Identification and description | |||||
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Name | POOLE CEMETERY | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 50.734449 Longitude: -1.9637009 National Grid Reference: SZ 02658 92760 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001595 Date first listed: 19-Feb-2002 |
A mid-C19 Burial Board cemetery laid out by the Bournemouth architect C C Creeke.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
In December 1853 the Vestry of St James' church, Poole resolved to establish a Burial
Board to provide a suitable cemetery for the parish. During the C18 the town and port
of Poole had expanded with the development of the Newfoundland fishing trade; in the
C19 new industries including pottery manufacture arose, and by the mid-C19 the churchyard
attached to the medieval parish church had ceased to be sufficient for the number
of interments taking place each year.
The newly constituted Board was instructed to enter into negotiations with the Trustees
of John Bingley Garland of Stone Cottage, Wimborne (Post Office Directory of Dorsetshire
1859) to secure a site for the proposed cemetery (Minutes, 2 December 1853). In January
1854 it was reported that Mr Garland had offered to present a site comprising 14 acres
(c 5.5ha) at Longfleet for use as a cemetery (Minutes, 9 January 1854). This site
lay within the Borough boundary, but to the north-east of the old town, close to the
newly fashionable residential areas which spread eastwards towards Bournemouth (Newman
and Pevsner 1972). Following the completion of negotiations, in May 1854 the Board
was authorised to expend up to £1500; in August this sum was increased to £2000 (Minutes,
23 May 1854, 7 August 1854).
In August 1854 (Minutes, 7 August 1854) the Board appointed as its Surveyor Christopher
Crabbe Creeke (1820-86), an architect in practise at Bournemouth with Augustus Henry
Parken (d 1898) (Felstead et al 1993). Creeke was responsible for the general laying
out of the site, and for the design of the two chapels. The cemetery was opened in
1854 (Kelly 1935), and was subsequently expanded to the west in the early-1930s when
an adjacent field enclosure was appropriated for burials; this extension is not included
in the site here registered. Today (2001), the cemetery remains in municipal ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Poole Cemetery is situated in the district
of Longfleet, c 1km north of the centre of Poole. The c 5.5ha site is bounded by hedges
and fences to the north, east, and south which separate it from mid and late-C20 domestic
properties and gardens; to the west it adjoins the early-C20 cemetery extension. To
the north there is an extensive belt of trees and evergreen shrubbery on a north-facing
slope which drops down from the area used for interments towards the northern boundary
of the site. The site slopes up towards the east and north-east corner, the north
or Anglican chapel standing on the crest of a west-facing slope from which there are
views to the west and south-west, including glimpses of Poole Harbour and the Purbeck
Hills beyond. When the cemetery was established in the mid-C19 these views would have
been more extensive, but have now (2001) been obscured by tree and scrub growth.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES Poole Cemetery is approached from the B3068, Ringwood Road
to the south-south-east at a point c 25m north of its junction with Bond Road. An
avenue of mature beech planted on a wide grass verge flanks a tarmac drive which leads
c 100m north from Ringwood Road to cross Dorchester Road. This drive is now (2001)
closed to vehicular traffic. To the north of Dorchester Road the drive continues for
c 80m north-north-west to reach the entrance to the cemetery which comprises a pair
of C19 wrought-iron carriage gates supported by a pair of gabled brick and stone piers
which are ornamented with carved stone panels bearing the arms of the Borough of Poole.
To east and west the carriage gates are flanked by a pair of wrought-iron pedestrian
gates supported by a similar pair of lower brick and stone piers. The present entrance
gates were restored in 1886 (inscription). To the north-west of the gates is an area
of lawn surrounding geometric beds for seasonal planting, beyond which stands a late-C19
two-storey brick and tile-hung Arts and Crafts-style lodge. This lodge is shown on
the OS map of 1890 and was probably constructed c 1886 when the entrance gates were
restored. From the entrance the broad tarmac drive leads north-west, passing a marble
panel bearing the arms of the Borough of Poole and an inscription recording the donation
of the site for the cemetery by John Bingley Garland in 1854. Adjacent to this stone
and opposite the lodge stands a war memorial in the form of a Cross of Sacrifice.
The memorial is set on a grass bank which ascends from the drive and is surrounded
by stone paving and low stone walls; a low laurel hedge separates the grass bank from
an area of late-C20 graves enclosed within further hedges to the north of the drive.
PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS The cemetery is provided with two separate chapels of similar
design. The southern chapel, constructed for the use of Nonconformists, is situated
c 100m north-north-west of the lodge. This chapel is of buttressed stone construction
under a slate roof, with a bold gothic-arched entrance set beneath a rose window in
the west facade. The door is flanked by a pair of lancet windows, while there is a
further rose window in the east facade. The west facade is surmounted by an open bellcote.
The northern or Anglican chapel stands on high ground c 100m north of the Nonconformist
chapel. It is of similar buttressed stone construction and has the same arrangement
of windows and entrances. The bellcote on the west gable of the Anglican chapel is
surmounted by an elaborate carved stone cross.
The chapels were designed in 1854 by the Surveyor to the Poole Burial Board, Christopher
Creeke (Minutes, 7 August 1854).
