchyard is Coychurch Celtic Cross-Shaft, which is a Scheduled Monument.
Burton died in Milford and is buried there at the Christ Episcopal Churchyard.
His interment was in the churchyard of the Congregational Church in Phippsburg Center.
Benedict is buried in the churchyard of St Pancras Old Church in London.
Peter Mojuntin was buried in the churchyard of St Michael Church, Donggongon, Penampang.
Croudace died in Worthing and was buried in St Peters churchyard in Linchmere.
Ornate fragments from the earlier, ruined medieval structure are found in the churchyard.
Brown died in 1644 and is buried in the old churchyard in Luing.
He was interred in the family plot at St. John's Churchyard, Halifax, Virginia.
His remains were interred in East Cowes parish churchyard on 23 August 1902.
Joseph Hocking's ashes were buried in the churchyard of St Stephen-in-Brannel.
In 1939 Impington Village College opened, the infants were moved to New School Road and this school closed. The old school's foundation stone found a resting place in Impington churchyard; in 2005 it was built into the new churchyard wall.
The churchyard also contains the war grave of a Royal Field Artillery soldier of World War I. The hay meadows belonging to the church are a Site of Biological Importance. Outside the churchyard is a restored stable dating from about 1700.
Finlay was married twice and had two children, Alec and Ailie. He died in Edinburgh. He is buried with his parents and wife in Abercorn Churchyard in West Lothian. The grave lies in the extreme south-east corner of the churchyard.
Church of the Holy Trinity at Tattershall website Properly it is the Church of St Martin Without, Stamford Baron. Burials include Dutch portrait painter William Wissing (1687), in the churchyard, and Daniel Lambert (1809), in the detached part of the churchyard.
He died in Edinburgh and is buried in St Cuthbert's Churchyard at the west end of Princes Street. His stone, in the southwest section of the churchyard on a west facing wall, is plain and says nothing of his work.
All these structures are listed at Grade II. In the churchyard is one of the oldest gravestones in Cheshire, dated 1596. The churchyard also contains the war graves of eight soldiers and a Royal Navy sailor of World War I.
The churchyard also contains five Commonwealth war graves, of three British Army soldiers of World War I and a British Army officer and Royal Navy sailor of World War II.Eccleshall (Holy Trinity) churchyard Commonwealth War Graves Commission, accessed 13 June 2019.
The churchyard walls, gateways and railings to south-east and north of the church are listed at Grade II. The churchyard contains the war graves of fourteen service personnel, eleven of World War I and three of World War II.
William Meade Lindsley "Billy" Fiske III stained glass window at Boxgrove Priory Fiske is buried in St Mary and St Blaise churchyard in Boxgrove, Sussex."Cemetery Photos" "Boxglove (SS. Mary and Blaise) Churchyard." Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved: 20 June 2010.
The body of the murderer Ruth Ellis was reburied in the churchyard extension of St Mary's Church. The headstone in the churchyard was inscribed "Ruth Hornby 1926–1955". Her son, Andy, destroyed the headstone shortly before he committed suicide in 1982.
Penguin Books it burnt down in 1981. One of the crosses in the churchyard There are two Cornish crosses in the parish; both are in the churchyard. There is also a cross base at Nangitha.Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses.
In the churchyard is a stone sundial from the late 18th century consisting of a vase baluster on a round step sitting on a square flagstone base with a copper dial and gnomon. Just outside the churchyard wall are stocks probably dating from the early 18th century. The churchyard also contains the war graves of six British servicemen, four of World War I and two of World War II.
Around the church are three structures, each of which has been listed at Grade II. These consist of the walls, gates and gate piers to the northeast and south of the churchyard, a gate, gate piers and adjoining walls to the east of the churchyard, and gate piers and gates to the northeast of the chancel. The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I.
Nowakowski, Jacqueline A.; Thomas, Charles (1992) Grave News From Tintagel: an Account of a Second Season of Archaeological Excavations at Tintagel Churchyard ... Truro: Cornwall Archaeological Unit. There are modern stained glass windows, three modern copies of Old Master paintings, and a Roman milestone (described above under Antiquities). The parish war memorial stands at the western end of the churchyard and a modern churchyard cross (c. 1910) near the south entrance.
In the churchyard stands the Sotheby Cross. John Soteby was born in Pocklington in 1390, and the Sotheby Cross was made for him, or in his memory, in the 15th century. It was rediscovered buried in the churchyard in 1835, since when it had stood inside the church. In 2006 it was reinstated in the churchyard, its location determined by reference to a drawing in an architectural journal from the 1880s.
The cross in the churchyard Arthur Langdon (1896) recorded two Cornish crosses and two cross bases (at Tredinnick Cross and Reperry)For more details of Reperry Cross, see Lanivet in the parish. One cross is in the churchyard and the other is half a cross head at Treffry. The cross in the churchyard is ornamented on all four sides of the shaft.Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses.
St Mellons Parish Church was granted Grade I listed status in 1963 owing to it retaining the majority of its medieval fabric. The base of the cross in the churchyard was granted Grade II status in 1977 to group it with the rest of the monuments on the church site as a "vestigial medieval churchyard cross for group value with the church and other listed items in St Mellons churchyard".
In the churchyard is a sundial was formerly in the garden of Bold Hall and was given to the church when the New Hall was demolished in 1899, and a column some in height which is part of an old churchyard cross. In the southeast corner of the churchyard is a former bridewell dating from 1827 and constructed from sandstone with a slate roof. It is a Grade II listed building.
The base of the track has been cut through the slate rock and there are visible wheel ruts. This indicates track was heavily used, possibly to collect sand and seaweed to be used as fertiliser, and possibly for smuggling. A cross now in the churchyard was mentioned by Arthur Langdon (1896) as being in a field west of the churchyard. In 1919 the rector had it erected in the churchyard.
Cross in churchyard A pair of 18th- century gate piers at the entrance of the churchyard are listed Grade II. On their fronts are carvings of skull and crossbones. In the churchyard is a 15th or 16th-century cross base in sandstone ashlar. It consists of a square cross base and an octagonal shaft on a stepped plinth. A 20th-century wooden circular cross has been set on the shaft.
There is a Cornish cross in the cemetery on the other side of the road from the churchyard. An account of it was given in the Antiquarian Magazine, August 1883. Part of it was once used as a footbridge; it was afterwards used in the churchyard wall but the parts were reunited and repaired; both the head and the shaft are ornamented. There is also a cross base in the churchyard.
Part of the original vicarage's garden became an extension of the churchyard at St Margaret's Church, Rottingdean. An ancient churchyard surrounds St Wulfran's Church, Ovingdean—a church with Saxon origins. Several tombs at Patcham's All Saints Church are Grade II-listed. After St Leonard's Church in Aldrington fell into ruin, its old churchyard may have been bought as private land. It was re-established in 1882 by the incumbent vicar.
The church was Grade I listed in 1951, being of exceptional architectural and historical interest. In addition, the north, east and west walls of the churchyard and the walls from the north of the churchyard to Barnard's Tower were Grade II listed in 1981, and the gates at the south-west entrance along with the railings to the south and west sides of the churchyard were Grade II listed in 2005.
He died on 1 October 1831 and was buried in Old St Pancras churchyard.
He is buried in the churchyard of St Michael and All Angels', Bugbrooke, Northamptonshire.
Martin died at Seaford and is buried there in the St. Luke's Episcopal Churchyard.
He was buried in Greenwich churchyard, where a monument was erected to his memory.
There is also a memorial in Balmaclellan churchyard where Paterson lived for many years.
There is the churchyard, the old and the new cemetery and a manor park.
Godfrey Wedgwood died at Idlerocks and is buried All Saints Churchyard in Moddershall, Staffordshire.
Olivier died in 1948, after suffering three strokes, and was interred in Wilton churchyard.
Gray's Family and Life (2) § 9. An Elegy in a Country Churchyard. (3) § 10.
He is buried near the south-west corner of St John's churchyard in Edinburgh.
In the churchyard there is the stump of a late 13th century stone cross.
The base of a crucifix sits in the churchyard; the crucifix is now missing.
The churchyard contains war graves of two World War II Royal Air Force personnel.
He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary, Radcliffe, on 22 December 1922.
The churchyard contains the war graves of four British soldiers of World War I.
Over 200 graves were found in the churchyard and 60 around the friars' choir.
The war memorial in the churchyard incorporates part of a large mediaeval stone cross.
He is buried in the south-west corner of St Johns Churchyard in Edinburgh.
He died on July 11, 1840, and is buried in St. Michael's Episcopal churchyard.
He was buried in the churchyard of St. Peter, Tiverton, on 3 April 1689.
He was buried in the churchyard of St. Mary Paddington, London.D'Oench 1980, page xi.
The grave of the film-maker Derek Jarman (1942–1994) is in the churchyard.
Derkert died on 28April 1973 in Lidingö, and is buried in the Lidingö churchyard.
RSPH He lived at Ridge Cottage, Finchampstead, Berkshire. He died there, aged 88, on 29 May 1920 and is buried in the churchyard of St James in the village. The grave of Alfred Stowell Jones in the churchyard of St James, Finchampstead.
One of the World War I graves in the churchyard The churchyard contains war graves of three British Army personnel of World War I. CWGC Cemetery Report, details from casualty record. There is also a well, said to be associated with Saint Cedd.
Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall; 2nd ed. Penguin Books; p. 179 There are two stone crosses in the churchyard. One is a Latin wayside cross which was found in use as a gatepost in one of the glebe fields near the churchyard in 1932.
In the churchyard, to the northeast of the church, is the Hopper Mausoleum, which is a Grade I listed building. Also in the churchyard are three Grade II listed buildings; these are a hearse house, the Chatt headstone, and the Gibson headstone.
The Christie burial plot in Muckhart churchyard Christie died of leukemia on the 29 January 1949 at Strathearn Road, Edinburgh. She is buried in the Christie family plot at Muckhart churchyard, east of Cowden. Her gardener Matsuo lies just to the south.
The church dates from the beginning of the 13th century. The chancel and nave were rebuilt in 1863 by Thomas Chambers Hine. The churchyard contains three Grade II listed chest tombs, and the lychgate and churchyard walls are also Grade II listed.
In the churchyard is a sundial dating probably from the 18th century. It consists of a baluster-pedestal on a stone base. It is listed at Grade II. Also listed at Grade II are the churchyard walls, railings, gates and gate piers.
Prisoners' graves in Magleby churchyard Fortunately the local inhabitants managed to rescue 351 of the prisoners. The other 19 could not be saved and died of disease or starvation during the next few days. Some of them are buried in nearby Magleby churchyard.
"Cullingsburgh, Voe of" Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 17 January 2010. The Pictish-era Bressay Stone was found near this churchyard in 1852. It dates from the 8th–9th century AD, and a replica of the original was erected inside the churchyard in 2000.
He died in 1896 in Baschurch, Shropshire, and was buried in the churchyard at Llanyblodwel.
In the churchyard is an 18th-century monument that has been listed at Grade II.
His remains were later reinterred in the churchyard of St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Edenton.
There were other children, but they died young, and were buried in St James's churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Loyal Regiment soldier of World War I.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Artillery soldier of World War II.
The churchyard extension contains the war graves of two soldiers of the Second World War.
He is buried in the churchyard of Church of St. James the Less in Philadelphia.
Hudson's body was retrieved from the Matterhorn glacier and was buried in the Zermatt churchyard.
1758 tombstone The churchyard contains a cemetery with graves and tombstones dating back to 1715.
John Taylor died on 24 September 1891, aged 51, and was buried in Dunston Churchyard.
The listed buildings comprise a church with a cross in the churchyard, farmhouses and dwellings.
The churchyard contains the war graves of 18 Commonwealth service personnel of World War II.
Smith, John G. The Old Churchyard; The twa mice, and miscellaneous poems (1862) Second ed.
The churchyard contains war graves of a soldier and an airman of World War I.
Many of the other chest tombs in the churchyard have been designated as listed buildings.
Also in the churchyard is the war grave of a First World War Canadian soldier.
Samuel Palmer died in Redhill, Surrey, and is buried with his wife in Reigate churchyard.
Other stones were incorporated into a wall on the Carrington Lido side of the churchyard.
Hargrove died at Knaresborough on 5 December 1818, and was buried in the churchyard there.
The property is not open to the public but can be seen from the churchyard.
The Earl of Offaly is buried in the churchyard of All Saints' Church, Sutton Courtenay.
The churchyard is surrounded by mature lime trees and bounded by a flint boundary wall.
Elizabeth is buried on the south side of the churchyard of Christ Church in Philadelphia.
He is buried in St Comgall's Church of Ireland churchyard, Newtownbutler, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.
She died in 1656. The door in the churchyard wall was blocked up in 1670.
Another 26 are in the churchyard of the neighbouring parish of All Saints, Middleton Stoney.
Quentin Bell is buried in the churchyard of St. Peter's Church, West Firle, East Sussex.
She was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's Church in Waterperry on 14 April.
Clarke died in November 1681 and was buried in St Mary’s churchyard, Bury St Edmunds.
Its churchyard continued in use until 1796 when it was swept away by a flood.
The churchyard contains war graves of three Royal Engineers soldiers of the First World War.
The churchyard contains a yew tree which is thought to be over 2,500 years old.
Memorial plaque. and buried in an unmarked pit in the churchyard of St Margaret's, Westminster.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a World War II Royal Air Force officer.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Cheshire Regiment soldier of World War I.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Dragoons soldier of World War I.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Artillery soldier of World War II.
Following the service the body was interred in the family vault at Malew Parish Churchyard.
He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary and All Saints in Lambourne, Essex.
A 15th-century stone cross in the churchyard also has Grade I listed building status.
They consist of a wooden board supported on two small stones. Moreover, this churchyard contain two burials in the incident of World War II.A Twin CWGC HeadstoneCWGC: Horsted Keynes (St. Giles) Churchyard Many members of the Michelborne family of Broadhurst Manor are buried in the churchyard. Another family who lived locally, at Birch Grove House in the northeast of the parish, were the descendants of Daniel MacMillan, founder of the Macmillan publishing house.
In the churchyard are six structures that are listed at Grade II. These are the gates and gate piers to the churchyard, a sandstone sundial dating from the mid-18th century, the tombchests of John Minshull and his daughter, William and Elizabeth Hilton, William Sandbach and others, and the tombstone of Beatrix Hollinsworth. The churchyard also contains the war graves of three British soldiers and a Canadian Army soldier of World War I.
The churchyard has seven gravestones that were discovered in the walls of the previous church. Six of them date from between the 9th and 11th centuries, and the seventh is from the 12th or 13th century. The doorway from the old church, dating from the 15th century, has been reused as an entrance to the churchyard. A carved stone human head, from the 12th century, has been inserted into the north wall of the churchyard.
He recommended an order be made to close the burialground to new interments, save for certain exceptions. The order was made in 1882. In 1930 bodies remaining in the churchyard were exhumed and buried in Southern Cemetery, Manchester. By the 1980s, when the site of the church was excavated and the churchyard landscaped, the churchyard contained 380 gravestones some of which were used to make a path and others were left in place.
Pyramidal tomb of the stonemason John Bryan. In the churchyard Painswick has a fine collection of chest tombs and monuments from the early 17th century onwards, carved in local stone by local craftsmen. The oldest tomb, with fossils on the top, is of William Loveday, yeoman, dated 1623.St. Mary's Painswick, Church leaflet, obtained July 2008 Clifton-Taylor describes the churchyard, with its tombs and yews, as "the grandest churchyard in England".
In the churchyard is a sandstone sundial dating probably from the 18th century with a brass plate and gnomon which is listed Grade II. Also listed Grade II are the Hodgson tomb chest dating from the early 18th century, and part of the churchyard wall, the steps leading to the gate and the gate piers. In the southwest corner of the churchyard is the war grave of a World War II airman.
The churchyard has been a burial site for well over a thousand years. In 1765 a turnpike cut through some of the ancient burial ground, and in 1954 improvements to the then A46 took a further part of the churchyard. It was during these excavations that the Swallow Giant was unearthed - a man, possibly a Viking warrior, who stood between and tall. Parts of the churchyard were levelled in 1970, causing damage to some gravestones.
A scheme drawn up by the Church Commissioners to sell the former church for residential use was approved by an Order in Council on 11 October 1977. The churchyard continues to be maintained by the Church of England. In 1982, some repair work was carried out on the boundary walls of the churchyard and new gates installed. Some memorials from the former church were mounted onto a new wall in the churchyard.
The churchyard of Vepriai, Lithuania In Christian countries a churchyard is a patch of land adjoining or surrounding a church, which is usually owned by the relevant church or local parish itself. In the Scots language and in Scottish English this can also be known as a kirkyard. While churchyards can be any patch of land on church grounds, historically, they were often used as graveyards (burial places). CHURCHYARD ADJACENT TO St.MARY'S FORANE CHURCH, KORATTY.
The churchyard of St. Peter's was the final resting place of many members of the parish, which in the 19th century grew to be the largest Church of Ireland parish in Dublin. It was also used as a burial place by the Huguenot community. The churchyard continued in use until about 1883. After the church was closed the churchyard was taken over by W & R Jacob's biscuit factory as a recreation ground for its staff.
John Brown (31 December 1795 – 23 October 1890)The Churchyard of St Peter and St Paul, Tring, Hertfordshire. Compiled by Ronald Geoffrey Spiers, 2004. PDF via "Churchyard Guide" at St Peter & St Paul – Tring accessed 24 April 2017. was a brewer in Tring, Hertfordshire.
