Identification and description | |||||
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Name | FORD PARK CEMETERY | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 50.382677 Longitude: -4.1441159 National Grid Reference: SX 47659 55841 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1001684 Date first listed: 26-Jan-2004 |
A mid C19 cemetery laid out to the design of J R Hamilton and J M Medland of Gloucester.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
During the early C19 the three adjoining towns of Plymouth, Devonport and Stonehouse
grew rapidly as the Naval dockyard at Devonport expanded (Pevsner, 1989). The resulting
growth in population placed an increasing burden on the towns' existing churchyards,
and in 1846 the Plymouth, Devonport and Stonehouse Cemetery Company was established
by Act of Parliament and purchased 18 acres (c 7.25 ha) of previously undeveloped
land at Ford, to the north of Plymouth, for the formation of a cemetery. Designs for
laying out the proposed cemetery were invited, and in April 1847 the premium was awarded
to J R Hamilton and J M Medland of Gloucester (Builder, 1847), who designed Warstone
Lane Cemetery, Birmingham (1848, qv) and Welford Road Cemetery, Leicester (1848, qv).
Hamilton & Medlands' scheme for Ford Park Cemetery was chosen in preference to one
submitted by the local architect, George Wightwick (Builder, 1847).
Hamilton & Medlands' design included an entrance lodge, and formal drive ascending
to a terrace which formed the setting for two chapels. The area to the south-west
of the terrace and chapels, together with a narrow strip of ground to the north-east
was laid out for burials in 1847-8, while the remainder of the site purchased in 1846,
extending to some c 3.25ha to the north-east of the chapels, was let for grazing and
at various times offered for sale in order to improve the company's finances. The
cemetery was opened for burials on 1 December 1848. In 1848-9 £23-16-6 was spent on
planting trees and shrubs in the cemetery (Minutes), while a further £30-0-0 was spent
to plant an avenue extending from Pennycomequick to the principal entrance to the
cemetery (Minutes). In its early years the cemetery company suffered from precarious
finances, and it appears that Hamilton & Medlands' scheme was modified by members
of the company board in order to secure economies (pers comm Dr Will). The cemetery
is shown as originally laid out on the first edition OS (c 1860).
The area to the north-east of the chapels was appropriated for burials in the 1860s,
while in 1874-5 the company purchased a further area of land to the north-west of
their original property. This extension was laid out to a grid pattern and planted
in a more simple style; it is not included in the registered site. By the late C19
a separate Jewish burial ground had been established to the north-east of the original
cemetery; these areas are not included in the registered site.
During the Second World War, the cemetery suffered bomb damage during air raids on
Plymouth and the dockyards. In particular, the nonconformist chapel was destroyed
in a raid in 1940. It was re-built on the same site, but to a simpler design in the
late 1950s. In the second half of the C20, the company began to face mounting financial
difficulties as the number of burials declined (Ford Park Cemetery Trust). It finally
went into voluntary liquidation in 1999, and the site was vested in the Ford Park
Cemetery Trust, a charity which manages it as a working cemetery. Today (2003), the
site remains in divided ownership, with the cemetery lodge in private ownership and
the remainder of the registered site in the ownership of Ford Park Cemetery Trust.