OTHER LAND Poole Cemetery is laid out with a series of curvilinear walks which form
two circular or elliptical patterns, one immediately west of the Nonconformist chapel,
and one immediately south-east of the Anglican chapel. To the north of the Anglican
chapel is an area of informal planting which adjoins a serpentine boundary walk. The
principal walks are today (2001) surfaced in tarmac, while subsidiary walks either
retain gravel surfaces or are laid to grass.
From the entrance the drive leads c 20m north-west to a junction from which walks
lead west to form a boundary walk, north towards the Nonconformist chapel, and north-north-east
towards the Anglican chapel. A group of significant monuments including a C19 stone
obelisk commemorating members of the Kemp-Welch family stands on a triangular-shaped
area of grass beneath mixed specimen trees including cedars, ilex oaks, and Irish
yews. Similar planting adjoins the walks leading north towards the Nonconformist chapel,
while the circular walk enclosing the burial area to the west of the chapel is planted
with further specimen trees including mature sweet chestnuts, Irish yews, and cypresses.
This circular burial area was formerly divided into quarters by further walks which
converged on a central specimen tree; these walks are now (2001) partly appropriated
for late-C20 burials. Between the outer circular walk and the perimeter walk are further
burial areas planted with mature specimen trees and conifers. To the east of the Nonconformist
chapel and the walk leading north towards the Anglican chapel is a further group of
significant monuments, including c 20m east-north-east of the chapel a monumental
stone obelisk commemorating John Morgan Salter BA, Surgeon to HMS Prince, which was
wrecked in Balaklava Bay on 14 November 1854. Adjacent is a stone sarcophagus with
a recessed arched opening at its west end containing a carved stone draped urn; this
monument commemorates John Tench (d 1860).
From the east side of the Nonconformist chapel a curvilinear walk sweeps north-north-east
through a mid-C20 avenue of flowering cherries and other specimen trees and conifers
to reach the Anglican chapel which stands on the edge of a south-west-facing slope
overlooking the lower area of the cemetery and the early-C20 cemetery extension. The
Anglican chapel is surrounded by further specimen trees and shrubs including monkey
puzzles, Irish yews, and cypresses. The slope below the chapel is similarly planted.
To the south-east of the chapel is an elliptical-shaped burial area surrounded by
walks and mature Liriodendrons. Around the perimeter of this ellipse is a group of
significant monuments including a stone spire in memory of Lilian Braxton (d 1866),
an obelisk commemorating George Ingram (d 1867), and a further obelisk in memory of
Elizabeth Pierce (d 1868). To the east, this elliptical area abuts the eastern perimeter
walk which extends north from the ellipse before following a serpentine course parallel
to the northern boundary of the site. The ground to the north of the walk falls away
and is thickly planted with pines and evergreen shrubbery. To the north-north-west
of the Anglican chapel some of this planting has been cleared in the mid and late-C20
to provide additional burial space. Some 100m north-west of the Anglican chapel a
walk leads south-south-west from the northern perimeter walk, ascending gently and
sweeping south and south-east to return to the Anglican chapel. To the north of this
walk, c 25m west of the chapel stands a large Gothic-style canopied tomb commemorating
Robert Slade (d 1863), his father Thomas Slade JP (d 1887), and other members of his
family. Nearby, and elsewhere throughout the cemetery, are C19 and early-C20 graves
numbered and marked with glazed pottery markers of local production.
Poole Cemetery retains its C19 path pattern and much of the structural planting as
recorded on the late-C19 OS map (1890); it also retains the mid-C19 chapels and a
representative collection of mid and late-C19 funerary monuments.
REFERENCES
Post Office Directory of Dorsetshire (1859) Kelly's Directory of Dorset (1935) Newman
J and Pevsner N, The Buildings of England: Dorset (1972), 317-18 Felstead A et al,
Directory of British Architects 1834-1900 (1993), 215-16
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1888 1938 edition OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st
edition published 1888-90 2nd edition published 1902 3rd edition published 1912-13
1936 edition
Archival items Minutes of the Burial Board of the Vestry of St James' church, 1853-4
(PE/PL: VE1/1), (Dorset County Record Office)
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION Poole Cemetery is designated at Grade II for the following
principal reasons: * Poole Cemetery is a High Victorian garden cemetery (1854) laid
out by a Burial Board. * The cemetery is a good example of the work of the Bournemouth
architect Christopher Crabbe Creeke (1820-86), who was subsequently responsible for
the design of Wimborne Road Cemetery, Bournemouth (qv). * The layout of the cemetery,
including its associated structures and planting survives intact. * The design of
the cemetery successfully exploits the undulating topography of the site for picturesque
effect. * The cemetery contains a good collection of C19 funerary monuments which
reflect the social and economic development of Poole during the C19. * Several monuments
in the cemetery commemorate individuals associated with the expansion of Poole as
a port, with their professions being reflected in the design of the monument.
Description written: October 2001 Amended: November 2001 Register Inspector: JML Edited:
December 2009
This List entry has been amended to add sources for War Memorials Online and the War
Memorials Register. These sources were not used in the compilation of this List entry
but are added here as a guide for further reading, 10 July 2017.
This garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by Historic England for its special historic interest.
Websites
War Memorials Online, accessed 10 July 2017 from https://www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk/memorial/76358
War Memorials Register, accessed 10 July 2017 from http://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/48847