To the south east of the churchyard, next door to the village blacksmith, Wraxall once had a public house called "Remember Lot's Wife." It was demolished by Colonel George Gibbs, in about 1920, when he gave the lower churchyard to the village as an extension.
A fine cross in the cemetery adjoining the churchyard was found in use as a footbridge near Trevear and moved to the churchyard in 1878. About 1890 it was moved to its present position.Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses. Truro: Joseph Pollard; pp.
Richardson was buried near her maternal grandmother Rachel Kempson in the churchyard. Richardson's aunt, Lynn Redgrave, was buried in the same churchyard on 8 May 2010, near Richardson and Kempson.Family, friends say goodbye to Redgrave CBC News 8 May 2010 Retrieved:8 May 2010.
Frindsbury Church from Rochester Castle As a result of quarrying, the church now stands isolated above chalk cliffs, visible from much of the Medway valley. It is surrounded by graveyards. The West Churchyard is managed by Medway Council and the East Churchyard by the PCC.
In the churchyard is a sundial dated 1702. Also in the churchyard, to the west of the church, is a war grave of a Royal Welsh Fusiliers soldier of World War I. To the south of the church are the earthworks of Pulford Castle.
The grave of Robin Bush in the churchyard of St Nicholas's Church in Corfe in Somerset Robin Bush died on 22 June 2010, aged 67, after a long period of illness. He is buried in the churchyard of St Nicholas's Church, Corfe, in Somerset.
Gravestones with carvings of cross are seen in the churchyard and one of them is of 7th-century vintage. A war memorial in the churchyard, commemorates the names of Llangaffo residents who were killed or missing in World War I and World War II.
The wellhouse is a Grade II listed building. Also in the churchyard is a Cornish cross which consists of a head and upper part of the shaft. These were found built into the churchyard wall in 1863.Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses.
In the churchyard is a sandstone cross shaft dating probably from the 16th century. the upper part of which is carved. It is listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war grave of a Duke of Wellington's Regiment soldier of World War I.
In the churchyard is a Grade II listed table tomb to members of the Bowness family with dates in the 18th century. Also in the churchyard is a stone sundial dated 1747 set on a medieval cross-base. It is also listed at Grade II.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Garrison Artillery soldier of World War I.
Other outbuildings were erected in the churchyard, bounded by a stone wall from the princely court.
He is buried in the churchyard of the church of St Peter & St Paul in Bardwell.
The old churchyard where Middleton was buried survives as a public park in Elephant and Castle.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a First World War soldier of the Cheshire Regiment.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Air Force officer of World War I.
Evnas died in 1906 at the early age of 36. He was buried at Penderyn Churchyard.
Johnson, O. (1998). The Sussex Tree Book. Pomegranate Press, The Jevington churchyard elm, seafordnaturalhistory.org.ukJevington Elm, flickr.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Second World War Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve officer.
The churchyard also contains the war grave of a Royal Artillery soldier of World War II.
The garrison surrendered shortly afterwards. MacEgan's body was later buried in the local churchyard at Aghinagh.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Garrison Artillery soldier of World War I.
He died of peritonitis on Easter Sunday 1918 and was buried in Brockenhurst (St Nicholas) churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war grave of an Essex Regiment soldier of the First World War.
He died in Charleston on 18 August 1798 and is buried in St. Phillip's Churchyard there.
Both are interred in the churchyard of the Church of St. James the Less in Philadelphia.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier and an airman of World War II.
Two chest tombs in the churchyard dating from the 18th century are listed at Grade II.
In 1862, Miller died in Morristown, New Jersey. He was interred in St. Peter's Parish Churchyard.
In the churchyard are three groups of monuments, each group comprising a Grade II listed building.
He was buried on 6 February in the churchyard of St Clement's Church, Leigh-on-Sea.
He died on 4 December 1916 in Eastry, Kent and is buried in the local churchyard.
He died in Doylestown, Pennsylvania and is interred in the Hilltown Baptist Churchyard in Chalfont, Pennsylvania.
Langdon (1896) records six stone crosses in the parish, of which two are in the churchyard.
All that remains of the grounds of the Abbey is the parish church's small neglected churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier and an airman of World War II.
They were buried at the churchyard of Nederlangbroek. All of the seven children survived into adulthood.
He is buried in the churchyard and his grave has an inscribed stone installed in 1932.
Ward died on died September 19, 1816, and is buried in Trinity Churchyard, New York City.
James Honeyman-Scott (1956-1982), the Pretenders guitarist, is buried in the churchyard. Find-a-grave.
She died in 1992 and is buried in the churchyard with her husband at Hinton Waldrist.
Victorian admiral Sir John Baird died in Wootton in 1908, he is buried in the churchyard.
Pinch died on 11 March 1827 in Bath and is buried at St Mary's Churchyard, Bathwick.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a First World War soldier of the Cheshire Regiment.
196 He died in Mortlake and was buried in the churchyard of St. Peter, Fordcombe, Kent.
He died in Cambridge, England, on his 56th birthday, and is buried in Grantchester Parish Churchyard.
Today, there is a tombstone located in the southwest quadrant of the churchyard bearing Mulligan's name.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Garrison Artillery soldier of World War I.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Garrison Artillery soldier who died in 1918.
He was buried in the churchyard at Llandegai, Caernarfonshire, near to the grave of Bishop Bethell.
Both are buried in the churchyard of the Episcopal Church of the Holy Trinity at Pitlochry.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier and three airmen of World War II.
The Gaelic poets Iain Lom and Dòmhnall Mac Fhionnlaigh nan Dàn are buried in the churchyard.
Bagnold died in Rottingdean in 1981, aged 91, and is interred at St Margaret's churchyard there.
Barclays Bank, 11 Churchyard Side, Nantwich 11 Churchyard Side is a Victorian bank in Gothic Revival style, in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. It stands on the town square, opposite the parish church (at ). Dating from 1876, the bank was designed by local architect Thomas Bower as a branch of the Midland Bank, and later became a branch of Barclays. It is listed at grade II. 11 Churchyard Side is one of three banks in the town dating from the Victorian era which are listed buildings; the others are the former District Bank, designed by Alfred Waterhouse, also on Churchyard Side, and the former Savings Bank on Welsh Row.
The churchyard is an oasis of greenery in the middle of Charleston, accessed via an inviting walkway from King Street or through gates on Archdale. It is also now part of Charleston's Gateway Walk. Despite myths to the contrary, nobody famous is buried in the churchyard, but the gravesites and other areas are planted with a variety of trees, bushes and plants such that there are flowers blooming at every season of the year. Camellias and roses grace the area around the sundial adjacent to a monument honoring Samuel and Caroline Gillman. The churchyard is part of Charleston’s Gateway WalkGage Hall, South of the churchyard.
An iron fence was installed in 1900 to prevent cattle from gaining entrance and in 1923 Sir Oswald Mosley, 5th Baronet extended the churchyard with a grant of land. Floodlighting was installed in 1996 and a millennium yew planted in 2000. One of the memorials in the churchyard, to George Ridgway, and some of the railings, with a gate, were separately granted grade II listed building protection on 26 March 1986. The south-west of the churchyard included St. Mary's Grammar School until the churchyard was remodelled in 1837, with the boys' entrance moved to the southern side to save vandalism to the windows and gravestones.
37 shows one of the ornamented crosses in the churchyard Brane cross Arthur Langdon (1896) recorded the existence of eight stone crosses in the parish, including four in the churchyard. One is at Anjarden; one of the crosses in the churchyard was found at Trannack and another at Sellan. Two more crosses in the churchyard are ornamented; the heads are unusual and the only ones of their type and the shafts are ornamented, in one case on all four sides and in the other on three sides. These two crosses are Hiberno-Saxon and both have the same unusual shape of the heads, with a crucifixus on one side.
In the churchyard is a 15th-century cross. The shaft is high, however the head of the cross is missing. The wall around the churchyard which separates it from Enmore Castle was probably built in the 18th century. The monuments include the Studdier, and Waterman family monuments.
The pilot, P/O NP van der Merwe, was from Salisbury in Southern Rhodesia. He and two other crew are buried in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission section of St Mary's parish churchyard, Upper Heyford. The fourth is buried in St Andrew's parish churchyard, Kingsbury, northwest London.
The primary churchyard contains the war graves of eight service personnel of the First World War and three of the Second World War, and the churchyard extension, in Heath Lane, those of ten service personnel of the First World War and four of the Second World War.
Grave in the churchyard of St Martha on the Hill near Guildford, Surrey She died in 1973 at 65 Chelsea Square, London SW3. She was interred in the churchyard of Saint Martha on the Hill in Guildford, Surrey, alongside her second husband (and later her son).
His grandson was the industrialist George Elkington. He died at Hay House on 17 October 1806 and was buried in the churchyard at All Saints, Madeley on 20 October. A monument to him in All Saints churchyard, Stretton- on-Dunsmore, calls him a "pioneer of land drainage".
In the churchyard is a four-holed Cornish cross which was found in 1952 buried in the churchyard. The lower part of the shaft and the base were made in 1954.Beacham, Peter & Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014) Cornwall. (The Buildings of England.) New Haven: Yale University Press; p.
Stutthof memorial stone in Magleby churchyard In the churchyard, the graves of Russian and Polish prisoners from the Stutthof concentration camp can be seen. They died in May 1945 shortly after arriving in Denmark on an old river barge with 351 others who survived the ordeal.
Sir Thomas Slade died on 23 February 1771 in Bath, and is buried in St Clement's churchyard, Grimwade Street, Ipswich. His will was proven on 19 March 1771 (Prob. 11/965). His wife Hannah and her parents were buried next to the west boundary of the churchyard.
In 1863 six graves cut from chalk and dressed with sandstone were found in the churchyard, and were probably of Saxon date.Cox, J. Charles (1916) Lincolnshire p. 239; Methuen & Co. Ltd. There is also a Grade II listed cross in the churchyard, dating from the 14th century.
The churchyard was bounded by a flint wall in 1829 and was extended to the north in 1928. Most of the headstones in the churchyard date from the 18th century onwards. The lychgate was taken in 1977 from West Harling Church to form a new entrance.
A place in the Fårö churchyard was prepared for him under heavy secrecy. Although he was buried on the island of Fårö, his name and date of birth were inscribed under his wife's name on a tomb at Roslagsbro churchyard, Norrtälje Municipality, several years before his death.
It runs from the east end of St Mary's Churchyard to Weekday Cross. Around 1681 a row of houses was constructed on the south side of St Mary's Churchyard. They existed until they were pulled down around 1792 when the street was widened. A new wall was constructed along the south side of the churchyard. In 1799, the name of a portion of the street between Short Hill and St Mary's Gate was called "St Mary's Church Side".
In and near to the churchyard are four structures that are listed at Grade II. The churchyard wall of sandstone and brick dates partly from the late medieval period with additions made in the 18th and 19th centuries. It incorporates a water trough. The lychgate to the churchyard was erected in 1920 as a war memorial to the First World War. It is oak-framed on a sandstone plinth, with an oak crucifix on the front gable.
George Orwell's headstone in All Saints' parish churchyard, showing his birth name The churchyard is the burial place of Eric Arthur Blair (1903–50), better known by his pen name George Orwell. As a child he fished in a local stream. He requested to be buried in an English country churchyard of the nearest church to where he died. However, he died in London, and none of the local churches had any space in their graveyards.
Crabbie's Warehouse in Great Junction Street follows the line of the French fortification As this was the first military conflict of the reign, Elizabethan writers called the siege the "School of War", a title used by Thomas Churchyard for his poem narrating the action of the siege.Thomas Churchyard, Churchyard's Chips concerning Scotland, Constable, London (1817), 88–115, : Goldwyn, Merril Harvey, 'Some Unpublished Manuscripts of Thomas Churchyard', in Studies in Philology, vol. 64 no. 2 (April 1967), p.
One is at Escalls and another at Sennen Green. Trevilley cross is one of only two crosses with a crucifixus figure on a cross carved onto the stone (there is a cross on the other side of the head). A cross on the churchyard wall came from a site near the Giant's Stone. A fine cross in the cemetery adjoining the churchyard was found in use as a footbridge near Trevear and moved to the churchyard in 1878.
The boundary wall of the churchyard, constructed in sandstone, is listed at Grade II. In the churchyard, as well as graves covering several centuries, there is a sundial from the 18th-century which records the time in Jerusalem, Rome and Plymouth in Massachusetts. The churchyard contains nine Commonwealth war graves, of six British soldiers of World War I and a British airman and two Canadian airmen of World War II. CWGC Cemetery report, breakdown obtained from casualty record.
The parish church and its churchyard date from the 13th century and the present church was rebuilt in 1789. The 18th century Manse, which stands at the entrance to the churchyard, was rebuilt in 1841. The ancient Tithe Barn adjoining the churchyard, one of only two remaining in Scotland, where once The Church's 10% was deposited, is now in the care of and protected by Historic Scotland. The parish is today conjoined with that of Mordington & Lamberton.
Outside the church is a lych gate dating from 1640 which Richards considers to be the best example in Cheshire. It has a self-closing mechanism to keep animals out of the churchyard. In the churchyard is a sundial dating from around 1730 which is listed at Grade II. Also listed at Grade II is the ashlar sandstone Simpson tomb dating from around 1831. In addition the churchyard contains the war graves of five soldiers of World War I.
63 Fig. e3: the churchyard cross at Roche There are two Cornish crosses in the parish of Roche: one in a meadow near the rectory garden is thought to be in situ; the other in the churchyard has ornament on the four sides of the shaft.Old crosses 1896, pp. 78–79 & 344–45 The churchyard cross is made of a massive piece of moorland granite; it has similarities to the cross in the graveyard at Merther Uny.
The churchyard contains the war grave of an Army Chaplain of World War I. CWGC Casualty Record.
The churchyard was closed to new burials in 1937 unless exclusive rights to a plot were held.
He was buried in the churchyard of Stretton, which he had laid out during his incumbency there.
Geddes died in Charleston on March 4, 1828, and was buried at the First Scots Presbyterian Churchyard.
Alfred is buried alongside his wife Mary Ellen (née Condren) in the churchyard of The Abbey, Erdington.
He died in 2009 and was buried in the churchyard of Haslum Church at Bærum in Akershus .
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers and a merchant sailor of World War I.
The grave of Charles Bowen Cooke (illustrated above right), a notable locomotive engineer, is in the churchyard.
A group of five headstones dated between 1735 and 1737 in the churchyard is listed Grade II.
Old Mortuary Chapel is a medieval Grade I listed building in St Mary's churchyard, Carew, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Parker was Episcopalian although he was buried near his parents in the First Presbyterian churchyard in Woodbridge.
He died in Trenton, New Jersey on August 29, 1807. Interment was in the First Presbyterian Churchyard.
The churchyard contains a war grave of a British soldier of World War I. CWGC Casualty record.
He died at Chelsea, 6 October 1846, and is buried in the churchyard of the old church.
McGee and his wife Sue (1921–2002) are buried at Saint Paul's Episcopal Churchyard in Woodville, Virginia.
He died on 20 February 1921 and was buried at St Mark's Churchyard at Highcliffe in Dorset.
He is buried in the Lindsay plot on the north side of the churchyard around Glasgow Cathedral.
She died in Edinburgh and is buried in St John's churchyard in one of the lower terraces.
5 His death occurred in Philadelphia in 1862. Interment in St. Peter’s Episcopal Churchyard in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
He was interred in the family vault in St. George's churchyard, Ramsgate.East Kent Times, 29 January 1908.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a soldier of World War I, east of the church.
The churchyard contains the war graves of five World War II airmen, four British and one Australian.
It is supposed that the residential buildings had occupied the area near the church and the churchyard.
In the churchyard is the grave of Peter Shakerley, founder of the chapel, who died in 1726.
James Finley died on January 6, 1795 in Rostraver, Pennsylvania and is buried at Rehoboth Presbyterian Churchyard.
Rent: £350 pa. This appears to relate to the outbuildings of Court House, next to the churchyard.
' Roddam was buried in the Roddam Mausoleum in the churchyard of St Michael's, Ilderton, in north Northumberland.
He died in London in 1797 at the age of 86 and was buried in Fulham churchyard.
Berkeley died in March 1870, aged 75; his body is buried in St Dunstan's churchyard in Cranford.
He died in Burlington, New Jersey, on February 25, 1831. He was interred in St. Mary's Churchyard.
He practiced law until his death in Prince Frederick, and is buried there at St. Paul's Churchyard.
The grave lies midway along the western boundary of the original churchyard, backing onto the Victorian cemetery.
The churchyard also contains the war grave, east of the church, of a Second World War soldier.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a World War I soldier of the Royal Field Artillery.
The artist Otto Modersohn (1865–1943) lived in Ottersberg and is buried in the churchyard at Quelkhorn.
There is a churchyard extension that contains the war grave of a soldier of World War I.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Field Artillery soldier of the First World War.
The Abdie stone is a Class I Pictish stone that stands in Abdie Churchyard, Lindores, Fife, Scotland.
He died at Warsaw in his 38th year, and was buried in the churchyard at Hillesden, Buckinghamshire.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Air Force officer of the First World War.
The Crosthwaite Free Grammar School, adjoining Crosthwaite churchyard, was an ancient institution, its date of foundation uncertain.
