Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | EAST FINCHLEY CEMETERY (FORMERLY ST MARYLEBONE CEMETERY) | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 51.591234 Longitude: -0.18377294 National Grid Reference: TQ 25913 89605 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1000835 Date first listed: 01-Oct-1987 |
Mid C19 public cemetery laid out by Barnett and Birch, planted by James Wright, with
late C19 extension.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
The Burial Board of the parish of St Marylebone purchased 25 acres (c 10ha) of land
and founded the cemetery in 1854. The ground on which the cemetery was to be laid
out was rural land, part of Newmarket Farm. A competition in January 1854 to design
the buildings and layout of the cemetery was won by the architects Barnett and Birch
Ltd. With a budget of £15,000, Barnett and Birch designed the two chapels together
with the lodge and entrance and the cemetery was planted by James Wright. Work started
on the buildings in May 1854 and in March 1855 St Marylebone Cemetery was consecrated
by the Bishop of London.
In 1893 an area of land adjoining the cemetery to the west was purchased. The extension
is not shown on the 2nd edition OS map published in 1894 but does appear on the 1914
edition.
In 1965 the Borough of St Marylebone was incorporated into the City of Westminster
and the cemetery was then administered by Westminster City Council and renamed East
Finchley Cemetery. In 1987 the council sold it, together with two other cemeteries,
to private developers for fifteen pence. Following a period of neglect and public
controversy, Westminster purchased the cemetery back and it continues (2000) to be
owned by them and is currently managed and maintained under contract. St Marylebone
Crematorium is now in private ownership. The Barnett and Birch ragstone buildings
(chapels and lodges) were restored in 1994-6.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING St Marylebone Cemetery, c 15ha, is located
to the north of the Hampstead Garden Suburb, in the London Borough of Barnet. It is
bounded by the East End Road to the north-east, playing fields, Brookland Primary
School, and the North Circular Road to the west and north-west, the gardens of houses
on Ludlow Way and Denison Close to the east, and gardens of houses along Hill Top
to the south. There are walls around most of the boundaries, with a low wall supporting
iron fencing along the north-east boundary. The cemetery is laid out on sloping ground,
with a fall from north to south. There are good views from the higher ground in the
northern part of the cemetery over the southern part and beyond to the churches in
Hampstead Garden Suburb.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The main approach to the cemetery is from East End Road to
the north-east. A pair of mid C19 entrance gates with gothic gateposts are connected
by a low stone wall on which spiked iron railings are mounted. The gates and walls
are set back from the road, with a lawn in front. The western entrance, with a gothic
lodge (1850s, listed grade II with the northern boundary wall and railings), is surmounted
by an archway. The entrance drives curve in from each gate to meet in the middle.
The 1930s approach to the crematorium is from a junction off East End Road in the
north-west corner of the cemetery. This entrance has two small, single-storey octagonal
gatehouses designed by Edwin Cooper (1937, listed grade II). The drive, Sycamore Avenue,
leads southwards towards the crematorium, 150m to the south.
PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS The Church of England (Episcopal) chapel (Barnett and Birch 1854,
listed grade II), in Decorated Gothic style, stands to the south of the semicircular
entrance drive. It has a crocketed spire over the entrance. Further south and on the
west side of the original cemetery is the smaller, and plainer, Dissenters or Nonconformist
chapel (Barnett and Birch 1854, listed grade II). The Italianate red-brick Crematorium
and Chapel (listed grade II), located in the western part of the cemetery, was designed
by Sir Edwin Cooper in 1937 for the Borough of St Marylebone.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS Near the entrance to the original (eastern) part of the
cemetery there are two large cedars (planted in 1856) and other mature trees and shrubs
within the semicircular area formed by the entrance drive. The original (mid C19)
part of the cemetery (c 9ha) runs north/south from the main entrance. The northern
half is laid out with three avenues: a central, straight avenue and two curving avenues
on either side, forming an oval circuit. The Church of England chapel lies at the
northern end of this oval (with the avenues merging from this point with the entrance
drives), and the Glenesk Mausoleum (listed grade II) at the southern end. The Mausoleum
was designed by Arthur Blomfield for Lord Glenesk in 1899 and is a rectangular building
in limestone, with corner buttresses and a slate roof.
