Identification and description | |||||
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Name | WARSTONE LANE CEMETERY | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 52.488418 Longitude: -1.9147316 National Grid Reference: SP 05887 87837 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001545 Date first listed: 03-Aug-2001 |
A cemetery opened by the Church of England Cemetery Company in 1848, with a landscape
possibly designed by R H Vertegans and buildings by James R Hamilton of the Gloucester
firm of Hamilton and Medland.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Warstone Lane Cemetery in the Jewellery Quarter of Birminghan belonged to the Church
of England Cemetery Company. The Company was founded in 1845 to establish a burial
ground for members of the Anglican church, following the opening in 1836 of the nearby
Key Hill Cemetery (qv) which was used predominantly by Nonconformists. With the approval
of the Bishop of Worcester, in whose diocese Birmingham then was, the Cemetery Company
looked for a suitable site. Finally a piece of land on Warstone Lane partly occupied
by a disused sand quarry was chosen. The site belonged to Sir Thomas Cooch and Colonel
Howard Vyse. The Company bought the c 7ha property for £9630. It was originally intended
that land on the north side of Pitsford Street should be reached through a tunnel
but this area was sold to the Birmingham to Dudley and Wolverhampton Railway Company,
whose line was opened in 1854.
The cemetery buildings were designed by James R Hamilton of the Gloucester firm of
Hamilton and Medland while the grounds around the chapel and catacombs may have been
laid out by the Birmingham nurseyman and landscape gardener Richard H Vertegans (BCC
Information leaflet).
Both the nearby Key Hill Cemetery and Warstone Lane Cemetery were compulsorily purchased
by Birmingham City Council in 1952 and closed for burial in 1982. Warstone Lane Cemetery
continues (2000) to be owned by Birmingham City Council and is managed by Birmingham
City Council.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Warstone Lane Cemetery is situated in
Hockley, c 1.3km north-west of Birmingham city centre. The setting is a commercial
area called the Jewellery Quarter combined with residential housing. The c 4ha former
sand quarry site lies north of Warstone Lane, sloping down to Icknield Street to the
west. Streets and houses mark the boundaries of the cemetery to the south on Warstone
Lane, to the west on Icknield Street, to the north on Pitsford Street, and to the
east on Vyse Street. The Birmingham Mint manufactory is situated to the south-west
of the cemetery. The original cast-iron railings which once topped the low stone boundary
walls have long been removed although some piers still survive on Icknield Street.
Today (2000) the boundary is marked by a wooden fence to the east, a brick wall to
the west, and elsewhere by the remains of the low stone walls. The boundaries were
originally planted with a row of trees which have either been lost or replaced by
more hardy species.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The main entrance was formerly that situated north of Warstone
Lane at the Cemetery Lodge (listed grade II) at the south-east corner of the cemetery.
The Lodge is built in the Tudor Gothic style of blue brick with stone dressings and
formerly contained apartments for the cemetery secretary, offices, and a boardroom.
No longer used as a cemetery lodge, it has recently been restored and converted to
commercial office use. The area around the Lodge is now separated from the cemetery
ground by iron railings, and the formal approach through the carriage arch has been
lost. The main entrance, which gave access to a tree-lined drive, consisted of the
gabled central carriageway of the cemetery lodge which was closed by doors and gates.
The front gates (now gone) were decorated with wrought-iron grilles in open panels
and wrought-iron hinges and cresting. The present (2000) main entrance to this end
of the site lies to the west of the Lodge and consists of a small path with some steps.
After c 10m the path rejoins the original main approach. The main approach (planted
with poplars) leads north from the Lodge to the site of the former mortuary chapel,
and to the catacombs beneath (to the west), continuing on to terminate at the north
entrance on Pitsford Street.
There are three further entrances: two in the low boundary wall on Vyse Street to
the east, and a third to the north-west on Icknield Street. The latter is marked by
a pair of gate piers relocated here from elsewhere in the cemetery. The Icknield Street
entrance is now the principal entrance to the site and from here a path runs uphill
towards the catacombs.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING The former transeptal chapel designed by James R Hamilton in the
Perpendicular Gothic style provided the centrepiece of the cemetery design. The chapel,
with its nearly 37m high octagonal spire, served as the parish church of St Michael
from 1854 to 1878. It suffered bomb damage during the Second World War and was eventually
demolished in 1958. The chapel stood on the highest point of the site, above the sandstone
catacombs which still survive (2000), facing west towards Icknield Street.
OTHER LAND Warstone Lane Cemetery, which retains its original area and design, is
laid out in an informal style with a perimeter walk and winding paths around the central
chapel and the catacombs. A local landscape gardener, R H Vertegans, may have been
responsible for laying out the area of the cemetery ground around the chapel, with
the main paths lined by avenues or rows of trees. The dominant feature was formerly
the chapel, placed on the highest point of the site with its catacombs beneath. Serpentine
paths from which the chapel could be seen still wind across and around the burial
ground.
Since 1958, when the chapel was demolished, the main focus of the cemetery has been
the catacombs. The terraced sandstone catacombs, constructed of rock-faced masonry,
were built into the sides of the old sand quarry and were not completed until 1880.
The structure is arranged in a semicircle of two tiers, each level supporting a narrow
walkway. Twin flights of steps descend from the platform of the former chapel to the
upper walk around the catacombs. The middle level can be approached from within the
semicircle while a third walk follows the inner circle at ground level. The catacombs
comprise round-arched openings which give access to vaults. The openings were once
closed with inscribed memorial stones although most of these have been replaced by
plain concrete. Graves are arranged in a grid pattern on the circular lawn enclosed
by the catacombs and a group of C20 trees mark its centre. In front (to the west)
of the catacomb circle the ground falls steeply away towards Icknield Street.
To the west of the Lodge at the Warstone Lane entrance stands the War-Stone on a stone
plinth. The War-Stone, which gives its name to both the street and the cemetery, is
a large glacial boulder. About 3m north of the Lodge is a Cross of Sacrifice commemorating
those who lost their lives in the First World War.
Within the cemetery the graves are arranged predominantly in a grid-pattern facing
the chapel site. Some areas have been cleared of memorials, but many old monuments
survive.
REFERENCES
Brooks, Mortal Remains (1989) Brooks C, English Historic Cemeteries, English Heritage
theme study (1994) The Church of England Cemetery, Warstone Lane, Information leaflet,
Birmingham City Council, Department of Planning and Architecture, nd Key Hill Conservation
Area, Guide leaflet, Birmingham City Council, Department of Planning and Architecture,
nd
Maps Smith J Piggott, Map of Birmingham ... from a ...survey made in the years 1824
and 1825, published 1828, Local Studies Collection, Birmingham Central Library
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1888 2nd edition published 1904 OS 25" to 1
mile 3rd edition published 1918
RESONS FOR DESIGNATION Warstone Lane Cemetery is designated at Grade II for the following
principal reasons: * The cemetery is an example of a mid-C19 joint stock cemetery
laid out to serve the Anglican community of a provincial town. * The cemetery is a
good example of the work of the noted cemetery designers J R Hamilton and J M Medland.
* The cemetery retains a significant range of catacombs which form a key element of
the design. * The original planting is attributed to Richard H Vertegans, a local
nurseryman of note.
Description written: July 2000 Amended: October 2001 Register Inspector: PS 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.