He remained there until his death on 16 August 1717 and was buried in the local churchyard.
The Alderton Press 2017 p.147 He was buried in Cheriton churchyard, near Folkestone, on 14 November.
Walmisley died in 1856, and is buried in the churchyard of St Andrew's Church, Fairlight, East Sussex.
Mortlake Quiet Gardens are based around the landscaped churchyard and are affiliated to The Quiet Garden Trust.
The churchyard contains a Grade II listed war memorial of 1921 by Walter Shirley, 11th Earl Ferrers.
He died at 114 West Campbell Street, Glasgow, 5 December 1862, and was buried in Dalton churchyard.
The traditional burial place of the Dukes is the Old Churchyard adjacent to St Mary's Church, Eccleston.
Basil Gray died on 10 June 1989 and is buried in the churchyard of Long Wittenham, Oxfordshire.
After leaving Congress, he resumed the practice of medicine, and served as member of the State board of education. He died in Burlington, New Jersey, April 30, 1905, and was interred in Saint Mary's Episcopal Churchyard in Burlington.St. Mary's Churchyard at The Political Graveyard. Accessed August 21, 2007.
The north tower, which functions as a portal was given by the church's patron Lord Fitzalan. The churchyard is typical of the country parish church, showing gravestones surrounding the building. A medieval tomb in the churchyard retains the remnants of a cross. The west window showing St.Catherine (wheel),St.
In the churchyard, to the south of the church is a sandstone cross base and part of its shaft, probably dating from the medieval era. The churchyard also contains the war graves of an airman of World War I, and an airman and a Wren of World War II.
An open-air service is held at the church every year in June. Several carved gravestones remain in the old churchyard, some from as early as 1665. A 'keep' is built into the churchyard wall, providing a place from which the church beadles could guard against body-snatchers.
The walls at the east side of the churchyard and the gate piers, with their pyramidal caps, probably date from the 18th century. In the churchyard is a yew tree said to be 2,500 years old. There is also the war grave of an airman of World War II.
A pair of table tombs in the churchyard are listed at Grade II. They are of yellow sandstone and date from the early 18th century. On one is an image of an hourglass, on the other a skull and crossbones. A sundial in the churchyard is dated 1793.
Auberon Waugh is buried in St Peter and Paul's churchyard. Evelyn Waugh is buried in a private plot of land next to the churchyard. The Anglican parish is part of the benefice of Bishop's Lydeard with Lydeard Saint Lawrence, Bagborough, Combe Florey and Cothelstone within the Taunton archdeaconry.
The church bell in the tower also dates back to the 14th century, but was recast in 1892. In the churchyard there is a well, which locals believe is haunted by a ghost. Legend has it that a ghost was seen in the churchyard before vanishing into a well.
Brown, H. M. (1976) A Century for Cornwall. Truro: Blackford; p. 40 In 1873, during Wingfield's tenure, the churchyard was extended on the northern side and a row of elm planted. The churchyard was extended on the southern side in 1882 and a lych-gate erected, opposite Posses Lane.
Outside the churchyard itself, close to the well, are the remains of a round building. A church terrier of 1742 refers to this, and to its use as a stable. Beyond the south-east corner of the churchyard there was once an old inn, demolished in the 19th century.
Above the chancel arch are rood-beam and corbels, but there is no trace of the rood-screen. The churchyard cross Externally there is a projection from the nave which would have been the stairway to the rood loft, which may have been blocked up at the time that the Kemeys monument was installed. In the churchyard there is a modern churchyard cross, standing on the original chamfered base with five steps. Above the porch entrance is a sundial dated 1718.
The lych gate built in 1891 is listed at Grade II. In the churchyard the box tomb of Samuel Brady dated 1814 is also listed at Grade II. In 1958 a cross base for twin Anglo-Saxon crosses was discovered in the churchyard. It is listed at Grade II, and is a Scheduled Monument. The churchyard also contains the war graves of six soldiers of World War I, and a Merchant Navy Master, an army officer, and a sergeant of World War II.
The steps function as a memorial for present-day mourners at St Chad's, in a small garden of remembrance. The churchyard is noted locally for its display of crocuses and other flowering bulbs in early springtime. Although the churchyard has been closed to burials since 1884, the ashes of cremated bodies have been interred in a small area to the west of the church since the 1950s. The paths in the churchyard incorporate gravestones that were set horizontally in 1973.
539 He is buried at St Mary and St Cuthbert Churchyard, Durham, where his alabaster effigy is located.
He died in 1930 and was buried in the churchyard of Saint Valery in Varengeville-sur-Mer, Normandy.
His funeral was at Winchester Cathedral on 22 June before he was buried at Chilworth Churchyard in Southampton.
Page died in Richmond, Virginia on October 11, 1808. He was interred in St. John's Churchyard in Richmond.
The churchyard contains the war graves of five soldiers and two Royal Navy sailors of World War II.
The Rev. Charles F. Robinson was the pastor from 1894 until 1924 and he is buried in churchyard.
The vicar is the Rev. James Alexander. A new church hall has recently been completed in the churchyard.
He is buried in Arlecdon churchyard. The Adams Recreation Ground at St Bees was created in his memory.
He died at Windsor Forges in 1848. He was buried in the Caernarvon Presbyterian Churchyard in Churchtown, Pennsylvania.
The churchyard contains a war grave of a Royal Engineers soldier of World War II. CWGC Casualty Record.
Most ducal graves can be found on the highest spot of Edensor's churchyard in the Cavendish family plot.
He died in Norfolk, Virginia, on May 10, 1804, and was interred there in Saint Paul's Episcopal Churchyard.
His head was exposed on the Netherbow (town gate) and afterwards buried with his body in Greyfriars churchyard.
European studies blog. British Library. Retrieved September 5, 2014. Wherry is buried in St John the Baptist Churchyard.
The listed buildings consist of two farmhouses, a farm building, a church, and a sundial in the churchyard.
Free-standing belltower was completed before 1679; it has historic lych-gate and wooden fence around the churchyard.
He died in London in 1903 and was buried in the churchyard of Church of All Saints, Wrington.
Evans died in 1923 and was buried at St Andrew and St Cuthman Churchyard in Steyning, West Sussex.
In the churchyard, south-east of the church, are two war graves of soldiers of World War I.
Disney died at The Hyde on 26 December 1816, and was buried in the churchyard of Fryerning, Essex.
She died in 1917 and is buried in the churchyard of St Peter and St Paul's Church, Aldeburgh.
Hylton-Foster and his wife are buried together in the churchyard of St Barnabas Church, Ranmore Common, Surrey.
Samuel Webbe's grave, Old St Pancras Churchyard, London Samuel Webbe (1740 – 25 May 1816) was an English composer.
He died on 22 April 1901 and was buried in the churchyard of St Michaels, Stoke Prior, Worcestershire.
Blake died in Montgomery, Orange County, New York. He is interred at Berea Churchyard, near Newburgh, New York.
The churchyard contains eleven Commonwealth war graves, six from World War I and five from World War II.
The church lies on a gentle hill with a well-arranged churchyard of trees, greens, and cobblestone walkways.
Thomas Bray died on 15 February and was buried two days later in the churchyard at St. Botolph's.
The churchyard contains the war grave, standing east of the church, of a soldier of World War I.
The churchyard extension contains a war grave of a World War II Home Guard officer. CWGC casualty record.
St Bartholomew's churchyard extension contains the war graves of two soldiers and an airman of World War I.
Theyer died at Cooper's Hill on 25 August 1673, and was buried in Brockworth churchyard on the 28th.
The gate piers, gates, and wall of the former churchyard have been designated as Grade II listed building.
In the churchyard is a shaft, dating possibly from the 17th century, and maybe part of a sundial.
Postlethwayt died suddenly on 13 September 1767. He was buried in the Old Street churchyard, in Clerkenwell, London.
He was buried in Busbridge churchyard, Godalming, Surrey on 5 September. His widow married Bernard Freyberg in 1922.
The road passes a number of houses, then comes to the old medieval churchyard. The church no longer remains as a complete building, but two burial enclosures in the middle of the yard appear to incorporate some of the fabric of its original walls. There are gravestones and memorials in the churchyard dating back to the 18th century, and because Lance Corporal Francis James Elms, who died in October 1918 during the First World War, is buried there, the churchyard is registered as a Commonwealth War Grave. A carved stone cross, dated to the 11th or 12th century and now standing in the forecourt of the Stewartry Museum in Kirkcudbright, is thought to have been taken from the churchyard.
Churchyard of St. Mary the Virgin The parish churchyard of Hay is small; it is somewhat of a triangular shape, and was formerly bounded upon two sides by a deep dingle or ravine; that on the east having a small stream flowing through it is called the Llogyn. Some writers have supposed this ravine to have been originally used as a moat. The hollow on the west side of the churchyard was partially filled up at the time of rebuilding the church. In Hay churchyard may be found specimens of most of the quaint epitaphs commonly met with upon tombstones in rural churchyards, but none that we have seen are from their originality entitled to especial notice.
In at least one case in the United States, the headstones from a churchyard in Pittsburgh were used to help form the foundation for an addition to the church fifty years after the last burial in the churchyard took place (the foundation itself unknowingly went through fifteen graves), with the churchyard itself becoming a parking lot nearly forty years after that; the churchyard was largely forgotten until PennDOT purchased the church property via eminent domain for construction of Interstate 279 and subsequently unearthed 727 graves. Some churchyards across the world are still used as graveyards today, particularly in most hamlets and small towns. Public cemeteries are primarily seen in major towns and cities.
The churchyard contains the graves of the war poet Robert Nichols and his father John Bowyer Buchanan Nichols, also a poet. The grave of the Canadian politician John Robertson also lies in the churchyard, as do the war graves of a soldier and two airmen of the Second World War.
The paired grave of Georgina and Sir Alexander Hope GCB, Aberlady Churchyard In 1805 he married Georgiana Brown; they had four sons, including George William Hope and James Robert Hope-Scott, father of James Hope, 1st Baron Rankeillour, and one daughter.The Peerage.com He is buried with Georgina in Aberlady churchyard.
The churchyard and cemetery lie to the rear of St. Catherine's. Originally dating to 1552, burials ceased in 1894. The cemetery is now a small public park.DublinCity.ie - St. Catherine's Park There is a plot which was provided by the Protestant Orphan Society for the burial of orphans, in the churchyard.
The church was damaged by an earthquake in 1886, which collapsed the west gable end. The original churchyard is now surrounded by a brick wall. Buried in the churchyard is Ralph Izard, a former U.S. senator from South Carolina who served as president pro tempore of the Senate in 1794.
Jekyll family memorial in Busbridge Church churchyard Jekyll is buried in the churchyard of Busbridge Church, formerly known as St John the Baptist, Busbridge, Godalming, next to her brother, Herbert Jekyll, and his wife, the artist, writer and philanthropist Agnes Jekyll. The Jekyll family memorial was designed by Edwin Lutyens.
In the churchyard is a chest tomb dating from the early or middle part of the 18th century. It is designated as a Grade II listed building. Also in the churchyard is a row of 13 children's gravestones, measuring about long; these have come to be known as "Pip's Graves".
He died in Newark, New Jersey, and was buried in Saint Mary's Episcopal Churchyard in Burlington.The ornate monuments to Grubb's father and brother in St. Mary's Churchyard are attributed to architect Frank Furness. George E. Thomas, et al., Frank Furness: The Complete Works (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1996) p. 154.
At the east end of the chancel is the datestone of the old chapel bearing the Haryinton Arms and dated 1591. The base and shaft of a stone churchyard cross are in the churchyard. A National School was built in the village in 1845; it appears to have closed in 1932.
St. Kenelm's Church, Sapperton, Gloucestershire St Kenelm’s Church is a historic church in Sapperton, Gloucestershire in the care of The Churches Conservation Trust. It is listed Grade I on the National Heritage List for England. The churchyard contains several notable graves in the churchyard, a few of which are listed.
He was buried in Old St. Pancras Churchyard on 15 November 1791 next to his wife Dame Isabella Chalmers who had died in 1784.The Environs of London: Pancras (1795) His grave was lost and is not listed on the Burdett Coutts memorial within the churchyard to important graves lost.
It was built of greenstone and limestonewith some brick patching. It has a 15th- century tower and a 14th-century font. In the churchyard is the base of a 14th-century churchyard cross which is both Grade II listed and a scheduled monument. A Wesleyan Methodist chapel was built in 1811.
St. Etheldreda's church has an almost rectangular sloping churchyard, with views over the Shropshire hills."Scourfield" and "Haslam", pp. 124 This churchyard contains the Commonwealth war graves of four British Army soldiers, three from World War I and one from World War II. CWGC Cemetery report, details from casualty record.
Wyville Thomson is commemorated in the stained glass window above the altar in St. Michael's Parish Church, Linlithgow and his headstone is in the churchyard. In addition the Wyville-Thomson Ridge in the North Atlantic Ocean is named after him. The headstone of Charles Wyville Thomson in St. Michael's Parish Churchyard.
He died on 23 January 1890 and is buried in the churchyard of St John's Church on Princes Street.
The Rev. Kriel and his wife are buried in the churchyard under a gravestone featuring his own trellis design.
"A Guide to Shropshire", Michael Raven, 2005, p 80 Eighteenth-century mathematician Edward Waring is buried in the churchyard.
Powles died at Elstree in 1867. He was buried in Elstree churchyard, where two of his sons already lay.
The foundations of the chapter house were recently made visible in the redeveloped south churchyard of the new cathedral.
He died 26 October 1997, and a large crowd attended his funeral and burial at the churchyard of Neustadter.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a sailor of the Royal Naval Patrol Service of World War II.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Field Artillery soldier of World War I. CWGC casualty record.
On 16 November 2011, Camiroaga's ashes were taken to the Lugar de Los Hombres Ilustres of Villa Alegre's churchyard.
Ettleton churchyard Ettleton is a village near Castleton, in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the former Roxburghshire.
In 1916 she organised the annual pilgrimage to Davison's grave in the churchyard of St. Mary's church at Morpeth.
The churchyard contains the war graves of five soldiers of World War I, and two of World War II.
Stubbs was buried in the churchyard of All Saints, Cuddesdon, next to the palace of the bishops of Oxford.
The village church is dedicated to St Andrew. The German film actor Anton Diffring is buried in the churchyard.
On his death he was buried with full military honours at the churchyard of his native village of Ballylooby.
He was buried in the churchyard of St. George's, Southwark. He was survived by his wife and son Ephraim.
Chapel site. Retrieved 15 November 2018. Wilden churchyard Wilden Primary School is a Voluntary Aided Church of England school.
He took on apprentices including Robert Strange. Cooper died in 1764, and was buried in the Canongate churchyard, Edinburgh.
In 1860, he owned 68 slaves. King died in Summerville, Georgia and was interred in St. Paul's Churchyard, Augusta.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier of World War I, and another of World War II.
He died on 28 November 1810 and was buried alongside his father in Kirknewton churchyard, south-west of Edinburgh.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Armoured Corps soldier of the Second World War.CWGC Casualty Record.
Mushet's wife, Agnes, died in 1854 and they are buried together in Staunton churchyard, in the Forest of Dean.
The church no longer exists, and the churchyard was designated an historic site by Waimea County Council in 1975.
He was buried in Glynde churchyard. Hay was deformed, scarcely five feet high, and assiduous in his parliamentary duties.
King Harold Godwinson, who died at the Battle of Hastings, is said to be buried in the present churchyard.
He died in Dingwall on New Year's Eve, 31 December 1974. He is buried in the churchyard at Fodderty.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier of World War I, and another of World War II.
The churchyard contains the graves or memorials of a variety of notables, including several members of Franklin Roosevelt's family.
Duncan Grant's remains are buried beside Vanessa Bell's in the churchyard of St Peter's Church, West Firle, East Sussex.
The Cosenes monument in the churchyard, which dates from the 16th century, is on the Heritage at Risk Register.
He died in April 1884, aged 71 and was buried in the churchyard of St. Lawrence's Church, Mereworth, Kent.
The pilot was Lt Cmdr CJ Lavender DSC (aged 34). He is commemorated in the churchyard at Appleton Thorn.
The Dusmal House and Mingo Creek Presbyterian Church and Churchyard are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The grave lies in the north-west corner of the first Victorian cemetery extension, west of the main churchyard.
W. J. Loftie. Faussett died at Canterbury 26 February 1877, and was buried in Nackington churchyard, near that city.
She died, aged 52, on 21 November 1926. Olive Christian Wigmore is interred in the Churchyard of Stoke D'Abernon.
He died in Chesterfield Street, London on 3 May 1884 and was buried Llandenny churchyard, Monmouthshire on 8 May.
Elisabeth Pickering died in October 1562. She is buried in St. Dunstan-in-the-West Churchyard in London, England.
He died on 15 January 1922 aged 89, and was buried in St. Nicholas' churchyard in Sevenoaks, Kent, England.
He died in Dublin in 1817 and was buried in St. Kevin's Churchyard, where his grave can be seen.
Television presenter Mark Speight, who died in 2008, was from Tettenhall. His ashes are interred in the parish churchyard.
West Allen Story: Ninebanks and Carrshield by Rev A F Donnelly (1964) St Mark's churchyard,Ninebanks: Detail from gravestone.
Abandoned boats in Salen Bay in 2016 The psychiatrist Angus MacNiven FRSE (1900-1984) is buried in Salen churchyard.