SITE DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Ford Park Cemetery is situated c 0.5km
north of North Cross, to the north-west of Ford Park Road, and to the east of Central
Park. The c 4ha registered site comprises the cemetery as laid out in 1847, and is
enclosed to the south-east and south-west by stone walls of varying heights, and to
the north-east by a range of mid C19 catacombs extending from south-east to north-west
c 10m north-east of the chapels. The south-eastern wall separates the cemetery from
Ford Park Road, and was formerly surmounted by railings. Low retaining walls to the
south-west separate the site from Central Park. The north-western boundary of the
registered site is formed by a straight walk extending from south-west to north-east
through the floor of a valley c 150m north-west of the Anglican chapel. This walk
represents the north-western boundary of the property acquired by the Plymouth, Devonport
and Stonehouse Cemetery Company in 1846, and follows the course of a C16 or C17 leat,
now culverted, which runs through the valley. The cemetery is situated on a south-west
facing slope which affords views across Central Park and Plymouth towards the Sound
and Mount Edgcumbe (qv). The ground also drops away towards the north-western boundary
of the registered site.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES Ford Park Cemetery is approached from Ford Park Road to the
south-west, at a point c 80m west of its junction with Ridge Park Avenue. The principal
entrance comprises a pair of C20 wrought-iron carriage gates supported by a pair of
stone piers surmounted by gabled caps, which are flanked by low stone quadrant walls
supporting C19 cast-iron railings (all listed grade II with lodge). Within the cemetery,
and immediately east of the entrance, stands a picturesque, single-storey gothic lodge
(listed grade II). Of irregular plan, the lodge is constructed in stone under slate
roofs, and stands in a small garden separated from the drive by low stone walls. The
lodge and associated entrance were designed by Hamilton & Medland as part of the original
scheme for the cemetery. In the mid C19 an avenue of limes was planted by the cemetery
company along Central Park Avenue (formerly known as Cemetery Road) which leads from
Pennycomequick north-east and north to the principal entrance to the site; some trees
survive from this scheme (outside the site here registered).
There is a further vehicular entrance to the cemetery from Ford Park Road at a point
c 80m west of the junction of Ford Park Road and Stangray Avenue. A pair of tall stone
piers with gabled caps supports a pair of C20 wrought-iron carriage gates, which lead
to a drive continuing the axis of the chapel terrace south-east to Ford Park Road.
This entrance formed part of the original cemetery scheme, and is marked on the first
edition OS (c 1860).
PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS The former Anglican chapel and the mid C20 chapel which replaced
the Nonconformist chapel destroyed by enemy action in 1940, stand on an artificially
levelled terrace which extends c 150m from south-east to north-west, c 250m north-north-east
of the principal entrance. The chapels stand c 50m north and east respectively of
the point at which the principal drive joins the terrace, and are separated by burial
areas. The former Anglican chapel (listed grade II) stands to the north and comprises
a single, hall-like structure, with a gabled porte-cochere set within its western
bay. The west gable is surmounted by a low crennellated bell turret, while the gables
of the porte-cochere are ornamented with pinnacles and buttresses. The chapel is built
in coursed rubble stone with ashlar dressings and gothic windows. Deconsecrated in
the 1998, the chapel is today (early C21) used as a store. The mid C20 chapel c 80m
south-east of the former Anglican chapel is constructed in a simple gothic style from
coursed rubble stone, but lacks the western porte-cochere and associated ornamentation.
The chapel, which remains in use in the early C21, is adjoined to the south-east by
a single-storey office wing. The nonconformists' chapel replaced by the present structure
was of identical design to the surviving former Anglican chapel (photograph, 1889).
OTHER LAND The principal drive sweeps north, north-east and east-north-east for c
350m, ascending from the principal entrance and lodge to reach the chapel terrace
which forms the focal point of Hamilton & Medlands' cemetery scheme. The drive is
adjoined to the east and south-east by grass verges and banks planted with a single
row of mature beech. The grass verges appear formerly to have incorporated flower
beds. To the west and north-west the drive is bordered by a low rubble-stone wall
which in part serves to retain the higher ground to the north-west, and also formed
the physical division between the consecrated ground to the north and west, and the
unconsecrated ground to the south-east, as required by Bishop Phillpotts of Exeter
(d 1869) in satisfaction of Canon Law. The first edition OS (c 1860) shows a double
row of trees to the south and east of the drive, with a single row to the west. This
scheme, which appears to have been part of Hamilton & Medlands' original layout for
the cemetery, is also shown on a photograph of 1889; it was subsequently simplified
during the C20.
Opposite the lodge, an area of lawns and evergreen shrubs forms the setting for a
war memorial in the form of the Cross of Sacrifice. To the north-north-west of the
war memorial are the foundations of late C19 glasshouses (OS, 1893) which abutted
the stone wall enclosing the Anglican burial areas, a free-standing section of which
survives (2003) c 20m north of the war memorial. Some 40m north of the entrance, a
grass walk leads west and north from the drive to pass c 200m north-north-west through
an avenue of mature Turkey oaks; this feature is shown on the first edition OS (c
1860), and appears to have formed part of Hamilton & Medlands' scheme for the site.
