Identification and description | |||||
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Name | ABBEY CEMETERY | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 51.371058 Longitude: -2.3479162 National Grid Reference: ST 75878 63613 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1001351 Date first listed: 20-Sep-1996 |
A private Anglican cemetery laid out by John Claudius Loudon in 1843.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
During the 1830s, with a lack of further burial space at Bath Abbey, a new cemetery
was proposed to be laid out at the edge of the city. The land was purchased from the
Prior Park estate by the Rector of Bath Abbey, Rev Brodrick. The architect, social
reformer, and landscape gardener, John Claudius Loudon (1783-1843) was probably responsible
for the initial scheme for the layout and planting of the cemetery. That scheme was
altered in the execution by the Bath City Architect, George Phillips Manners, who
was also responsible for the cemetery chapel. In 1843, the year Loudon completed Abbey
Cemetery, he published his book, On the Laying out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries.
The design for Abbey Cemetery, which he had just completed, is included in it as an
example for a 'proposal for a cemetery on hilly ground'. Besides Abbey Cemetery, Loudon
designed two other cemeteries in England: Southampton Cemetery (qv) in Hampshire and
Histon Road Cemetery, Cambridge (qv), and he gave advice on the design of various
other cemeteries throughout England. Loudon died just a few weeks before Abbey Cemetery
was consecrated on 30 January 1844.
Abbey Cemetery remains (2001) in private ownership and burials are only permitted
in existing family plots. The mortuary chapel is currently closed, awaiting repairs.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Abbey Cemetery is situated c 1.3km south-east
of Bath city in a residential area. The c 3ha triangular site lies north-west of Prior
Park (qv), on a steep, south-facing hillside. The boundaries of the cemetery are formed
by retaining walls which separate the site from the public roads and residential housing
defining it: Prior Park Road to the east, Perrymead Hill to the west, and Perrymead
Roman Catholic Cemetery to the south. To the south-west a wire fence has been erected
between the boundary wall and the grave plots.
From the site there are very fine and extensive views of Bath, the opposite northern
height of Lansdown Hill, and to the east over the vale of Widcombe.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES Abbey Cemetery is approached by an entrance situated at the
far north corner of the site, at the junction of Prior Park Road and Perrymead Hill.
This entrance consists of a wooden gate, a replacement copy of the one introduced
in the mid C19, which hangs between mid C19 gate piers of Bath stone and is flanked
to the west by a roofed pedestrian gate. Both gates are decorated with grilles in
open panels and iron rivets.
The main drive, formerly lined with elm trees, leads from the main entrance to the
south-eastern part of the cemetery, running parallel to the public road. A short distance
from the southern boundary it swings west-south-west to a turning circle on the north
side of the mortuary chapel.
There is a service entrance in the far south-west corner of the site which is now
(2001) no longer used. Here, wooden gates formerly gave access to a straight track
(now overgrown) leading north-eastwards to the rear of the chapel.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING The main focus of Abbey Cemetery is provided by the mortuary chapel
(listed grade II), designed by George Phillips Manners in 1844. It is built in Norman
style, with its tower and short body standing adjacent to the south boundary at the
top of the sloping site, and at the head of the path bisecting the cemetery through
its north-west to south-east axis.
Some 10m west of the mortuary chapel, in the south-west corner of the cemetery, is
the site of a former building, possibly a greenhouse or gardener's hut (OS 1884, 1902).
OTHER LAND The layout of Abbey Cemetery comprises a perimeter walk which encloses
the different cemetery sections (see Index Plan, pre 1848) with formally laid out
plots on either side of a central north-west to south-east axis. Immediately north
of the chapel, which is situated centrally on the south boundary, is an area laid
out as an informal meadow. This is the former site of William Beckford's tomb, whose
burial at Abbey Cemetery took place in 1844, just after the opening of the cemetery.
Four years later, in 1848, Beckford's tomb, including its surrounding railings, was
returned to the newly consecrated Lansdown Cemetery (qv), which was laid out on the
site of Beckford's own garden.
The central path at Abbey Cemetery runs north-west from the chapel downhill towards
the far north-west end of the site, where it turns east, before it meets the main
drive 15m south of the main entrance. The north end of the central path, at its turn
to the east, is marked by two mature Wellingtonias. Halfway along its length, c 15m
north-west of the chapel, the central path crosses the main drive, which is marked
by steps and four mature yews planted on each corner (OS 1885).
Abbey Cemetery contains many mature trees, mostly evergreens, including English and
Turkey oak, ash, beech, holly, elder, cherry, hawthorn, box, hazel, cotoneaster, horse
chestnut, redwood, and Wellingtonia. Several Roman burials were discovered in the
south-east corner while the ground was being prepared for the laying out of the cemetery
in 1843 (OS 1885), this fact being marked by a monument, presented by Blauchard Coward,
which is sited on the main carriage drive.
The graves in Abbey Cemetery are arranged in a formal grid and are connected by paths.
There is a fine collection of mid to late C19 tombs and funerary monuments belonging
to eminent local residents such as diplomats, military men, bishops, musicians, actors,
and poets. Amongst these monuments are the Hinds Memorial of c 1847, signed by Reeves,
a monumental stonemason of Bath, and the Partis Memorial of c 1846. Both are in the
Greek Revival Style and situated in section III to the north-west of the mortuary
chapel. At the turn of the main approach that leads to the chapel, in the south-east
corner of the site (section II), stands the Crimean War Memorial. The Greek Revival-style
obelisk, unveiled on 31 May 1856, lists both the officers and the other ranks who
died during the Crimean War.
The south-west corner of the site, now (2001) overgrown, was formerly the site of
a small nursery with a greenhouse, as indicated on the OS map of 1885.
REFERENCES
J C Loudon, On the Laying out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, and on the Improvement
of Churchyards (1843) 'Bath Abbey Cemetery', Bath Chronicle Gazette, 31 January 1844
J Tunstall, Rambles about Bath and its Neighbourhood (1856) N Pevsner, The Buildings
of England: North Somerset and Bristol (1958), p 111 C Brooks, English Historic Cemeteries,
(English Heritage Theme Study 1994), p 54 S Harding and D Lambert, Parks and Gardens
of Avon (1994), pp 108-09 T Gorst, Bath: An Architectural Guide (1997), pp 278-9
Maps
Bath Abbey Archives: plans and watercolours of the cemetery by G P Manners
Index Plan of the Bath Abbey Cemetery, pre 1848 (copy on EH file)
OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1884, published 1889 2nd edition surveyed 1902,
published 1904 OS 50" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1884, published 1885
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION Abbey Cemetery is designated at Grade II* for the following
principal reasons:
* Abbey Cemetery is an important example of an early Victorian garden cemetery developed
from an initial plan by J C Loudon, the leading mid 19th century writer on cemetery
improvement. * The cemetery contains an outstanding collection of funerary monuments
which reflect the social, economic and aesthetic life of Bath in the second half of
the 19th century. * The cemetery survives intact.
Description written: October 2001 Amended: October 2001 Register Inspector: FDM Edited:
January 2004 Upgraded: November 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, 21 August 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 21 August 2017 from https://www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk/memorial/217060
War Memorials Register, accessed 21 August 2017 from http://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/7202