Brierly is wounded in a fight in a churchyard, but the criminals are arrested, and Brierly's honour is restored.
1788) and William Baldwin (d. 1839). The churchyard contains a number of Grade II listed table tombs and headstones.
It stands in a circular churchyard, and possesses the only central Norman tower on a medieval church in Cumbria.
In the churchyard are a number of objects which are listed at Grade II. These include a medieval stone coffin, and four monuments. Also in the churchyard are a granite cross dating from the 19th century which is set on a granite base probably dating from before the Norman Conquest, and stocks dating from the 17th century which are set under a 20th-century gabled roof on granite piers. The lychgate at the south entrance to the churchyard dates from the late 19th century.
In the churchyard is a red sandstone cross base and shaft from the 15th or 16th century which is listed at Grade II. Also in the churchyard is a war memorial in Portland stone designed by Sir Percy Scott Worthington. It consists of a lantern cross containing a carved figure of Christ, and is listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war graves of a Royal Engineers soldier and two airmen of World War II. The lych gate is also listed at Grade II.
In the churchyard are two structures also listed at Grade II. At the entrance to the churchyard is a lychgate dating from 1911, consisting of an oak frame on low stone plinth. It has a green slate roof that has ornate bargeboards and finials. Inside the churchyard and overlooking the road is a war memorial dating from 1920. This is in sandstone and consists of a Celtic cross decorated with vine patterns and inscribed with the names of those lost in both World Wars.
Further away, to the south, are the footings of a former round tower. Some of the gravestones in the churchyard contain Victorian and Art Deco carving. At the north entrance to the churchyard is a lychgate which was built during the Victorian restoration but contains wood brought from Upton Magna church.Cranage, p. 176.
She died of tuberculosis, historically known as consumption, in October 1842, aged 26. She is buried in the churchyard of St Aidan's Church, Bamburgh. An independent canopied monument, with her sleeping effigy holding an oar, lies at the west edge of the churchyard. The original statue (which was eroding) lies within the church.
Miss Brown, who died the following year, was a noted local benefactor and paid for the erection of a number of buildings in Ormesby including the Queen Victoria Jubilee Memorial (Lamp), the churchyard lychgate, the tower and spire of St Cuthbert's Church and her own grade II listed monument in the churchyard.
The famous countertenor Alfred Deller, CBE (1912–1979) and his wife Peggy (1913–2006) are buried in the newer section of the churchyard. On 31 May 2012, All Saints' Church held a concert to celebrate Deller's 100th birthday during which James Bowman planted a tree in memory of Deller in the churchyard.
St. Vedastuskerk Reningelst Churchyard Extension. Commonwealth military cemetery next to the churchyard of the church of Saint Vedast in Reningelst. Probably the most popular tourist site is the Catholic village church, the St. Vedastuskerk. In the year 1568 three priests of Reningelst were murdered here because of the religious persecution during that period.
Davidson's home: Woodhall House The grave of Sir Stanley Davidson, Currie Churchyard, Edinburgh The Davidson vault, Currie churchyard, Edinburgh Sir Leybourne Stanley Patrick Davidson (1894-1981) was a British physician, medical investigator and author who is well known for his medical textbook Principles and Practice of Medicine, which was first published in 1952.
The church consists of a three-bay nave and chancel with a north aisle and south porch. The three-stage west tower is supported by diagonal buttresses. Inside the church is a 12th-century font. The remains of a late medieval churchyard cross on a square base can be seen in the churchyard.
In the churchyard are the graves of Prince Louis of Battenberg and his wife, Princess Victoria; also Uffa Fox, the yachtsman and designer. The churchyard contains war graves of seven Commonwealth service personnel, four from World War I and three from World War II. CWGC Cemetery Report. Breakdown obtained from casualty record.
In the southern part of the churchyard are the remains of a churchyard cross dating from the early-medieval period. It consists of a truncated shaft, and a base that contains a vertical hollow. The cross is included in the Grade I listing of the church. It is also a scheduled monument.
Another tradition states that when a new churchyard was opened the first man buried there had to guard it against the Devil. To save a human soul from such a duty a black dog was buried in the north part of the churchyard as a substitute.Henderson 1879, p. 274.Wright 1913, p. 194.
A report of 1831 stated that the churchyard was in a deplorable condition - no sooner was a body buried but it was removed by body- snatchers. Over the following two years the church and churchyard were renovated and a cottage was provided for a watchman to watch over the graves at all times.
He was buried in the churchyard of Eishausen. The castle in which the Dunkelgräfin had lived was demolished in 1873.
The churchyard contains one registered war grave, of a woman of Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps who died in 1920.
Also in the churchyard is the mausoleum of C. F. G. R. Schwerdt, an art collector, who died in 1931.
Kruger Gray died in Chichester, West Sussex, on 2 May 1943. He is buried in St Mary Churchyard, Fittleworth, Chichester.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I, and a soldier of World War II.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I, and two airmen of World War II.
After his death the business was continued by his sons. He was buried in the churchyard of All Saints, Runcorn.
Her gravesite is in the churchyard at Tewkesbury Abbey. The papers of Harriet McIlquham are archived in The Women's Library.
The churchyard contains five war graves, containing four soldiers of World War I, and an Aircraftwoman of World War II.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
Other members of family are interred in St. Martin's parish churchyard at Bladon, a short distance from the palace.Vanderbilt Balsan.
He was buried at St Lawrence Church, London Road, Morden, Surrey. His grave can still be seen in the Churchyard.
Voyce died on 31 March 1713, aged 79 years and 11 months, and is buried in the churchyard at Oakley.
A rare example of a morthouse is located in the churchyard, built to frustrate the activities of 19th century bodysnatchers.
The statue of Thomas Becket (1970) by Edward Bainbridge Copnall is installed in St Paul's Churchyard in London, United Kingdom.
The churchyard contains war graves of six service personnel of World War II. CWGC Cemetery Report, details from casualty record.
The churchyard contains a Commonwealth war grave, of a World War I soldier of the Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey).
Stone died on 17 September 1916 in Abingdon and is buried at Radley in the cemetery in St. Helen's Churchyard.
Hayter never married. She died on 10 January 2006, and is buried in the churchyard of St Swithun's, Headbourne Worthy.
Biddle died in Chatsworth, Baltimore County, Maryland on September 5, 1779. He is buried in St. Pauls Churchyard in Baltimore.
The 18th-century boundary wall, gates and gate piers of the churchyard are designated as a Grade II listed building.
Rash's Surname Index, pennock.ws He is buried in St. Peter's Churchyard in Philadelphia. Como farm is now a golf course.
He died at his residence, Barn Elms, Surrey, on 10 August 1850, aged 71, and was buried in Barnes churchyard.
Also in the churchyard is the grave of Lennon's uncle, George Toogood Smith, with whom he lived as a child.
Also in the churchyard are several ancient Yew trees, one of which is claimed to be over 2,000 years old.
The churchyard contains the war graves of five service personnel of World War I, and four of World War II.
He died in January 1848 and was buried in the churchyard at St John the Baptist in West Wickham, Kent.
In the churchyard is a tombstone to William Powell, supposedly "The Harmonious Blacksmith" who inspired one of Handel's keyboard works.
The churchyard also contains the war graves of a soldier of World War I, and another of World War II.
He died in 1968. He was buried at All Saints Churchyard, Sutton Courtenay, Vale of White Horse District, Oxfordshire, England.
The churchyard contains three war graves, of two British soldiers of World War I and one of World War II.
The churchyard contains the Commonwealth war grave of a Royal Flying Corps officer of World War I. CWGC Casualty record.
The churchyard contains ten war graves of service personnel, three of World War I and seven of World War II.
He later moved to Norwalk, Ohio, where he died in 1844. He is buried in St. Paul’s Episcopal Churchyard there.
The renowned civil engineer John Smeaton was born in the local parish of Austhorpe and is buried in Whitkirk churchyard.
In the churchyard, close to the porch, is a gravestone in the form of a three-sided pyramid; a tetrahedron.
St Barnabas's Church was demolished in 1987 after its partial collapse in the previous year. The churchyard is still maintained.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier of World War I, and two soldiers of World War II.
A rare example of a 19th century morthouse is located in the churchyard, built to frustrate the activities of bodysnatchers.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
William Brown died in February 1782 and is buried in Heddon churchyard – the family gravestone showing a coat of arms.
The churchyard contains the war graves of an army officer and a Royal Air Force officer of World War I.
He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary Magdalen Woolwich; he designed the memorial located in its Lady Chapel.
In the churchyard is a chest tomb dating from the early 19th century that has been listed at Grade II.
The churchyard contains a war grave of a Royal Army Ordnance Corps officer of World War II. CWGC Casualty Record.
The church was opened and the enlarged churchyard consecrated by the Bishop of Bath and Wells on 24 July 1890.
The tower is high. There are ruined remains of the priory in the churchyard to the east of the church.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three service personnel of World War I, and seven of World War II.
Toward the front of the churchyard, between the church and the presbytery, is a steel-framed bell tower and bell.
Eventually she was found dead by a woman who lent her books, and was buried without rites in Brading Churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war graves of seven service personnel of World War I and three of World War II.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. Congressman Joshua Seney is buried in the churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
He died at Bury on 14 October 1852, aged 55, and was buried in St. Paul's churchyard on 20 October.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
He died on 31 January 1873, and was buried in the south-eastern angle of the churchyard at Houghton Conquest.
The churchyard contains the war graves of two soldiers of World War I and a soldier of World War II.
In the churchyard is a red sandstone sundial dated 1684. It has a square shaft, the head is weathered and the gnomon is missing. The sundial is a Grade II listed structure. The churchyard also contains many carved gravestones from the 17th to the 19th centuries, and the table tomb of Fletcher Christian's father Charles.
Mary Hardy died at Letheringsett Hall on 23 March 1809, two days after making her last entry in her diary. She was buried in the family vault in Letheringsett churchyard, joining her elder son Raven who had died of tuberculosis in 1787 aged 19. William Hardy joined them in the churchyard on 22 August 1811.
The church consists of a west tower, a five-bay aisled nave, a south porch, and a two-bay unaisled chancel. The grounds of the church and its churchyard measure 1.38 acres. The wall of the churchyard is itself a grade II listed structure. The church has a lych gate which is grade I listed.
The church is surrounded by a small churchyard, called Lundby Old Churchyard (Swedish: Lundby gamla kyrkogård). It has an area of 1.7 hectares and houses around 1700 graves. The first records of it come from 1788, and the oldest existing map from 1856. The oldest tombstones, however, bear dates from the late 17th century.
83 (Earl Richard of Cornwall bestowed it in 1246)Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall, 2nd ed., revised by Enid Radcliffe. Penguin Books; pp. 61-62 There is a Cornish cross in the churchyard; it is probably the old churchyard cross but was found in a ditch nearby in 1849 and set up in its present position.
Personal Statement - The Minister of Transport (Mr. Ernest Marples), Hansard, House of Commons, 28 January 1960 A large part of the churchyard of St Paul's Church, the parish church of Hammersmith, had to be cleared to allow the building of the flyover, and much of the churchyard wall and many of the graves were lost.
The Irvine family grave in the churchyard of St Machar's Cathedral, Aberdeen Jessie Seymour Irvine died in 1887 and is buried in the family grave in the churchyard of St Machar's Cathedral in Aberdeen. She was commemorated by a set of four etched glass panels which were installed inside Crimond Parish Church in 2002.
The churchyard includes a 15th-century cross. There is also a crucifix which is a memorial to a local airman Pat Garnett. It was made by Arthur George Walker and was sited below Backwell Hill House before becoming rusted and overgrown. It was restored and moved to the churchyard by Laurence Tindall in 1997.
During the German bombing of Belgrade on 6 April 1941, bombs directly hit the churchyard, killing 200 people. A memorial marble cross commemorating the victims was built in the 1970s. It was also hit during the bombing of Belgrade by the Allies in 1944. In April 2013, almost all trees in the churchyard were cut.
In the churchyard to the south of the church is a square sandstone cross base with two steps. Its age is not known. It is surmounted by a later square block and a 20th-century cross. The churchyard also contains the war graves of two British and one Canadian soldier of World War I.
There are twenty Commonwealth service personnel buried in the churchyard, eleven from World War I and nine from World War II, most of whose graves could not be located so are commemorated by special memorial.CWGC Cemetery Report. Breakdown obtained from casualty record. There is access to the churchyard from Church End and Church Terrace.
Sir Vicary Gibbs was also a Parishioner and is buried in the Churchyard: within the church is a monument detailing his life. The churchyard is also the final resting place of John Panis (where panis was the general term for an enslaved Native American), being brought over here as a slave, he died in 1763.
In the churchyard are some ancient yew trees and the remains of a stone cross which has been converted into a sundial. Its shaft is dated 1693 and the head 1736. The sundial is a scheduled ancient monument. The churchyard also contains war graves of a soldier and an airman of World War II.
Clerk married Maria Anne Law (1788-1866), the daughter of Ewan Law , brother of Edward Law, 1st Baron Ellenborough, in 1810. He died in December 1867, aged 80, at Penycuik House, Midlothian. He is buried in the local churchyard, close to his parents' mausoleum in St. Mungo's Churchyard in Penicuik. His wife lies with him.
Harrison that he would like to be buried in and English churchyard. Mrs. Harrison herself died earlier that same year (and their father, already ill, died soon after), but the sisters, after consulting Jelka Delius, saw that this wish was carried out, and in May 1935 his [Delius’] body was exhumed and brought over to England to be laid to rest in Limpsfield churchyard, near to the Harrisons’ own mother’s grave.”Fountain, Katrina. The Harrison sisters.“Delius at Rest: Burial in a Surrey Churchyard: Sir Thomas Beecham’s Eulogy.” London, England: The Times, May 26, 1935.
Harrison that he would like to be buried in an English churchyard. Mrs. Harrison herself died earlier that same year (and their father, already ill, died soon after), but the sisters, after consulting Jelka Delius, saw that this wish was carried out, and in May 1935 his [Delius’] body was exhumed and brought over to England to be laid to rest in Limpsfield churchyard, near to the Harrisons’ own mother’s grave.”Fountain, Katrina. The Harrison sisters.“Delius at Rest: Burial in a Surrey Churchyard: Sir Thomas Beecham’s Eulogy.” London, England: The Times, May 26, 1935.
In the churchyard the gates, gatepiers and churchyard wall along north side of Shotwick Lane are Grade II listed structures. Also listed Grade II are the red sandstone sundial consisting of a tall bulbous baluster on square base dated 1720, and the tombchests of James Phillips, John Nevett Bennett, Rev M. Reay and four children, Robert and Martha Ellison, William Briscoe (died 1704) and others, and William Briscoe (died 1723) and others. In the northwest part of the churchyard are the war graves of nine Royal Air Force officers of World War I.
1–3 Churchyard Side, Nantwich 1–3 Churchyard Side is a grade-II-listed Victorian Gothic building in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, located on the corner of Churchyard Side and Pepper Street (), opposite St Mary's Church. Built in 1864–66 to a design by Alfred Waterhouse as the Nantwich branch of the Manchester and Liverpool District Bank, it is among the most notable examples of Victorian corporate architecture in the town. The building remained a branch of the District Bank until the late 20th century, and is still in use as a bank.
The flint walls of the churchyard were listed Grade II in 1970. On the north and west sides they are believed to follow the line of the former town walls, the churchyard being in the north-west corner of the walled part of the town, and may contain material from those walls. In the churchyard are several carved gravestones, including that of one Mark Sharp, carpenter, who made the head- and footstones himself, depicting a set of carpenter's tools. The paved floor of the old chancel covers the burial vault of the Crofts family.
In the churchyard is a baluster sundial, and a South African War Memorial from the early 1900s, which is probably by Douglas and Minshull. The south gates to the churchyard, dating from 1877, were by Douglas. To the northwest of the church is a lychgate designed by Sir Herbert Baker in 1929, consisting of a pyramidal roof on ogee timber framing. The churchyard contains 57 Commonwealth war graves of service personnel, 9 from World War I and 48 (predominately Royal Air Force) from World War II. CWGC Cemetery report, details from casualty record.
The churchyard gate to the south west of the church is listed grade II (26 October 2002). Given the relative size of the churchyard, the church and each of the two gates have their own postcode: the postal address of the church is Primrose Hill, Llanbadarn Fawr, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 3QZ, the postcode of the west gate is SY23 3QY."Churchyard gate to SW of Church of St Padarn, Llanbadarn Fawr" British Listed Buildings. The lychgate to the south east is also listed grade II (25 October 2002), and is located at SY23 3RA.
In the churchyard is a table tomb to the memory of William Worthington of Leftwich, a merchant who died in 1808, and members of his family. It is listed at Grade II. Also listed Grade II is the lych gate which dates from the late 19th century, and was designed by E. G. Paley. Also in the churchyard is a memorial to the Russell Allen family, with dates including 1927, also by Lorimer. The churchyard contains 18 war graves of British service personnel, 13 from World War I, and five from World War II.
In the churchyard is a red sandstone sundial, probably dating from the 17th century, which is listed at Grade II. It has an octagonal pillar on an octagonal base with the remains of a brass sundial cemented on its top. The churchyard contains the grave of nine-year-old Nelson Burt, son of Albin R. Burt, drowned during the River Mersey hurricane of 1822. The churchyard also contains the war graves of an Army Veterinary Corps soldier of World War I and two airmen of World War II.
