Identification and description | |||||
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Name | TONGE CEMETERY | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 53.576998 Longitude: -2.4084853 National Grid Reference: SD 73050 09011 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001660 Date first listed: 20-Nov-2002 |
A public cemetery opened in 1856, laid out by William Henderson and with extant buildings
by Charles Holt and John Smalman Smith.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
In 1854 Bolton Corporation was reported as reluctant to become encumbered with the
responsibilities of providing and maintaining a public cemetery and action was only
taken following receipt, in April 1855, of an Order of Her Majesty in Council vesting
the Borough of Bolton with the powers for providing places for burials with a request
that the Order be laid before the Town Council (Kelly 1988). A Burial Board was subsequently
appointed at a special council meeting later in the same month (ibid).
Some 29 acres (c 12ha) of land at Tonge were purchased for a cemetery from Le Gendre
Nicholas Starkie for £8067 (Bolton Almanack, 1856). Starkie also gave a 16 yard (c
14.4m) wide strip of land for an approach road from Tonge Bridge and £300 towards
ornamenting the ground (ibid). A competition was held for designs for mortuary chapels
and in June 1856 designs by Bolton architect, Charles Holt were selected for the Church
of England and Roman Catholic chapels and Robert Burrows was appointed to construct
the two for £1222 (The Builder, 1856). Two other Bolton architects were also involved:
George Woodhouse for the design of the Nonconformist chapel, costing £570, and John
Smalman Smith for the design of the lodges, entrance, and fence forming the northern
boundary (Bolton Almanack, 1856). The lodges and entrance gates cost £860, drainage
£500, fencing £2000, and laying out the ground £1500 (ibid). Draining, fencing, and
road-making was carried out by the Borough Engineer, Baylis, and the laying out, planting,
and ornamentation by Henderson of Birkenhead (ibid). William Henderson was responsible
for designs for Corporation Park (qv) in Blackburn (1857), Alexandra Park (qv) in
Oldham (1865), Queen's Park (qv) in Bolton (1866) and, in part, Farnworth Park (qv)
in Bolton (1864). The cemetery opened on 31 December 1856 with the first burial of
Thomas Allan of Little Bolton, aged seventy, although at that time the entrance buildings,
approach road, and road to the Roman Catholic chapel were not complete (Registrar's
Report, 6 January 1857).
The 1893 OS map indicates that the irregular site was divided from east to west at
the centre by a steep embankment with burial grounds laid out in the northern section,
around the Nonconformist and Church of England chapels, but with only a perimeter
path and small area adjacent to the Roman Catholic chapel laid out in the southern
section. In 1894 the Church of England chapel was damaged by the removal of coal from
the Bancroft Mine lying below the cemetery (Kelly 1988). Damage to other buildings
was anticipated and, rather than purchase the sections of coal supporting them for
£3986 4s 7d, it was decided that the buildings should be tied without delay (ibid).
By 1908 (OS 1910) the central area of the site had been laid out, with the steep,
dividing embankment appearing to have been re-levelled, and the cemetery boundary
extended to include additional ground, then partially laid out, to the east.
The Nonconformist and Roman Catholic chapels no longer (2002) remain. Tonge Cemetery
remains (2002) in use and is in the ownership of Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council,
excepting only the west entrance lodge which is in private ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING The irregular, c 15ha site is situated
c 1.3km east of Bolton town centre. To the west and south-west the cemetery adjoins
the steeply sloping wooded bank of the River Tonge with the boundary generally unmarked.
To the east the cemetery adjoins the wooded edge of Leverhulme Park, a public park
gifted to the town by Viscount Leverhulme in the early-C20. From the southern tip
of the cemetery this boundary is marked for c 170m to the north by a c 1.6m high buttressed
stone wall and elsewhere generally by C20 concrete panel fencing. The line of the
stone wall accords with the boundary shown on the 1893 OS map and the C20 fencing
with the boundary of the extension land indicated on the OS map of 1910. The north
boundary, adjoining early and late-C20 housing on Cemetery Road and Tonge Fold Road
respectively, is marked by a low stone wall with evidence of railings, now (2002)
removed. In the north-west corner of the cemetery, where the ground falls towards
the river, the north boundary wall is stepped to follow the ground line with junctions
between differing wall heights marked by wide piers with swan-neck detailing. To the
east of the entrance on the north boundary the ground rises, with the boundary wall
stepped to follow the slope. At the north-east corner of the site an area of allotment
gardens, on rising ground, is inset into the cemetery with the boundary marked by
a low stone retaining wall. The north boundary is generally lined with trees and these,
together with the wooded belts adjoining the river and in the adjacent public park,
create a strong, enclosing boundary line.
The north-west area of the cemetery occupies a generally level plateau. Along the
southern edge of the plateau the ground slopes down to the south and south-west, the
lower ground in the southern area of the cemetery being gently undulating. To the
east of the plateau, ground in the north-east of the cemetery slopes steadily up towards
the east boundary with a disused mine shaft adjacent to the far north-east corner
of the site. To the north and north-east the surrounding area is in mixed housing
and commercial use, with Leverhulme Park to the east and across the river to the south-west,
the C19 Bradford Park developed with C20 housing.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The principal, and only, entrance lies at the centre of the
main northern boundary and is approached via Cemetery Road, which leads southwards
from Bury Road. It is marked by a carriage entrance with cast-iron gates set between
large octagonal stone piers with projecting splayed caps. The carriage entrance is
flanked by two iron pedestrian gates set within low stone walls, topped with railings
and terminating at stone piers with ball finials. These outer piers are each attached
to lodges situated immediately to the west and east of the entrance. The entrance
ironwork is all of similar design and by Pickersley Sims & Co, Bedford Foundry, Leigh.