The avenue walk allowed access to burial areas at the lower, western end of the consecrated
ground, and linked to a walk parallel to the north-western boundary of the mid C19
cemetery, which approximately corresponds to the walk forming the boundary of the
registered site.
As the drive ascends towards the chapel terrace, it turns north-east, passing to the
south-east of a rectangular garden of remembrance for the interment of cremated remains.
This C20 garden is enclosed by rubble-stone walls c 3m high, which are the remains
of a picturesquely gabled mid C19 cottage which is shown on the first edition OS (c
1860), and a photograph of 1889.
The chapel terrace is partly enclosed to the south-west by ranges of mid C19 catacombs
comprising raised, grass-topped mounds retained to the north-east and south-west by
ashlar walls, in which loculi are closed by memorial slabs. Further, similar ranges
of catacombs extend to the north-west of the Anglican chapel, and to the north-east
of both chapels. These latter catacombs extended parallel to the north-eastern boundary
of the mid C19 cemetery. There are further catacombs and vaults set into the south-west
facing slope above a secondary drive leading north-west from the principal drive at
a point immediately south-west of the former shelter. From the chapel terrace, a walk
extends south-west on axis with the west façade of the Anglican chapel, passing through
a break in the range of catacombs, to reach a rond-point c 80m south-west of the chapel,
the centre of which is occupied by a set of raised vaults. Circular on plan, with
loculi marked by commemorative slabs on the circumference, the central area of the
range is covered with lawn surrounding a single sarcophagus. A similar set of raised
vaults is situated south-west of the chapel standing on the site of the nonconformist
chapel, thus creating a symmetrical plan below the chapel terrace. The raised vaults
and the associated walks formed part of Hamilton & Medlands' layout for the cemetery,
and are shown on the first edition OS (c 1860), and a photograph of 1889, which also
indicates that the raised grass areas were formerly planted with specimen Irish yews.
The burial areas to the north-west and south-east of the principal drive are laid
out to a grid pattern divided by subsidiary walks and planted with scattered specimen
trees and conifers including significant numbers of Irish yews which may relate to
the mid C19 planting scheme (pers comm Dr Will). The path pattern shown on the first
edition OS (c 1860) with curvilinear walks to the south-west of the circular raised
vaults appears to have been simplified in the late C19 (OS, 1893). The area to the
south-west of the chapel terrace contains a representative collection of predominantly
mid and late C19 monuments.
The area to the north-east of the chapel terrace is similarly laid out to a grid pattern,
with scattered specimen trees and conifers, including deodar cedars and a monkey puzzle,
being planted in the burial areas. This ground, which formed part of the Company's
original acquisition in 1846, was progressively appropriated for burials from c 1870,
having been used as grazing land in the interim. It is not included in the site here
registered.
REFERENCES
The Builder, 5 (24 April 1874), p 198 B Cherry and N Pevsner, The Buildings of England:
Devon (2nd ed 1989), pp 637-8, 648 Ford Park Cemetery Trust, Ford Park Cemetery, introductory
booklet (c 2000)
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: second edition, published 1894 OS 25" to 1 mile: first edition,
c 1860 (no survey or publication date) second edition, revised 1892-3, published 1893
Illustrations F Frith, photograph of Plymouth Cemetery from the south-west, 1889
Archival items Minutes and records of the Plymouth, Devonport and Stonehouse Cemetery
Company, 1846-50 (private collection) H A Will, A brief historical note on the landscape
at Ford Park Cemetery, 2003
Information from Dr Will and the Ford Park Cemetery Trust
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION Ford Park Cemetery is designated at Grade II* for the following
principal reasons:
* A good example of a mid-19th century garden cemetery (1847-8). * A substantial example
of the work of the noted cemetery designers J R Hamilton and J M Medland. * The cemetery
layout survives intact. * The cemetery includes burial vaults of an unusual above-ground
design. * The cemetery contains a good collection of funerary monuments which reflects
the social and economic development of Plymouth and Devonport in the 19th century.
Register Inspector: JML Description written: March 2003 Revised: July 2003 Edited:
May 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, 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 Online, accessed 11 July 2017 from https://www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk/memorial/98536
War Memorials Register, accessed 11 July 2017 from http://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/25614