School 43 began as a small building constructed by Joseph Churchyard in 1880 on Gold Street. Known as "The Churchyard School", the school operated for two years until it was purchased by the City of Buffalo and converted into an annex for School 25. In 1883, a replacement for the Churchyard Skill was built on the corners of Gold and Lovejoy, and was operational until 1901 when the present building was constructed, which received an addition in 1925. In 1892, District 43 was created for all students in the Lovejoy area.
Grave markers in the churchyard date to the seventeenth century. There are numerous mounds in which bodies were buried one atop the other; in keeping with medieval custom, these double burials were always situated on the south side of a church "as no-one wanted the shadow of the Church to fall on his grave". According to legend, a pyramidical tombstone in the churchyard was contrived to prevent the deceased's wife from dancing on his grave. Burials in the churchyard slowed to a trickle after the opening of the Box cemetery in 1858.
In and around the churchyard are three items, all dating from 1877, and all listed at Grade II. The lychgate and the wall, which completely encircles the churchyard, were designed by Street, and both are constructed in sandstone ashlar. Over the lychgate is a gabled roof, with a cross on its north end. In the churchyard is a cross, also designed by Street and in sandstone ashlar. It is circular in plan and consists of a fluted shaft on a base of three steps, carrying a foliated cross under a crocketed, gabled canopy.
Sandstone carving of 'Cheshire Cat' On the outside of the church, immediately below the west window, is a carving of a cat and it is suggested that this might be the origin of the Cheshire cat. A sundial in the churchyard is dated 1714 and is listed at Grade II. At set of stocks at the entrance to the churchyard, also listed at Grade II, have endstones probably dating from the 17th century. The churchyard also contains five war graves of British service personnel, two from World War I and three from World War II.
The churchyard contains the graves of John Charles Ryle, the first Anglican Bishop of Liverpool, and his wife, and the grave of the poet William Watson, as well as Commonwealth War Graves Commission graves of six service personnel of World War I, and five of World War II. Against the south wall of the churchyard is an elaborate pedimented arch which is a memorial to Sir Andrew Barclay Walker and his wife. Also in the churchyard is a sandstone hearse house dated 1811 which is a Grade II listed building.
Van Straubenzee became Governor of Malta in 1872. Van Straubenzee is buried at St Mary the Virgin's Churchyard near Bath, Somerset.
Russell died on 28 April 1883 and was buried in the churchyard of St. James's Church, Swimbridge, where he was vicar.
County Court, 18-22 St Peter’s Churchyard, Derby 1897 Arthur Eaton (1857 - 29 June 1924) was an architect based in Derby.
The wrought iron gates and the sandstone gate piers to the churchyard, dating probably from 1838, are also Grade II listed.
In the southwest corner of the churchyard is the war grave of a South Wales Borderers soldier of World War I.
He died in Shelton 1743, aged 55, and was buried in Stoke churchyard, having made a fortune, and leaving several sons.
In the churchyard is the grave of Thomas Sopwith, the pioneer aviator, who developed the Sopwith Camel, and died in 1989.
The churchyard contains the war graves of 26 service personnel, 22 of World War I and four of World War II.
A very complete find was made in this churchyard of groats of about the time of the Wars of the Roses.
Ellis died in Letchworth in Hertfordshire in 1979 and is buried in the churchyard of All Saints church in Willian, Hertfordshire.
Johansen died on December 28, 1959 in Selma, Alabama, and was buried in the churchyard of Selma's St. Paul's Episcopal Church.
Pendleton died on October 20, 1821, in Hyde Park, New York. He was interred in St. James' Churchyard in Hyde Park.
The churchyard contains six war graves of British service personnel, three from World War I and three from World War II.
He died at Woolwich, London on 4June, 1838 and is buried in the now vanished St Luke's Churchyard in Charlton, Kent.
After the concert, the countertenor James Bowman planted a tree in memory of Deller in the churchyard where he is buried.
The Swedish Academy belatedly placed a memorial in the churchyard in 1851, complete with a bronze medallion by Johan Tobias Sergel.
There is also the Sandtorg Church, a grocery store, and a gas station. In the churchyard are three British war graves.
The churchyard contains the war graves of 31 service personnel, 17 from World War I and 14 from World War II.
The churchyard contains the war graves of twelve service personnel, nine of World War I and three of World War II.
The graves of Dame Anne Warburton, the first female British ambassador, and the violinist, Frederick Grinke, also lie within the churchyard.
He died in poverty in Pimlico and was buried in the churchyard of St Martin-in-the-Fields in central London.
The churchyard includes an unidentified chest tomb from around 1860, and one for the Brown family from the late 18th century.
The church dates from the 13th century and was restored in 1865. The lychgate and churchyard wall are Grade II listed.
He was buried in the Johnston cemetery on Hayes Plantation near Edenton, but was reinterred in 1906 at Christ Churchyard, Philadelphia.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three British soldiers of World War I.CWGC Cemetery Report. Details obtained from casualty record.
Coleman died of gout and liver disease 14 July 1839 and was buried in the churchyard of St James's Hampstead Road.
She died at Burford, near Oxford, on 22 March 1977 and was buried beside her husband in the churchyard at Elsfield.
Two World War I soldiers buried in the churchyard are commemorated by special memorial erected by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
Also in the churchyard are the war graves of two soldiers and a Royal Flying Corps officer of World War I.
Aubrey died of an apoplexy while travelling, in June 1697, and was buried in the churchyard of St Mary Magdalen, Oxford.
Athene Seyler died in 1990, aged 101, and her ashes were placed in the Hannen Columbarium in St Mary's Churchyard, Wargrave.
A stone in the nave, about with a hole in the top, might once have been used as a churchyard cross.
Ellmaker died in Lancaster on November 28, 1851. He was buried in the churchyard of St. James' Episcopal Church in Lancaster.
He died of tuberculosis at Christ's College, Cambridge on 31 March 1894. He is buried with his parents at Keig churchyard.
816661 Oxford Road 22, Bright. The original congregation was Presbyterian. Built in 1854. The Chesterfield centotaph is located in the churchyard.
A grandson was Bishop Richard Mant of Down and Dromore. He is buried in the churchyard of St Swithun's Headbourne Worthy.
The pulpit was built in 1633. In the churchyard is a 14th century cross which was restored in the 19th century.
The churchyard contains two war graves of Royal Artillery soldiers of World War II. CWGC Cemetery Report. Details from casualty record.
James and Theodosia are buried together in a simple grave in the south-west corner of St Cuthberts Churchyard in Edinburgh.
The churchyard also contains the war graves of twelve soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
The churchyard contains the war grave of a Colonel Bertram of the Manchester Regiment of World War I. CWGC Casualty record.
The church is on the west side of Church Road, near the junction with St Paul's Road. Its churchyard is about .
His remains were returned to Helpston for burial in St Botolph's churchyard, where he had expressed a wish to be buried.
He is thought to be buried nearby in Gladsmuir churchyard. His place as Senator was filled by George Brown, Lord Coalstoun.
He died in Dromard, County Sligo on 15 August 1902 and was buried in Bannagh Roman Catholic Churchyard, Tubrid, County Fermanagh.
Southward view across the churchyard The churchyard has far-reaching southward views to the South Downs. There are many 17th- and 18th-century gravestones, 22 of which are individually protected with Grade II listing. Elsewhere, a rare 19th-century wooden grave marker has been restored to its original condition. An extremely tall, old tree is a dominant feature.
The churchyard walls and gates date from around 1866. The walls are made from squared rubble red sandstone and the gates are of oak. Also in the churchyard is the war grave of an Army Service Corps soldier of World War I. To the north of the church are the earthworks and some stone fragments remaining from Aldford Castle.
Mersey Chambers from St. Nicholas' churchyard Mersey Chambers was built in 1878 for the Harrison Shipping Line in Liverpool, England.Liverpool Picturebook it was designed by G.E. Grayson. It is a Grade II listed building. It fronts St. Nicholas' churchyard, which was laid out as a public garden in 1891 in memory of James Harrison, a partner in the company.
The lych gate standing at the northern entrance to the churchyard is also listed at Grade II. It is constructed in timber with a tile roof, and stands on a stone plinth. On the gable ends are decorated bargeboards. The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier of World War I, and two of World War II.
In the churchyard to the south of the church are three more Grade II listed buildings. The sundial is possibly the stump of a medieval churchyard cross. The Atkinson monument consists of a headstone dated 1805. Also to the south of the church is a group of four tombs dating from the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
The grounds include a graveyard. At the southern entrance to the churchyard, there is a lychgate. The churchyard is home to the listed Thomas Monument, about south of the tower. Its rectangular slate stone flanked by carved Ionic columns and a round arch bears the inscription "Death spares none", good lettering with verses to Alice Thomas, 1826.
In the churchyard is a stone sundial of unusual design dating probably from the 18th century. It consists of a circular plinth on a circular stone step which carries a battered cruciform stem with an octagonal cap. The dial and gnomon are copper. It is listed Grade II. At the churchyard gate is an 18th-century mounting block.
In the churchyard is a sandstone sundial dating from the late 18th century which was restored in 1894 and which is listed at Grade II. Also in the churchyard and listed at Grade II are the Rawlinson memorial dating from the late 18th century, and a tomb chest with a damaged marble effigy dating from the mid 19th century.
There are 53 other listed buildings in Great Gransden parish, including houses, barns and the remains of a churchyard cross. The brick vicarage, north-west of the church, was built by Barnabas Oley, probably between 1660 and 1685. A lychgate was built in the churchyard in 1920 to commemorate Great Gransden men who died in World War I.
The boundary walls and gates to the west and south of the churchyard are also listed at Grade II. The walls and gate piers are in sandstone, and the elaborate gates are in wrought iron. The churchyard contains 25 war graves of Commonwealth service personnel, 14 of World War I and 11 of World War II.
He died on 9 August 1889, aged 60, and was buried in the churchyard cemetery at St Mary Magdalen’s Roman Catholic Church Mortlake. His wife Alice died in 1926 and is also buried in the churchyard. There is a plaque inside the church in their memory. It was unveiled on 11 August 1989, 100 years after his death.
Mary Berry (1763–1852), author and editor, and her sister Agnes Berry (1764–1852), are buried in the churchyard. Major General Sir Jeremiah Bryant CB (1783–1845) was a British Army officer in the Bengal Army. Mary Burdekin (d. 1772), believed to be the first baker of Maids of Honour pastries, is buried in the churchyard.
17 ;Cross in churchyard The churchyard contains an inscribed stone cross: the first word of the inscription is perhaps isnioc (later opinion believes ignioc). The inscription is Ignioc Vitali fili Torrici (i.e. Ignioc son of Vitalus son of Torricus) and the dating is 5th to 7th century. Another inscription is in Ogham, perhaps partly in Irish.
There are traceried 3-light bell-chamber windows with a dense quatrefoil interlace and blank 2-light windows on the two lower stages. The flanked niches were for statuary, however this is now missing. The churchyard has a triangular lychgate designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Several of the chest tombs and headstones in the churchyard are also listed buildings.
Alan Harper. A brass plate on the church's font tells states that it was used by Dean Swift when he was in Ballynure Church during his incumbency in 1695. The churchyard has probably been used as a place of interment since the medieval period. Within the churchyard is a Spanish chestnut tree, locally known as the “Spanish Armada Tree”.
Templecross churchyard contains a number of historic monuments: there are several to 19th century Catholic priests who served Ballinacargy, including the Rev. John Cantwell, PP, who was well known locally for his work with the poor and his promotion of education.Woods, 1907, p.311 The base of an early stone cross is also located in the churchyard.
The tower houses eight bells, one dating to 1586. The church is grade I listed and there are associated grade II listings for churchyard railings, a memorial, the lychgate and a former church grammar school. The lychgate, by Cecil Greenwood Hare, also functions as a war memorial. A Saxon cross in the churchyard was relocated from Tatenhill.
In the churchyard is a Grade II listed and scheduled churchyard cross which dates from the 14th century, and is believed to stand in its original position. Stapleford Woods Stapleford Woods are under the care of the Forestry Commission. Stapleford CE School was built in 1867 as a National School. It was closed on 18 July 1984.
In the churchyard, to the south of the church, is the sandstone base of a medieval cross, consisting of a square base containing a square socket. The churchyard contains war graves of a Royal Army Medical Corps officer of World War I, and two airmen and an officer and sergeant of the Royal Artillery of World War II.
In the churchyard is a sandstone sundial dated possibly 1764. It consists of a chamfered shaft with octagonal cap, on top of which is a brass plate and gnomon. It is listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war graves of nineteen service personnel, four of World War I and fifteen of World War II.
In the churchyard are three structures that are designated as Grade II listed buildings. One is a sandstone sundial post of uncertain date, which consists of an octagonal shaft on a square base. There is a sandstone war memorial dating from around 1920 by Arthur Hennings. The third structure consists of the piers, railings and walls surrounding the churchyard.
There was a further restoration in 1890 for the interior. Tencreek cross and Culverland cross are stone crosses in the churchyard. The former was found in 1903 at Tencreek Farm and was moved to the churchyard in 1908. The latter was also moved here in 1908 and is thought to have come from a site near Trevecca.
The churchyard also contains the war graves of 21 Commonwealth service personnel, 15 from World War I and six from World War II. Also in the churchyard is the grave of Prince Warabo, the teenaged son of King Jaja of Opobo, Nigeria, who was sent to the former Manor House School in Frodsham but died in 1882.
Millton died of typhoid at his home in Christchurch on 22 June 1887, and was buried in St Peter's churchyard, Upper Riccarton.
It forms an important setting that accentuates the rural and nineteenth century characters of the church and churchyard and rectory and grounds.
He was buried alongside his wife in Laindon churchyard. His son Ernest Longstaffe went on to become a famous composer and producer.
The Churchyard Extension contains the war graves of 27 service personnel, 11 of World War I and 16 of World War II.
Both Robert Millar and his wife, Ella, were buried in the churchyard of Bekkelaget Church in the district of Nordstrand of Oslo.
Garvey died on July 25, 1973, in her native Kingston, Jamaica, and was interred in the churchyard of Saint Andrew's Parish Church.
The Lives of British Saints . He is supposedly buried in the churchyard at Penystrywad. Church of St Gwrhai , Penstrowed, Montgomeryshire Churches Survey.
In April 1868 he was struck with paralysis, and died on 7 April 1869. He is buried in Holy Trinity churchyard, Ripon.
69 After his death, he was buried on the west side of Kensington churchyard, where a monument was erected to his memory.
King died in Waresboro, Georgia on May 10, 1864. He was buried in the churchyard of Christ Church on St. Simons Island.
Conflicting sources give his date of death as either 1950 or 1970. He was buried in St. Mary's Churchyard, Inistioge, County Kilkenny.
The St. Michael's churchyard which contains a vault where Irvine is entombed has continued to be used by the Barbadian Masonic community.
Beatrice Chase, writer known during the first half of the 20th century for her Dartmoor-based novels, is buried in the churchyard.
The walled churchyard surrounds only buildings and structures designed for worship – the church, the calvary, and sometimes an ossuary or charnel house.
The churchyard contains the grave of Driver William John Watkins, a Royal Field Artillery soldier of World War I. CWGC Casualty Record.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three soldiers of World War I, and a soldier and airman of World War II.
Bernard Walke, Vicar of St Hilary and his wife Annie Walke who was a painter and poet are buried in the churchyard.
It was in use from 1681 until 1744 when it was replaced by Fredrikskyrkan. The churchyard has been converted into a park.
Normanton died on 14 October 1957, and after cremation was buried with her husband Gavin Bowman Watson Clark in Ovingdean churchyard, Sussex.
On his death Graham was buried at Aberuthven. The grave is within a substantial Palladian style mausoleum, which dominates the small churchyard.
She was buried alongside Esther Roper in St John's churchyard, Hampstead, with a quote from lesbian icon Sappho carved on their gravestone.
208 The miner poet John Harris (1820–1884) is buried in the churchyard, where also is the mausoleum of the Pendarves family.
The churchyard contains the war graves of eight service personnel of the First World War, and nine of the Second World War.
Many statesmen from Sussex County are interred in the churchyard, including Caleb R. Layton, Daniel J. Layton, Charles C. Stockley and others.
The park contains a fountain made from Lamorna stone which was installed in 1909. This originally stood in St Paul's Cathedral churchyard.
St. Michael's Churchyard is the church and graveyard located in Mickleham, Surrey, England, belonging to the Church of England parish of Mickleham.
The East Lyng churchyard contains the grave of George Marston who was the artist for Ernest Shackleton's 1914 Endurance Trans-Antarctic Expedition.
The churchyard contains the Commonwealth war grave of a Hampshire Regiment soldier of World War I. CWGC casualty record, B T Luckham.
A rare example of a morthouse is located in the churchyard, built to frustrate the activities of bodysnatchers in the 19th century.
On October 4, 1819, Roach married Mary Huddell. Roach died in 1848 in Philadelphia, where he is buried in St. Peter's churchyard.
Robertson died at Wolverhampton, of gout in the stomach, on 20 May 1783, and was buried in the churchyard of St. John's.
There is a memorial to him at St John the Baptist, Penshurst. He is buried in the churchyard at St. Peter, Fordcombe.