In the southern half of the original cemetery, the three avenues continue southwards
as parallel linear drives, known as West, Central, and East Avenues. The avenues are
connected at their southern ends by Southern Avenue, which runs west/east. Acacia
Avenue runs parallel, and to the west of, Western Avenue and leads north from Southern
Avenue to the Nonconformist chapel, which is located within an area of tarmac between
Acacia Avenue and Western Avenue. The unconsecrated ground which surrounded the chapel
was divided from the rest of the ground in the 1850s by ornamental post-and-chain
fencing (removed C20). A curving drive, Rosemary Avenue, leads through the south-east
corner of the cemetery, connecting Eastern Avenue with the southern end of Central
Avenue.
There are avenues of yew and other conifers along most of the avenues. Central Avenue
was planted in the 1850s with an avenue of poplars but these were felled in 1887 and
replaced by yew trees. There are scattered mature trees throughout the C19 cemetery
(mostly evergreens, conifers, and oaks) and some shrubs amongst the densely laid out
graves. An area in the south-east corner is more open with grass and scattered trees.
There are many notable Edwardian monuments which have been strategically placed at
the main junctions. The monuments include six which are listed grade II: the memorial
to Harry Ripley (William Reid Dick c 1914) of a bronze draped figure on a granite
plinth, on Cypress Avenue; opposite the Ripley monument is the memorial to Thomas
Tate (F Lynn Jenkins c 1909) of a bronze draped Roman figure on a sarcophagus; the
large monument to Sir Peter Nicol Russell (Sir Edgar MacKennal early C20) to the east
of the Church of England chapel, a bronze group against a tall pedestal; the pink
polished granite monument to Sir Henry Bishop, with a bronze portrait medallion, on
a stone base off Central Avenue; the stone screen monument to Sir Robert Harmsworth
and family by Edwin Lutyens off West Avenue; and the massive sarcophagus monument
to Thomas Skarratt Hall (d 1903) and his family in polished pink granite on a stone
plinth off West Avenue.
The cemetery extension (6ha) in the north-west corner of the site is laid out on a
square grid plan of straight drives, with formal arrangements of graves set within
garden areas. The land was taken into the cemetery in the late C19 but was not laid
out until the 1930s. Oak Tree Avenue (terminated at its east end by an oak tree) runs
west/east along the southern end of the extension and Cypress Avenue runs west/east
across the centre. The crematorium (1937) is located in the south-west corner of the
extension and the entrance drive runs down the eastern boundary of this area, linking
the crematorium to the entrance from East End Road. To the south of the crematorium
are an informal memorial garden known as Willow Tree Gardens and an area of lawn graves,
both developed in the late C20 (outside the area here registered). A drive leads north
along the east side of the crematorium and terminates at a war memorial near the northern
boundary of the cemetery. A small plot of military graves, 'Soldiers' Corner', is
located on Remembrance Avenue.
REFERENCES
H Meller, London Cemeteries (1981), pp 56-63 B Cherry and N Pevsner, The Buildings
of England: London 4 North (1998), p 122
Maps OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1868 2nd edition published 1894 3rd edition
published 1913
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION East Finchley Cemetery is designated at Grade II* for the
following principal reasons:
* A good example of a High Victorian (18454-55) public cemetery for the Metropolis.
* Notable designers (Barnett & Birch Ltd) provided a creative layout. * The layout
and structures survive largely intact in good condition. * Local and national social
interest is expressed in a rich variety of 19th and early 20th century monuments.
* The cemetery contains a good early 20th century crematorium and memorial cloister
(1937) by Sir Edwin Cooper.
Description written: December 1998 Amended: March 2000 Register Inspector: CB Edited:
November 2003 Upgraded: November 2009
This List entry has been amended to add the source for War Memorials Register. This
source was not used in the compilation of this List entry but is added here as a guide
for further reading, 11 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 Register, accessed 11 July 2017 from http://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/63102
War Memorials Register, accessed 11 July 2017 from http://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/58000