Fixing details appear altered however suggesting that earlier gates and railings have
been replaced. The lodges, generally two storey with single-storey canted projections
adjoining the entrance, are largely symmetrical in design with walls of coursed stone
rubble with ashlar dressings and window-head detailing below steep roofs of blue slate
with gable parapets. Cast-iron wall-plates indicate internal tie rods. The lodges
and entrance date from 1856-7 and are by John Smalman Smith.
PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS The Church of England mortuary chapel is sited 130m south-east
of the entrance on the east side of the north-west plateau area. The single-storey
stone chapel, in a simple Gothic Revival style, is in coursed stone rubble with ashlar
dressings below a blue fish-scale slate roof with a short pinnacled bell turret above
the recessed main west door. Cast-iron wall-plates indicate internal tie rods. The
chapel dates from 1856 and is by Charles Holt.
OTHER LAND From the entrance a 5m wide axial main drive leads 180m south-south-east
to the southern edge of the plateau area in the north-west of the cemetery. Immediately
adjacent to the entrance two drives lead off to east and west to form a winding circuit
largely following the boundaries to north and west, and to the southern tip of the
cemetery. To the east the circuit drive winds from north to south through the cemetery
and generally marks the boundary between the mid-C19 cemetery and later extension
ground.
Some 30m south of the entrance a further pair of drives lead off to east and west
of the axial drive, each following a semicircular route leading back to the axial
drive c 165m to the south of the entrance. These drives thus form an inner, 135m diameter
formal circuit adjoining which, to east and west respectively in a cross-axial arrangement,
are the Church of England chapel and the site of the former Nonconformist chapel,
the latter marked by an open grassed area. Burial areas in the north-west plateau
area of the cemetery are laid out with grassed axial and occasional cross-axial paths
with those in the north-west corner on a north/south axis.
To the south of the formal circuit drive, c 175m south of the entrance, two cross-axial
drives lead off the main drive which, from this point, continues as a 3m wide path
leading down for c 100m where it meets the winding circuit path adjacent to the south-west
river boundary. The cross-axial paths also intersect with the winding circuit path,
one leading directly eastwards before curving down to the east-south-east and the
other leading down, directly westwards. Immediately south-east of this junction is
a small Quaker burial ground. These cross-axial paths are indicated on the 1893 OS
map as lying at the head of a steep embankment with lower ground to the south. Some
35m south of the cross-axial drives, two further curving paths lead off the main axial
path to link with the winding circuit path to west and east. This layout is first
indicated on the OS map of 1910.
In the lower, southern area of the cemetery, c 330m south-east of the entrance and
within the winding circuit drive, is the site of the former Roman Catholic chapel,
marked by an open grassed area. From the chapel site a winding path leads north-west
and another south-east, both to rejoin the winding circuit drive. Burial areas adjacent
to this chapel site are laid out with grassed paths on a north-north-west to south-south-east
axis and include, to the south-east of the chapel site, a small rectangular burial
ground for nuns enclosed by low C19 railings. Elsewhere the southern burial ground
is generally laid out with an extension of the axial arrangement of grassed paths
in the north-west of the cemetery.
The eastern area of the cemetery, rising steeply to the north-east, is generally laid
out with straight paths leading eastwards, slightly off the cross-axis, from the winding
circuit path to a path running north-west to south-east. This path bisects the north-east
area of the cemetery, a large part of which remains unused for burials.
The cemetery contains a number of mature trees, in particular along main drives where
their location and occasional siting on small mounds may indicate former more extensive
formal tree planting. The main axial drive is lined with mature yews for c 15m to
north and south of the cross-axis linking the two chapel sites and, adjacent to the
entrance, the ground between the two main drive junctions with the axial drive is
marked by two rectangular areas densely planted with evergreens.
Among the many varied memorials to prominent C19 and C20 Bolton people are those to
the radical reformer, Thomas Yates (d 1857) and composer, John Francet (d 1867) (Brooks
1989). Particularly impressive groups of monuments, some enclosed with railings and
many marking vaults below, line the main axial drive. Other notable groups are situated
immediately south-east of the Nonconformist chapel site and facing the west front
of the Church of England chapel.
REFERENCES
The Builder 14, no 697 (14 June 1856), 334 Bolton Almanack and Year Book for 1857
(1856), 49-50 L Kelly, Disposal of the Dead in 19th century Bolton (unpublished MA
thesis, Manchester Polytechnic 1988), 101-10 C Brooks, Mortal Remains (1989), 52,
125
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1850 1938 edition OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st
edition published 1893 2nd edition revised 1908, published 1910 1930 edition 1939
edition
Archival items Tonge Cemetery Registrar's Report, 1857 (ABZ/3/4), (Bolton Local Studies
Library)
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION Tonge Cemetery is designated at Grade II for the following
principal reasons: * Tonge Cemetery is a High Victorian cemetery (1856) laid out for
a Burial Board. * The cemetery was laid out by William Henderson of Birkenhead, with
associated structures designed by local architects Charles Holt, Robert Burrows, George
Woodhouse and John Smalman Smith. * The cemetery is laid out with a formal axial drive
and curvilinear walks dividing the burial areas which exploit the undulating topography
of the site. * The layout of the cemetery survives substantially intact, although
the Nonconformist Chapel (Woodhouse, 1856) and the Roman Catholic Chapel (Holt, 1856)
have been lost. * The cemetery contains a good collection of C19 and early C20 funerary
monuments which reflect the development of Bolton.
Description written: October 2002 Register Inspector: HMT Edited: December 2009
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.