She is buried at the traditional burial place of the Dukes of Portland in the churchyard of St Winifred's Church at Holbeck.
He died on 16 December 1878 and is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's Collegiate Church, Haddington, against the northern wall.
His wife Robina Millar died in 1874. The grave lies in the eastern extension, adjacent to the link to the main churchyard.
The three of them are buried under one headstone in the churchyard of St Margaret and St Andrew Church, Littleham, East Devon.
He died in Richmond County, Staten Island, on December 27, 1849. He was interred in St. Andrew's Churchyard, Staten Island, New York.
He resumed the practice of law. He died in Darlington, South Carolina, June 29, 1898. He was interred in First Baptist Churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war graves of ten British service personnel, three of World War I and seven of World War II.
He died on 16 August 1881, and was buried in Crosthwaite Churchyard, Keswick, Cumbria, not far from the grave of Robert Southey.
Seventy five miners who were killed in the 1849 Darley Main Colliery disaster lay buried in the churchyard in a mass grave.
He is buried in a rather unassuming grave, with his baby daughter Elaine Maude and his wife, in St Nicholas Churchyard, Harpenden.
He was elected intendant in September 1789. He died October 30, 1836, and is buried in the Circular Congregational churchyard in Charleston.
Its large stained glass windows, buttresses and neatly kept churchyard are among the reasons for its listing in the highest architectural category.
He composed several well-known airs. He was buried in the churchyard of St Cynhaiarn's Church in his home village of Ynyscynhaearn.
His grave is an old-fashioned table stone on the east side of the path near the north entrance to the churchyard.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three British soldiers of World War I, and a Canadian seaman of World War II.
McRoberts died in New York City on September 8, 1947. He was buried at Saint Matthew's Episcopal Churchyard in Bedford, New York.
He died in 1931 of cancer in Kallista near Melbourne. His ashes are buried in the churchyard at Illawarra near Longford, Tasmania .
The churchyard contains the war graves of eleven Commonwealth service personnel, nine of World War I and two of World War II.
He died on 1 December 1977 and is buried under an oak tree in his own churchyard at Chittoe, facing his parishioners.
The original octagonal font is now situated in the churchyard with a replacement font given in memory of Ann Wilson in 1878.
The dovecote in the churchyard dates from the 17th century, and was associated with a manor house which was demolished around 1850.
He died at Wimpole Street, Cavendish Square, London, on 21 April 1833, and was buried in the churchyard of St. Benet's Doctors' Commons.
He died in Bedford Hills, New York, on March 28, 1956. He was buried in Saint Matthew's Episcopal Churchyard in Bedford, New York.
His remains are interred in the churchyard of St Peters, Tandridge and can be found in the eastern side near the boundary wall.
It was destroyed by a tornado in 1932. The churchyard on the plantation grounds continued to be used as an active burial ground.
He had suffered a stroke and went into a coma from which he never recovered. He was buried in the churchyard at Grantchester.
The grave of Alexander Gordon, Lord Rockville, St Cuthberts churchyard, Edinburgh Alexander Gordon, Lord Rockville (1739 – 13 March 1792) was a Scottish judge.
Tomb of Thomas Rickman The architect Thomas Rickman was buried in the churchyard in 1841, and his tomb is now a listed structure.
Heilgers, a Royal Artillery officer, was killed, aged 51, in the 1944 Ilford rail crash He was laid to rest in Bardwell churchyard.
Holt died in New York City on 30 January 1784 and was buried in the churchyard of St. Paul's Chapel in New York.
He suffered from epilepsy in his later years, and took his own life at Roehampton in 1936. He is buried in Bersted churchyard.
The parish War Memorial adjoins the southwestern end of St. Margaret's churchyard. Dedicated in 1920, it is in the form of a calvary.
His position as Senator was filled by William Baillie, Lord Polkemmet. He was buried in Restalrig Churchyard in eastern Edinburgh on 5 July.
The village church stands to the north, with the churchyard containing a number of war graves dating back to the Second World War.
He died at The Ferns (now Crickley Court), Witcombe, a village near Gloucester, and is buried in the churchyard of St Peter's, Bentham.
At the entrance to the churchyard is a timber-framed lych gate dated 1902 by Douglas which is a Grade II listed building.
The local Saint Nicholas' church is Anglican.Church of England The churchyard has a set of stocks by the entrance and some sculptural gravestones.
The adjoining churchyard at Mount Bethel contains relocated graves of some of the earliest settlers of Foxville, including those of the Buhrman family.
Dupont died in London on 20 January 1797, aged 42. He was buried in Kew churchyard in the same grave as Thomas Gainsborough.
24Winn, p. 207. A member of the Sedbergh & District History Society kindly checked the churchyard in vain for a marker to Woodmason's grave.
The churchyard contains the war graves of eight Commonwealth service personnel of World War II. CWGC Cemetery report, details obtained from casualty record.
The bells were dedicated in 1912 when new land was added to the churchyard at the expense of the governors of Winchester College.
The churchyard contains the war graves of eight service personnel of World War I, and a Royal Artillery soldier of World War II.
Grace Episcopal Church is seen by many people as "a place of inspiration."Wilford, Sarah. Grace Church and Churchyard, Jamaica. L.I. Daily Press.
He is recorded in London on 12 April 1806 and died there on 24 January 1811 \- he was buried in St Pancras Churchyard.
The grave of Thomas Halyburton St Andrews Cathedral churchyard Rev Prof Thomas Halyburton (25 December 1674 – 23 September 1712) was a Scottish divine.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a British soldier of World War I, and a British Army officer of World War II.
The Vestry Books contain accounts of elections and church meetings from 1703 onwards. No burials have taken place in the churchyard since 1881.
The village is on the route of the 1936 Jarrow March, there is a small plaque on the churchyard wall to commemorate this.
In 1910 a papal bull issued by Pope Boniface IX was found in the churchyard that referred to the dissolution of Norton Priory.
James Thomson (1788–1850) engraved another portrait. Sharp died at Chiswick on 25 July 1824, and was buried in the parish churchyard there.
When this churchyard was cleared, his remains were moved to West Norwood Cemetery within the enclosure that the church acquired there in 1847.
Paterson died on January 10, 1961, and was interred in the Welles family plot at Saint Mary's Episcopal Churchyard in Burlington, New Jersey.
There are three military graves in the churchyard dating between 1918 and 1920 that are looked after by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
Man and the landscape in Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown Most of those who perished are interred in Carrickbrennan Churchyard in Monkstown with a memorial.
Cowen died at his home, Stella Hall, Blaydon-on-Tyne, County Durham in 1873. He was buried in St Paul's Churchyard in Winlaton.
He died almost penniless in 1947 in Putney, and is buried in St Marks Churchyard at Highcliffe next to his wife and mother.
He died in North Stoke, Oxfordshire, England on 9 March 1957 aged 86. He is buried in St Mary churchyard, North Stoke, Oxfordshire.
In 1879, White moved to New York and died on May 10, 1882. He was interred in St. Michael's Episcopal Churchyard in Charleston.
He is buried in the Holmdel Baptist Churchyard. A son, Horatio Ely, would go on to serve as sheriff from 1837 to 1838.
First World War hero William Harold Coltman VC, DCM and Bar, MM and Bar, is buried in the churchyard with his wife Eleanor.
Burns died in Plymouth on June 26, 1866 (age 73 years, 196 days). interred at the churchyard of Trinity Church, Holderness, New Hampshire.
The population at the 2011 Census was 2,392. Richard Dimbleby is buried in St Peter's churchyard. According to the link, he was cremated.
Antiques Roadshow's Greatest Finds (episode unknown) Brettle died aged 40 and is buried in the churchyard of St. Peter's Church, Harborne in Birmingham.
Semousies is a commune in the Nord department in northern France. The churchyard contains three Commonwealth war graves from the First World War.
Anne died of pancreatic cancer on 7 August 1996. Her ashes are buried in Ancrum Churchyard, beside her mother and father, in Roxburghshire.
The churchyard also contains the Commonwealth war graves of three New Zealand soldiers from World War I and two from World War II.
It is known as 'crocán' and slopes to the East North and South. There are a few old trees growing in the churchyard.
Loyalist Robin Jackson, nicknamed "The Jackal" (1948-1998), was born in Donaghmore and is buried in the St. Bartholomew Church of Ireland churchyard.
Bodley died on 21 October 1907 at Water Eaton, Oxfordshire and is buried in the churchyard of St James' parish church, Kinnersley, Herefordshire.
The churchyard was converted into Wolfe Tone Square, a public park where the gravestones can be seen stacked up at the southern end.
The churchyard remains, including a number of memorials, and the 19th-century wall and gates. This incorporates part of a tenth-century building.
The churchyard contains the war graves of three soldiers and an airman of World War I, and three soldiers of World War II.
The garden is on the site of the churchyard of St Gabriel Fenchurch, burnt down in the Great Fire of London in 1666.
The Chinese Elm cultivar Ulmus parvifolia 'Churchyard' was raised by Fleming's Nurseries in Victoria, Australia, propagated from a Chinese Elm growing in Melbourne.
He had made his last home at Whitton Hall in Shropshire by 1948 and was buried in the parish churchyard at nearby Westbury.
On the outer walls can be seen numerous grooves where arrows were sharpened during the middles ages, archery was practiced in the churchyard.
She held this post until her retirement in 1903. She died in Edinburgh, on 13 February 1921 and was buried in Girton churchyard.
In the churchyard is a tomb slab on a brick base dated 1699 which has been designated as a Grade II listed building.
The churchyard contains the war graves of seven soldiers of World War I, and three soldiers and two airmen of World War II.
He died at Hereford, England, on 30 May 1970. He is buried, alongside his wife, Winnie, in the churchyard of Sutton St Michael.
St. Michael's Churchyard, adjacent to the church, is the resting place of some famous historical figures, including two signers of the U.S. Constitution.
A number of the lineage are buried in Penicuik Old Parish Churchyard, with both a memorial gateway and a mausoleum to their memories.
In the same year, the English composer Cyril Scott (18791970) also published a setting of that last poem, under the title "Garrison Churchyard".
They serve no function, unlike gargoyles which carry off water. The churchyard includes tombs of the Warre family who owned nearby Hestercombe House.
The churchyard contains a war grave memorial erected by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to a Cheshire Regiment soldier of World War II.
He is buried in Paissy Churchyard, Aisne, France [Grave 2], and was survived by his wife Mabel (née Carr) and their two sons.
Scott-Moncrieff, George (1951), Living Traditions of Scotland, His Majesty's Stationery Office, Edinburgh He died in Peeblesshire and is buried in Traquair Churchyard.
He died in McLaren Vale on 16 November 2014 and was buried in the churchyard of St Philip & St James' Church, Old Noarlunga.
He died in spring 1729 in Sloane's house in London and was buried on 24 April in the churchyard of Chelsea Old Church.
James Henthorn Todd died at his house in Rathfarnham on 28 June 1869 and was buried in the churchyard of St. Patrick's Cathedral.
His bodie was buried in an old churchyard of the pied friers, without any manner of exequies of funerall seruice doone for him.
In recent times the churchyard has been extended, but the original churchyard, is a raised area that is almost circular, and contains many historic yew trees. The combination of a church within an almost circular churchyard and an early dedication would suggest that it was founded in the 6th or 7th centuries. The church is recorded in the Norwich Taxation of 1254 as 'Ecc'a de Llanlocharen' with a value of £1 6s 8d. In 1263 part of it was appropriated to the Cistercian nunnery at Llanllugan, and in 1291 the combined value was £4 6s 8d.
A schoolhouse was built in the churchyard in 1688, but was demolished in 1824. The present churchyard contains the hollow trunk of a 1000-year-old yew, held together by chains, and the war grave of a Royal Field Artillery soldier of World War I. The lych gate is a memorial to those who fell in World War I and is inscribed "Ye who live on, mid-English pastures green. Remember us and think of what might have been". The lych gate is listed at Grade II, as are the sandstone churchyard walls which date from the 16th or 17th century.
The Bishop of Chichester, Charles Ridgeway, reconsecrated the church in October 1913. The Parochial church council raised concerns about the condition of the churchyard in 1931. A document issued on 31 October 1931Illustrated in observed that its "overgrown" state gave "the appearance of sad neglect", and proposed that grave mounds would be levelled, shrubbery would be removed and elaborate gravestones would no longer be permitted. The scheme was not successful, but over the ensuing decades an impressive range of wild flowers have grown in parts of the churchyard, which is now maintained as a nature reserve by the "Living Churchyard" conservation project.
A short and seemingly alliterative poem in the manner of Piers Plowman, Davie Dicar brought Churchyard into trouble with the privy council, but he was supported by Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset and dismissed with a reprimand. Carried out in broadside ballads, the Churchyard-Camel debate was concerned with the relative merit of the plain style in native English literary tradition and the proper literary use of the English language itself. In a verse dedication to John Stow's Pithy Pleasaunt and Profitable Workes (1568), Churchyard defended the native tradition, grounding it in "Peers plowman . . . full plaine" and Chaucer.
In the Valor Ecclesiasticus (1535) the chapel of the Blessed Mary of Redybone is mentioned (iv, 272), and in 1538 we have references to the churchyard of Our Lady of Bury and Our Lady's Gild at Redebourn, and also the churchyard of St. Mary of Bury . The church of Bury being dedicated to the Holy Cross, it may, perhaps, be suggested that the churchyard, chapel and gild of Our Lady relate to the chapel at the west end of Bury church, built possibly to serve the inhabitants of Hepmangrove, and that Redebourn may be an alternative name for Hepmangrove.
Albert Henry Scott (1844–1865), photographer and third son of the architect George Gilbert Scott, is buried in the churchyard; his tomb is Grade II listed. Major General Sir Humphry Thomas Tollemache, 6th Baronet (1897–1990), senior Royal Marines officer, and his wife Nora Priscilla (née Taylor) are buried in the churchyard. The explorer Captain George Vancouver (1757–1798) wrote A Voyage Of Discovery To The North Pacific Ocean, And Round The World when staying in Petersham. There is a memorial tablet to him in the church and he is buried in the churchyard; his grave is Grade II listed.
Together with two unrelated tombs nearby, which are 18th- or early 19th-century, they were listed at Grade II by English Heritage on 26 August 1999. On the north side of the churchyard, which is traditionally used for burials of criminals and those who committed suicide, a memorial survives to "a smuggler, unfortunately shot". The churchyard contains 16 Commonwealth war graves, comprising two British Army soldiers of World War I buried in the south part, and eight Royal Air Force personnel, five soldiers and a WREN of World War II who are all buried in the churchyard extension.
The western extension was also taken over by the Corporation in 1884, and like the original churchyard is maintained by the Council as an area of open space called the Dyke Road Garden of Rest. The Great Storm of 1987 damaged all three parts of the churchyard, and the Council planted about 90 new trees to replace those lost. Phoebe Hessel, whose eventful life made her a Brighton celebrity, is buried in this listed tomb. Many prominent Brighton residents and people associated with the resort are buried at St Nicholas' Church, mostly in the original churchyard.
Colonel Sir George Everest is buried in the churchyard at Hove's parish church. The ancient churchyard around St Andrew's parish church in Hove has been used since the 16th century or earlier, but it fell out of use in 1883 and has been built over in places. Some historic tombs have been damaged or removed in the process, and hundreds of bodies had to be exhumed and reinterred during one period of building work. The churchyard was already nearly full by 1850, when it acquired local fame after influential theologian, sermon writer and well-known preacher Rev.
The churchyard also contains war graves of a York and Lancaster Regiment officer and an airman of World War II. CWGC Cemetery Report, details from casualty record. There is very little space remaining in the churchyard for future burials. The Churchyard has very limited land space remaining for future burials; the field adjacent to the church is earmarked for a potential housing development and thus cannot be purchased. As a result, the church has restricted future burials to Backwell residents only, and is requesting permission to reuse existing graves that have no memorials and are more than 80 years old.
The stable block no longer serves its original purpose, but is now operated as a business park for small local businesses. A short walk to the west of the Hall, facing its rear facade, is the parish church of St John the Baptist, and its surrounding churchyard. With two earlier exceptions, members of the Lyttelton family, owners of Hagley Hall and their relatives, have only been buried in the churchyard since 1875; also there are the owners of other large houses and estates in the area, and their servants as well.Tom Pagett, "St John's Churchyard, Hagley" in Historic Hagley, HHFS pp.
The tomb of George Lloyde from Ampney Park, who died in 1584, is in the North Transept. The organ was installed in the mid-19th century. The cross in the churchyard (2014 photo) The cross in the churchyard was erected in 1415. Parts of it were stored in the church for many years and reinstalled on its base around 1860.
Stone cross in churchyard In the churchyard, there is a stone cross, raised on steps, which support an hexagonal shaft. On the top, there are tabernacled niches. The one on the north side contains the Virgin and infant Christ, while the one on the west side contains the Crucifixion. The views on the east and south sides are nearly obliterated.
The grave monument of George Clinton in the Old Dutch Churchyard Kingston is home to many historic churches. The oldest is the First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church of Kingston, which was organized in 1659. Referred to as The Old Dutch Church, it is in uptown Kingston. George Clinton, first governor of New York and fourth US vice president, is buried in the churchyard.
In the churchyard to the north of the church is the gravestone of Joseph Ramsey, who died in 1878 aged two years. He was the unbaptised child of a nonconformist family. His burial in a Church of England churchyard led to a legal trial, and as a result a change in funeral practices following the Burial Law Reform Act (1880).
St Anne's Churchyard, also known as St Anne’s Gardens, is a public park on Wardour Street in Soho, London. Formerly the churchyard of St Anne's, Soho, it was closed to burials in 1853. It was laid out as a garden by the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association in 1891. It is managed by Westminster City Council and has received the Green Flag Award.
In 1800, Newington Butts was still part of rural Surrey. The playground in St Mary's churchyard has mounds that can be thought of as archery butts. More mounds in the field of St Mary's churchyard. Newington was a rural village that grew up on the Walworth Road at its junction with the Portsmouth Road, about a mile south of London Bridge.
At his request, a memorial to them was put up on the south wall of the chapel. James, Frances and Kyffin are buried in the churchyard. The churchyard also contains the Commonwealth war graves of a Royal Navy sailor of World War I and another from World War II. CWGC Cemetery report, breakdown from casualty record. The CWGC spell the village name Llanfairynghornwy.
These remains can be found at the edge of the churchyard of St Mary's Church, Norton Cuckney. Cuckney motte and bailey castle is listed as a Scheduled Monument by the Department for Culture, Media & Sport. In the 1950s, a mass grave of approximately 200 human remains was found in a trench near the churchyard, leading to speculation regarding a battle near the site.
In Churchyards Challenge (1593) the author refers to his broadside ballad, Davie Dicars dreame (c. 1551–1552), which he says was written against by one Thomas Camel whom Churchyard then "openly confuted". Their argument came to involve not only Churchyard and Camel but also William Waterman, Geoffrey Chappell, and Richard Beard. All their various contributions were collected and reprinted in in 1560.
Earlier remains continue to be reinterred there as well; if unmarked graves are found on land whose ownership can be traced back to original members of the parish, the church is willing to discuss moving them to the churchyard. Fences and permanent plantings are prohibited in the churchyard, and use of artificial flowers is restricted, as is the design of gravestones.
The bell tower has a ring of six bells, all cast by Gillett & Johnston of Croydon in 1907. The church has also a Sanctus bell that was cast in 1352. In the churchyard are the base and broken shaft of a 14th- or 15th-century stone churchyard cross. The ecclesiastical parish is now part of the Benefice of Bicester, Bucknell, Caversfield and Launton.
It is designated by English Heritage as a Grade II listed building. In the churchyard is another memorial to the First World War. This is in Art Nouveau style and carries a Celtic cross, the word "PEACE", and the date of the completion of the war. Also in the churchyard is the grave of Bob Paisley, footballer and manager of Liverpool F.C.
The lychgate of St Luke's, viewed from the churchyard At the entrance to the churchyard is a lychgate dating from about 1870. It is constructed in sandstone, has a tile roof, and is in Decorated style. It is approached by six steps from the east, and at the eastern entrance is a pair of wooden gates. Inside the lychgate are stone benches.
In 1934 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were William Thomas Ritchie, James Hartley Ashworth, Thomas Jehu and Sir Ernest Maclagan Wedderburn. He died on 3 February 1949 and is buried in Currie Churchyard south of Edinburgh. The grave stands on the north wall of the modern cemetery, backing onto the old churchyard.
It later was purchased as the Excise Office for Edinburgh. It stood in the centre of what is now Drummond Place which is named in honour of George Drummond.Lost Edinburgh, Hamish Coghill He died in Edinburgh on 4 December 1766.Grave of George Drummond, Canongate Churchyard Drummond is buried in the Canongate Churchyard the burial ground of the Canongate Kirk.
In the churchyard in front of the porch is the Dole Table, a large stone table which was used once a year to distribute money to the needy of the village. Among those buried in the churchyard is Richard Sax, a farmer who was murdered following an argument with a farm labourer who worked on the estate of Lieutenant- General Lord Baden-Powell.
The churchyard In the churchyard is the remains of a church cross dating from the 14th century. The shaft is octagonal and made from red sandstone. There is also a Ham stone chest tomb inscribed to John North who died in 1721 and Grace North who died in 1759. There are also several unidentified tombs from the 17th and 18th centuries.
Grave of Jack o'Legs in the churchyard of Holy Trinity Church In the churchyard is the grave of Jack o'Legs, who, according to local legend, lived in a cave in a wood at Weston and who stole food from the people of nearby Baldock. The grave is unusually long and was possibly placed there to fuel belief in the legend.
In 1904 the family of a deceased Joseph Edleston owned a plot of land next to the churchyard of St. Mary's in Gainford.Lloyd, Chris (January 5, 2005). "Echo Memories - Of feuds and fiefdoms in little Gainford", The Northern Echo, Darlington. p. 8. The children asked to erect a monument in the churchyard in memory of Joseph's 41-year tenure at the church.
Also in the churchyard is a sundial which was constructed in the 19th century using part of the shaft of the original 15th-century cross. The shaft stands on two square steps. It is also listed at Grade II. In addition the churchyard contains the war graves of three soldiers of World War I, and an airman of World War II.
In the churchyard is a grave of a member of the Hext family with a medieval lantern cross mounted on a modern shaft. The cross head was found in the 19th century at an unknown location and in 1882 set up in the churchyard. It was later moved to its present position.Langdon, A. G. (2002) Stone Crosses in Mid Cornwall; 2nd ed.
The church is medieval but was restored in 1899 and a north aisle added. In the churchyard there is a monolith of the type found in Derbyshire stone circles which suggests that the site was used for pagan worship before the church was built. The churchyard houses the grave of Daniel Boswell King of the Gypsies.Churches in the Ashfield Area.
Trinity Church Cemetery consists of three separate burial grounds associated with Trinity Church in New York City. The first was established in the original Churchyard, located since 1698 at 74 Trinity Place at Wall Street and Broadway. When St. Paul's Chapel (St. Paul's Chapel of Trinity Church) was built in 1766, roughly up Broadway, a burial place was added in its small churchyard.
Stanley J. Weyman, the novelist known as the "Prince of Romance", was born in Ludlow, as was sculptor Adrian Jones, whose ashes are buried in the same churchyard. The naval historian and novelist Captain Geoffrey Bennett (Sea Lion) lived in Ludlow after his retirement in 1974 up to his death in 1983 and his ashes, too, were interred in the parish churchyard.
Plaque adjacent to the tomb of Thomas Gray in Stoke Poges Churchyard Gray died on 30 July 1771 in Cambridge, and was buried beside his mother in the churchyard of St Giles' church in Stoke Poges, the reputed (though disputed) setting for his famous Elegy.Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Location 18533).
Paul Bennett, who lived in the Vicarage behind the church, was found stabbed to death in the churchyard. Bennett had taken the services in the three parish churches and played the church organ too. 500 people attended his funeral at the church on 3 April 2007. His killer had been suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and had lived in a flat overlooking the churchyard.
Maxwell's gravestone at the Old Greenwich Presbyterian Churchyard After the war Maxwell served one term in the New Jersey state legislature, but did not notably distinguish himself. He died on November 4, 1796, while visiting a friend, Charles Stewart in Landsdown in Hunterdon County. He was buried in the Old Greenwich Presbyterian Churchyard in his hometown of Greenwich Township, Warren County, New Jersey.
The parish contains 36 listed buildings: two churches (St Mary Magdalen, Hewelsfield and Brockweir Moravian Church), a churchyard wall, 17 chest tombs (in the churchyard of St Mary Magdalen, Hewelsfield), a pair of limekilns, a milepost, two bridges and 12 houses. Lists of the listed buildings can be found in the Wikipedia articles on the villages of Hewelsfield and Brockweir.
It was found buried in the churchyard before 1920 and taken to what was then the new rectory.Langdon, A. G. (2002) Stone Crosses in Mid Cornwall; 2nd ed. Federation of Old Cornwall Societies; p. 83 There is a Cornish cross in the churchyard of St Austell which was found buried in the ground on the manor of Treverbyn in 1879.
A building in the churchyard dated 1824 was either a watch house or a bier house. It is a stone structure with a stone slate roof, and is listed at Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war graves of four soldiers and a Royal Navy sailor of World War I, and four soldiers and two Royal Navy personnel of World War II.
The parish is part of a united benefice with the parish of Mylor in the Archdeaconry of Cornwall and Diocese of Truro. There is a Cornish cross in the churchyard. It was found in a farm building at Porloe in 1891 and moved to the churchyard. The head has a crude crucifixus figure on the front and a Latin cross on the back.
He backed her into a corner and got her into a bottle, which was then buried. It later turned out that the story had been invented by the local headmaster, who was trying to shame the then rector into clearing up the churchyard. Rumour has it that a ‘witch’s grave’ is in the churchyard complete with a spy hole in the gravestone.
He died in Philadelphia on January 15, 1850 and was buried in St. Mary’s Churchyard in Hamilton Village, now a part of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Sveinn lived most of his life at Suður-Vík in Mýrdalur. He was laid to rest in the old churchyard at Reynir near Vík.
The congregation was called All Saints' Church and Petto ministered there until his death 1711. He was buried in the churchyard on September 21.
Afterward, he resumed the practice of law. He died in Aiken, South Carolina, March 23, 1920 and was interred in St. Thaddeus' Episcopal Churchyard.
Sandby died at the deputy ranger's lodge in Windsor Park on Monday, 25 June 1798, and was buried in the churchyard of Old Windsor.
In the churchyard was a sundial inscribed with the date 1795 which was listed at Grade II. This has since been removed for safekeeping.
He later achieved the rank of sergeant-major. He died in Dublin on 29 February 1892 and is buried there in St. James churchyard.
Bambridge died on 16 December 1943, aged 51, from undisclosed causes. His widow died in 1976. They are interred in St Andrew's Churchyard, Wimpole.
View from the air, showing quarry The churchyard contains one war grave, of a soldier of the Machine Gun Corps of World War I.
He continued writing for the Telegraph until his last days. He died at Sheffield, on 20 February 1902. He was buried in Ecclesall churchyard.
William John Churchyard (2 February 1878 – 31 August 1957) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
The font has a circular bowl and stem on a cuboid step. In the churchyard the stump of a medieval cross can be seen.
In the churchyard is the table tomb of Gabriel Newton, a local politician and founder of the local Bluecoat School, who died in 1762.
Colonel Sherburne died insolvent at the age of 75 on May 21, 1824. He was buried in the churchyard of Trinity Church in Newport.
Baring died in November 1873, aged 74. He was buried in the St. Mary the Virgin Churchyard in Micheldever, City of Winchester, Hampshire, England.
Immediately to the north of St Pancras churchyard is St Pancras Hospital, once the parish workhouse and later the London Hospital for Tropical Diseases.
A General History..., op. cit., Vol. II, p. 834. Robert Potter died aged 83 in Lowestoft, Suffolk, and was buried in the parish churchyard.
Middleton died on 14 June 1613, and was buried in Hardwick churchyard, where a monument, with an English inscription, was erected to his memory.
Clark died at Smyrna and is buried in the Duck Creek Presbyterian Churchyard, now Holy Hill Cemetery, located south of Smyrna on Lake Como.
Aitken died in Hampstead, North London at the age of 57 on 16 November 1917. He is buried at St John-at-Hampstead Churchyard.
In 1895, a monument was erected to his memory in the churchyard at Osteel, where his father had been pastor from 1603 until 1616.
The churchyard cross was erected in the 14th century. It has an octagonal base and tapering shaft. The head of the cross is missing.
John married and had three children. John James Bentley died aged fifty eight, and was buried in St Anne's Churchyard, Chapeltown, in September 1918.
He is buried in the village churchyard at St. James Avebury, next to the house which he had lovingly restored to ensure its survival.
The churchyard contains war graves of two British and one Australian soldier of World War I, and a British airman of World War II.
Zillebeke Churchyard Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery forms part of the village churchyard located around the Catholic parish church of Zillebeke in Belgium. A section of the parish churchyard used by the inhabitants of Zillebeke is maintained as a war cemetery by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission as a burial ground for the dead of the First World War near Ypres (now Ieper) on the Western Front. The grounds of the war cemetery were assigned to the United Kingdom in perpetuity by King Albert I of Belgium in recognition of the sacrifices made by the British Empire in the defence and liberation of Belgium during the war.First World War, accessed 19 August 2006 Within Zillebeke Churchyard CWGC Cemetery there is a section with war graves of soldiers from aristocratic backgrounds; this plot is called The Aristocrat's Cemetery.
Despite later claims his coffin was lost while being transported to Handford, parish records show he was buried in St John Baptist Churchyard, Croydon Minster.
The churchyard contains war graves of four soldiers of World War I, and a soldier, a marine and Royal Navy sailor of World War II.
Stone wall panels include works by the sculptors John Flaxman, John Bacon Junior and Edward Hodges Baily. The church is surrounded by a large churchyard.
BFI Screen Online. Retrieved 02-10-2010. A blue plaque on the building commemorates him. Both Peake and Edwardes are buried in St. Mary's churchyard.
The churchyard contains 26 war graves, those of 25 British Army soldiers of World War I, and a Royal Navy seaman of World War II.
The site is usually inaccessible to the public but can be glimpsed from the churchyard of Coverham's redundant medieval parish church, Holy Trinity Church, Coverham.
The traditional burial place of the Dukes of Portland at Welbeck Abbey was the churchyard of St Winifred's Church in the nearby village of Holbeck.
Kitty moved to a nursing home at Swainsthorpe, Norfolk and she died on 24 April 1946. Both are buried in Burston churchyard alongside each other.
311 In 1620 the church was "repaired and beautified" at a cost of more than £600. The composer Thomas Morley was buried in the churchyard.
He died at his home in Walmer, Kent on 3 October 1947 and was buried in the churchyard of Old St Mary's in the town.
Schiøtz died in Copenhagen in 1975, aged 68, and is buried in the churchyard of the Raabjerg Church, near Skiveren, Denmark, with his wife Gerd.
Moore died November 23, 1915, on a train going to Cincinnati, Ohio. His body was laid to rest in a quiet churchyard in Athens, Ohio.
Anwyl drowned on 23 July 1949 and was buried in the churchyard at Penllech, Gwynedd. His papers are archived at the National Library of Wales.
The script on the archway reads in Norwegian: Kom til Guds Hus (Come to Gods House). The Waterloo Ridge Cemetery is located in the churchyard.
Although she was a Lutheran, Franc Hrastelj, the priest of the Catholic parish, approved her burial in the churchyard of St. Anna's in Slovenske Konjice.
Sutherland died on November 15, 1861, at the age of 69. His grave is in the churchyard of Old Pine Street Church, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Morse died in Surbiton, Surrey, England, U.K. on February 5, 1891. His interment was in the parish churchyard of St. Mary’s in Long Ditton, England.
1776), a stonemason, lived in a cottage near the Cheesewring; several gravestones in Linkinhorne churchyard were carved by him.Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall; 2nd ed., rev.
Leach (2013), pp. li, lii In 1816/1817, the school moved away from the churchyard to a site next to the Schoolmaster’s house in Keldgate.
He was buried in Old St. Pancras Churchyard in London. His name is listed on Burdett Coutts memorial there amongst the interments with no marker.
Only one execution is recorded as taking place in St. Paul's Churchyard: that of Henry Garnet, one of those found guilty of the Gunpowder plot.
Trecothick died on 28 May 1775, before his house at Addington was completed. He was interred at St Mary the Blessed Virgin Churchyard in Addington.
She finally retired from the theatre in 1884. Charlotte Bournonville died in Copenhagen on 22 March 1911. She is buried in Asminderød Churchyard near Fredensborg.
He retained both jobs till his death. He died on 7 June 1701, at the age of seventy-two, and is buried in Greyfriars Churchyard.
His gravestone is in the Inch Parish Churchyard in Inch, Scotland; several memorials of the disaster are located on both sides of the North Channel.
The churchyard cross is also from the 13th century. The church also still houses the original wooden bier used at funerals over a century ago.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a Royal Scots Fusiliers soldier of World War I and a Royal Navy officer of World War II.
He died at his home on 18 July 1877 and was buried in Albury churchyard. J. B. Cardale and his wife Emma had 9 children.
He was survived by his wife, his four daughters and thirteen grandchildren. He was buried in the churchyard at St Peters Church, in Paglesham, Essex.
J. W. Smith Neill CBE born in 1855, died in 1935 and his wife Evelyn died in 1947, both are buried in the Barnweil churchyard.
He is buried in the churchyard at St Wulfran's Church, Ovingdean. Unfortunately, most of Kempe's records were disposed of after the firm shut in 1934.
Jane died in 1875, aged 61; Holloway died there on 26 December 1875, aged 83. They are buried in a family grave at Sunninghill churchyard.
Braose also had to organise a mass exhumation of all Bramber's dead, the bodies being transferred to the Abbey's churchyard of Saint Cuthman's in Steyning.
Pleyben () is a commune in the Châteaulin arrondissement of Finistère department of Brittany in north-western France. The calvary in the churchyard dates from 1555.
In the churchyard to the south of the church is a medieval sandstone cross base with an empty socket. It is listed at Grade II.
He is buried with his family in St Cuthbert's Churchyard in the city centre. The grave lies against a wall, north-west of the church.
In the churchyard is a modern cross, and there are memorial stones to members of the families of Boyle, Bumey, Fairtlough, Hoare, Lane, Mayor, etc.
Thorold died on 1 May 1999. His wife predeceased him, dying in 1993. He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's Church, Syston, Lincolnshire.
William remained active well into his eighties. He died at home in Germantown in 1801 and is buried in the First Presbyterian Churchyard at Philadelphia.
The original churchyard was retained as a memorial garden when the church was moved in 1874. Many of the gravestones were moved at that time.
His middle name is taken from his maternal grandmother, Elizabeth (née Span). He was buried in the churchyard of his now ruined church at Tourmakeady.
The existence of a pair of lychgates at a churchyard is rare. Enlargement took place in 1855 to accommodate burials from the growing railway town of Haywards Heath, which at that time was still in Holy Trinity's parish. By this time, the churchyard had become a cemetery and was no longer run by the church authorities. More land was acquired for expansion in the 20th century.
In the churchyard is a sundial dating from the 18th century which consists of an octagonal shaft on square steps. The shaft has a square dial on a square stone head and a gnomon is present. It is listed Grade II. The lychgate dated around 1896 is also listed Grade II. The churchyard also contains the war grave of a Royal Navy officer of World War II.
P. 131. The ruins are still fairly substantial and clearly visible, with the church and churchyard containing many monuments to the historic families of Cunninghamhead and Pierceton. The Free Church became the Mission Hall for the parish church in Dreghorn and recently it has become an evangelical Christian centre (datum 2006). The entire church, churchyard and hall have all been fenced off and the gates padlocked (2006).
Lychgate At the entrance to the churchyard is a lych gate dated 1879 which was also probably designed by Douglas. It is made of oak with a stone slate roof and is listed Grade II. The churchyard contains the war grave of a Royal Army Service Corps officer cadet of World War II, and of a Royal Air Force flight lieutenant killed in Afghanistan in 2006.
Churchyard cross In the churchyard is a preaching cross dating from the 14th century which is a scheduled ancient monument. A square plinth is set on a circular concrete base. In this is set a sandstone chamfered shaft, rectangular in cross-section, which is about 3.5m high. On the head are cinquefoil panels, those on the east and west sides containing depictions of the Crucifixion.
The Minster Terrace (in German: Münsterplattform) was built during 1334 and the mid 15th Century as a large churchyard. During the Protestant Reformation the paintings and statues of the Cathedral altars were dumped in the churchyard. Some of the art work has been found in archeological digs conducted on the terrace. During the 20th century, the terrace was changed from a graveyard to an open plaza.
The History of Rutherglen and East Kilbride, David Ure. He was originally interred in Blackfriars Churchyard, but the body had to be moved in 1875 when a railway was built through the churchyard. He was reburied in Craigton Cemetery with a monument designed by Greek Thomson and sculpted by John Mossman. The graves lies near the south- west corner within the second row from the south path.
The embankments and ditches of the fort can still be seen. A church and churchyard occupy the southern part of the site, and the churchyard contains the famous Bewcastle Cross. To the north-east of the site are the remains of Bewcastle Castle, a Norman castle built in about 1092, using stones from the Roman fort. The castle was reputedly destroyed by Oliver Cromwell in 1641.
At one time they were thought to date from the late seventh or early eighth centuries, but are now believed to be 10th or 11th century. Pieces of the cross have been put together and now stand in the churchyard near the Norman Chapel. It has been registered as a scheduled monument. Yew trees in the churchyard date from the time of the Hundred Years' War.
The churchyard used to be surrounded by walls. From 1758 to 1772, a battery of guns stood on an area of the burial ground (now covered by road) to defend the river. Until 1767, when Georges Dock was built where the Liver Building now stands, the River Mersey reached the church garden walls at high tide. In 1849 the churchyard was closed to burials.
The cape was topped by a cowl, which was designed by Nolan, Hemming, and costume effects supervisor Graham Churchyard. The cowl was created to be thin enough to allow motion but thick enough to avoid wrinkling when Bale turned his head in the Batsuit. Churchyard explained the cowl had been designed to show "a man who has angst", so his character would be revealed through the mask.
The gates, gate piers and railings of the churchyard are listed at Grade II. The gate piers are of stone with panelled sides and cornice caps. The gates and railings are in wrought iron. Over the gate is a wrought iron overthrow and a lantern. The churchyard contains the war graves of eleven British service personnel, seven of World War I, and four of World War II.
The proposal is to create areas for seating and wildlife, while identifying the more historic grave sites. The group received a grant to assist in determining whether such a plan would work for the churchyard. Notable persons buried at St Augustine's include Welsh composer Joseph Parry. Until Penarth Cemetery was opened in 1903, the St Augustine churchyard was the only burial place in the town.
Changes to the church since World War II have seen pews removed from the south aisle and the floor relaid in Caithness stone in 1947. The churchyard has had a new drainage system installed, trees removed and headstones placed around the perimeter walls. The electrical, heating and sound system have been upgraded, while in 1983 the church organ was overhauled. The huntsman‘s tomb in the churchyard.
The churchyard is oval in shape and contains the base of an old cross and the stone plinth of a former sundial. To the east of the church is a lych gate, adjoining which is a hearse house dating from about 1810. The hearse house, together with the churchyard walls and the lych gate were designated as a Grade II listed building on 16 October 1995.
The church was surrounded on three sides by a churchyard which contained a large number of graves. In the 18th and early 19th centuries it was a favourite target of body snatchers, owing to its proximity to Trinity College, which taught medicine. A wall was built around the churchyard to try to prevent access. In 1892-3 the wall was removed and a railing substituted.
The grave of Chrystal MacMillan, Corstorphine churchyard, Edinburgh In 1937, Macmillan's health was failing and in June of that year she had a leg was amputated. On 21 September she died of heart disease, at home in bed at 8 Chalmers Crescent, Edinburgh. On 23 September her body was cremated. Her remains were buried with her parents in Corstorphine churchyard in the west of the city.
To the south of the church is a medieval churchyard cross. Part of the original shaft is set on four octagonal steps. The upper part was restored in 1867 and incorporates carvings of the Crucifixion and the Nativity. It is listed at Grade II. The churchyard contains the war grave of a King's Shropshire Light Infantry soldier of World War I. CWGC casualty record.
The church was granted by William Testard, lord of Wembdon Manor, to St John's Hospital, Bridgwater in 1284. The current red sandstone building was built in the 14th and 15th century in a perpendicular style with a west tower. In the churchyard is a 15th-century churchyard cross on an octagonal base. The shaft is approximately high; however the head of the cross is missing.
Altab Ali was murdered by three teenagers on 4 May 1978 in a racist attack at St Mary's Gardens by St Mary's Churchyard as he walked home after work. The reaction to his murder provoked the mass mobilisation of the Bengali community locally and came to represent the self-organisation of the community. The gardens of the churchyard were later renamed Altab Ali Park in his memory.
The church itself dates from the twelfth century and is a single-chambered structure set within a rectangular churchyard, with walls of fourteenth- or fifteenth-century origin. Its baptismal font dates from the twelfth or thirteenth century and the churchyard includes a tomb from the seventeenth century, besides war graves of two soldiers of World War I. CWGC Cemetery Report. Details obtained from casualty record.
The inventory of 1552 makes it clear that there were three bells in the tower, a fourth being added in 1610. The latter is the only one remaining, the others being sold to defray the cost of repairs in 1765. Farmer James Reynolds' headstone in Beeston Regis churchyard The strange story of farmer Reynolds' stone. Within the churchyard is a large stone covering a grave.
The open space is still known as St Mary's Churchyard, and the narrow pedestrian walk at its south end is Churchyard Row. There is record of a 'hospital' before the Reformation. In 1601 the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers erected St Peter's Hospital on the site of the present London College of Communication. This expanded and survived until 1850, when it was removed to Wandsworth.
St Martin's Church He also rebuilt the wall of the churchyard which included a number of architectural features such as the gazebo and its family crest-engraved walls. He planned for his death 20 years before he died when began work on his mausoleum in another corner of the churchyard. The mausoleum, which has recently been restored, contains his tomb and that of his second wife.
In the churchyard are 13 listed structures, each of which is designated at Grade II. To the north and west of the church are walls, stiles and gates. To the south of the south transept is a sundial. This originated as a medieval churchyard cross, whose shaft is sunk into a former mill wheel. On the top are two brass dials, one overlying the other.
The nave roof was finally completed in 1740. The octagonal crocketed spire is thought to be the tallest in the county at 210 feet (64 metres). There are two gargoyles on the south transept. A headstone to Thomas Parker and a table tomb in the churchyard are both Grade II listed, as are the gate piers and gates to the churchyard to the north.
It has Welsh and Westmorland slate roofs with decorative tiled ridges. The church interior comprises a nave, western tower, south aisle and porch, and a chancel. At the threshold of west door to the tower is set part of a coped or round-topped 11th century Saxon grave slab, possibly placed here in 1894. The churchyard has the remains of a 14th-century churchyard cross.
Harrison married Margaret Shackleton at Lancaster Priory in 1785. The couple had three children who survived childhood; a son, John, who died in 1802, and two daughters. Harrison died aged 85 at his home, St Martin's Lodge, Chester, in 1829. He was buried in the churchyard of St Bridget's Church, Chester, but his remains were moved to Blacon Cemetery when the churchyard was cleared in about 1964.
The interior of the church In September 1815 Percy Bysshe Shelley visited Lechlade with his future wife Mary, her step-brother Charles Clairmont, and the novelist Thomas Love Peacock, and was moved to compose a poem, A Summer-Evening Churchyard, Lechlade, Gloucestershire, which was published the following year. The path through the churchyard is now named “Shelley’s Walk”, in a tribute to the famous atheist.
The font, gifted by the architect, is of Ancaster stone, with a marble column and Doulting stone base. The 1889–90 restoration also saw the churchyard rearranged, enlarged and enclosed with a new boundary wall of Hamstone. To enlarge the churchyard, two cottages were demolished on the east side and one on the west side, the latter being gifted by the Earl of Ilchester.
The Church of the Holy Innocents has good integrity and intactness as the majority of its original fabric is extant. The churchyard has fair integrity and intactness as it retains most of its original fabric, but is in need of maitenance works. The churchyard has only poor integrity and intactness as its boundary fence has been removed, although it still exists as an open space.
The war memorial In the churchyard is a war memorial that was moved from the churchyard of the previous church. The memorial is also recorded as a designated Grade II listed building. It is in stone, and has a triangular plinth. On the plinth is a triangular pedestal with scrolled feet on the corners at the base, and a cornice with carved scrolls at the top.
David Harrison, "Monmouth Cemetery, Trail 1", June 2008, p.5 Map of Monmouth Cemetery 1880 Map of Monmouth Cemetery 1960 showing the expansion into the field to the north The cemetery came into existence because Monmouth Council had decided to close St Mary's Churchyard in Monmouth for burials as decaying human remains were appearing above ground. This was caused by the raised height of the churchyard. Residents in neighbouring Whitecross Street suffered a high mortality rate as a result and unpleasant odours from the churchyard were also evident Henry Somerset, 7th Duke of Beaufort sold the land to the Council for use as the new cemetery.
The north side of the church The church sits in a small churchyard with the River Medway to the west, the remnants of the college, including its gateway, to the south, the Archbishop's Palace to the north-west and the palace's tithe barn to the north-east. The medieval wall on the north and west sides of the churchyard and the Monckton War Memorial in the churchyard are both separately listed as Grade II structures. The church is built of rag-stone in the Perpendicular style with buttressed walls and a crenellated parapet. The tower is on the south-west corner and is tall.
Portrait of Thomas Churchyard (by unknown artist) around the time of his wedding in 1825 Landscape painting of Haugh Lane, Woodbridge by Thomas Churchyard Thomas Churchyard (born Melton, near Woodbridge, Suffolk in 1798, died 1865) was an English lawyer and painter of Woodbridge. He was trained as a solicitor, and worked in the law for many years, but his real interest was landscape painting. He married Harriet Hailes of Melton in 1825, and they had two sons and six daughters who survived to adulthood (but none of whom prospered). Thomas was a long-term friend of Edward FitzGerald, the translator of Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat.
The body was interred in Holyrood Abbey but was allegedly moved to Canongate churchyard in 1688. A small bronze plaque on the east wall of the church, above a worn 17th-century flat tombstone, reads: It is more likely to be a fanciful story to attach to the old but illegible stone (which may be the stone of Bishop James Ramsay). Holyrood was still a royal chapel in 1688, and there would have been little popular support to move this body to the "people's" churchyard. Rizzio being a Catholic, it is also hard to explain why he would be buried in a Protestant churchyard.
Near the church is the tower of the previous church which is dated 1824. It is built in three stages with an embattled parapet and is a Grade II listed building. In the churchyard is a stone sundial dated 1844 which is also listed at Grade II. Also in the churchyard is a 17th-century stone font with an octagonal bowl and a rounded stem, and the ancient stone coffin lid of a child. In addition the churchyard contains the war graves of a World War I Middlesex Regiment officer, and an airman, Royal Engineers soldier and Lancashire Fusiliers officer of World War II.
In March 1914, Manchester Corporation was negotiating with the Ecclesiastical Commissioners to turn St John's dreary city-centre churchyard from an "eyesore" to a garden planted with trees and shrubs. The church is commemorated by a stone cross in the garden; a plaque states that more than 22,000 bodies lie buried in the vicinity. Among those buried in the churchyard are John Owens, founder of Owens College, the forerunner of Manchester University, and William Marsden, who successfully campaigned for the introduction of a half-day holiday for workers on Saturdays. With the exception of Owens' grave, the tombstones in the churchyard were covered with of soil.
William Blackwood and Sons, and assistant-editor of Blackwood's Magazine. He died at Portobello on 23 April 1896, and was buried in Rhynie parish churchyard, Aberdeenshire.
10; Issue 44773; col B Mrs. Litchfield. Darwin's Daughter And Helper. A correspondent. Category: Obituaries She is buried in St Mary the Virgin Churchyard, Downe, Kent.
In the churchyard is a table tomb with cast iron railings bearing the dates 1797 and 1799. It is designated as a Grade II listed building.
Auchinleck was Lecturer on Surgery in the Dublin School of Medicine. He died, suddenly, on the 27th December, 1848, and was interred in St. Michan's churchyard.
The churchyard contains the graves of former servants of the family. The house of Croome Court and its surrounding parkland are owned by the National Trust.
The grave of Ian Hamilton Finlay, Abercorn churchyard Ian Hamilton Finlay, CBE (28 October 1925 – 27 March 2006) was a Scottish poet, writer, artist and gardener.
He retired in 1964 and died, following a short illness, in Aberdeen Royal Infirmary on 20 January 1971. He is buried at Dunnottar churchyard near Stonehaven.
He died in obscurity, under the name Geoffrey Norton, on 18 February 1960 and was buried in an unmarked grave in Kessingland churchyard, near Lowestoft, Suffolk.
The sandstone boundary wall of the churchyard is listed at Grade II, as is the brick-built vicarage that stands to the south of the church.
He died at 28 Norfolk Street, Park Lane, London on 5 February 1873, aged sixty-two, and was buried in the parish churchyard at Much Wenlock.
He was recognised by the erection of a white marble tomb was buried in the churchyard of All Saints Church, Fulham, London on 16 January 1762.
In the churchyard are two tombs, one bearing dates in the 19th century, the other without an inscription, which are designated as Grade II listed buildings.
His grave in the neighbouring country churchyard is marked by a cross, bearing an Irish and a Latin inscription, erected in 1861 by his literary admirers.
His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Black Watch Museum in Balhousie Castle, Perth, Scotland. The grave of Thomas Edwards in St Mary's churchyard, Chigwell, Essex.
The other structures are a church with a sundial in the churchyard, a public house, a boundary stone, and the wall around a former burial ground.
He was buried on 21 January in the churchyard of St. Mary's, Ealing where there was a memorial tablet. He was an admirer of Samuel Johnson.
The churchyard contains a number of Grade II listed tombs and headstones including those of James Allen (d. 1682), Paul Beeston (d. 1694), Richard Beeston (d.
King died at his house in Edward Street, London, after a few hours' illness, on 3 November 1787, and was buried in the churchyard of Wormley.
Historical sources report that the ceremony took place in the churchyard of the St Antonino Church, not far from where the event is currently taking place.
He is buried in the churchyard of St Michael's Church, Helston, and is commemorated in the naming of Trengrouse Way, a main thoroughfare in the town.
In the churchyard is a 14th-century cross consisting of an octagonal shaft on a square base. It is designated as a Grade II listed building.
The churchyard contains the war graves of a Derbyshire Yeomanry officer (a member of the Curzon family), and a Pioneer Corps soldier of World War II.
Cox lived in the house until his death in December 1889 aged 72. William Cox is buried in the parish of St Andrew's churchyard, Netteswell, Harlow.
84 pages. Robertson, Cecelia B., Respect This Stone: St. Paul's Churchyard, Augusta, Georgia, 1783-1820. Genealogical research by Robert K. Adams. Foreword by Edward J. Cashin.
Lucy Cavendish died aged 83 in her home, the Glebe, in Penshurst, Kent. She was buried with her husband in the Cavendish family churchyard, St Peter's.
He died in 1838 and was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's Church, Wormsley, where his surviving chest tomb is a grade II listed structure.
St Gregory's churchyard includes a monument that may be 16th- century, one good late-18th-century headstone and a 17th- or 18th-century set of stocks.
The Lambley and Hartleyburn War Memorial is located in the churchyard. Lambley Parish Church falls within the Parish of Alston Moor within the Diocese of Newcastle.

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