Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | GREAT TORRINGTON CEMETERY | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 50.954231 Longitude: -4.1560837 National Grid Reference: SS 48659 19414 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001580 Date first listed: 14-Jan-2002 |
A mid-C19 Burial Board cemetery laid out to the designs of the surveyor to the Great
Torrington Burial Board.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
In the C19 the town of Great Torrington expanded and grew in prosperity, partly as
the result of the arrival of the railway. The only place of burial remained the graveyard
associated with the medieval parish church in the centre of the town, which by the
1830s was becoming overcrowded. In 1833 a proposal was debated by the Vestry that
a new burial ground should be created on a piece of land known as Yeo or Barley Grove
and an adjoining plot between it and Castle Green, but this scheme did not find favour
and was subsequently abandoned (Alexander and Hooper 1948). By 1852 the problem of
burial space had become urgent, and a public meeting held in August that year voted
in favour of the creation of a cemetery on a piece of common land at the end of New
Street under the supervision of a Burial Board. This proposal was not realised until
1854 when the Burial Board was established and the site laid out, apparently to the
design of the as yet unidentified surveyor to the Board. The design included a substantial
boundary wall fronting New Road (now Bideford Road), a lodge, and a pair of chapels
placed symmetrically for picturesque effect. Substantial belts of planting on the
boundaries screen the burial areas north of the chapels. Despite opposition from Bishop
Philpotts of Exeter, who objected that the failure to separate the Anglican section
of the cemetery from the Nonconformist section with a wall contravened Canon Law,
the site was eventually consecrated in 1856 (Brooks 1989). The site remains substantially
unchanged today (2001) and is in the care of the local authority.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Great Torrington Cemetery is situated
c 0.75km west of the centre of Great Torrington, to the north of the A386 Bideford
Road. The c 2.5ha site is bounded to the south by a high buttressed stone wall which
separates the cemetery from Bideford Road, while to the north and east the site is
enclosed by low stone walls separating it from Great Torrington Common to the north
and domestic properties to the east. To the west the cemetery is enclosed by traditional
Devon banks, hedges, and walls which separate it from further areas of Common. The
site slopes down from the southern boundary to the chapels and the burial areas beyond,
allowing views north across Great Torrington Common and the steep-sided valley of
a stream, Common Lake.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The cemetery is entered from the A386 Bideford Road to the
south at a point c 50m east of its junction with Limer's Hill. Low stone quadrant
walls surmounted by ornamental cast-iron railings extend north from gothic stone piers
with gabled caps which are set in the boundary walls. The quadrant walls are terminated
by further identical stone piers which flank the entrance which comprises a pair of
cast-iron carriage gates with quatrefoil ornaments and down-swept top rails with flame
finials. The carriage gates are adjoined to the east by a single pedestrian gate of
similar design which is supported by a cast-iron pier. To the east of the entrance
stands a two-storey Tudor Gothic-style lodge of stone construction with Barnstaple
brick details around the windows. The lodge has picturesque details including ornamental
bargeboards and stands behind a small garden which adjoins the drive.
From the entrance a wide tarmac drive drops gently north for c 100m to reach a carriage
turn immediately south of the chapels. The drive is flanked to east and west by grass
banks which rise to artificially raised and levelled burial areas. The banks are separated
from the drive by low evergreen hedges of laurel, holly, and rhododendron which continue
to enclose the south side of the carriage turn south of the chapels, and are planted
with specimen evergreen trees including Deodar cedars, Douglas firs, and yews.
PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS A pair of stone Gothic-style chapels stands on an artificially
levelled terrace c 100m north of the entrance to the cemetery. The chapels are placed
symmetrically to flank the axis of the drive leading from the entrance to the burial
areas north of the chapels, while a First World War memorial in the form of a monumental
granite cross on a square stepped base placed at the centre of the carriage turn south
of the chapels emphasises the formality of the arrangement; the war memorial was constructed
by the local monumental mason, Parnacott (signature on monument). The chapels are
of identical external design with rubble-stone buttressed walls, dressed stone window
openings, and steeply pitched slate roofs. Each chapel has a projecting gabled wing
on its south side. The Anglican chapel to the east is entered through a gothic-arched
door beneath a small stone-framed quatrefoil-shaped window in the west facade; the
Nonconformist chapel to the west is entered in a similar way from the east. The entrance
facade of each chapel is surmounted by a small bellcote.
The chapels form the focal point of the mid-C19 cemetery scheme; their designer has
not been identified (2001).
OTHER LAND The north, east, and west boundaries of the cemetery are planted with a
thick belt of mature beech, conifers, and evergreen shrubs. There is a further dense
area of evergreen shrubbery on the western boundary and at the south-west corner of
the site.
For the better accommodation of graves, the site is partly terraced. To the east and
west of the drive, and raised above its level by steep grass banks, are two approximately
rectangular burial areas. That to the east is surrounded by mature trees and evergreen
shrubs, while that to the west adjoins the dense areas of shrubbery on the site boundary;
there is a late-C20 area for the interment of cremated remains adjacent to the south-west
boundary wall. Each burial area is characterised by a large number of late-C19 and
early-C20 slate headstones of traditional form: those in the eastern or Anglican area
are predominantly manufactured by the monumental mason Parnacott, while those on the
western or Nonconformist section are signed by Edyvean, who succeeded Parnacott in
the early-C20. This reflects the different dates at which the respective terraces
were appropriated for burials: that to the east was already in use by 1886 (OS), while
the area to the west remained densely planted with shrubbery and specimen trees in
1904 (OS). Curved walks descend from each terrace to reach the carriage turn south
of the chapels.
Immediately north of the chapels a steep grass bank drops down to the level of a series
of approximately rectangular burial areas which are arranged to east and west of a
central walk which continues the axis of the entrance drive towards the northern boundary
of the site. The burial areas are divided into a grid pattern by tarmac walks which
are planted with regularly spaced pairs of clipped Irish yews. The eastern perimeter
walk is curved to reflect the line of the east boundary, and ascends past a rhododendron
hedge and mature specimen conifers to reach a further burial area to the east of the
Anglican (east) chapel. The western perimeter walk leads to a similar area to the
west of the Nonconformist (west) chapel. At the lower or northern end of the site,
parallel to the northern boundary, is a late-C20 lawn cemetery; this replaces some
of the dense boundary shrubbery shown on the late-C19 OS map (1886).
The cemetery retains a good collection of mid and late-C19 and early-C20 funerary
monuments. These include, c 10m east of the east chapel a headstone with armorial
carvings surmounted by an urn commemorating members of the Hole family (c 1880), and
a group of monuments west of the west chapel including a marble angel erected in memory
of William Vaughan (d 1903). A further significant group of monuments to the north
of the west chapel includes a Classical-style sarcophagus with acroteria ornaments
commemorating the Rev James Buckpitt (d 1866), and a short stone obelisk in memory
of the Rev Richard Noble (d 1877). Some 15m north of these monuments, a Classical-style
pedestal in memory of Valentine Farleigh (d 1859) is enclosed by ornamental cast-iron
kerb railings, while c 10m west of this monument, a marble headstone commemorating
Robert Henry Palmer, RN, who was killed at the Battle of Jutland in 1916, incorporates
at its head a carved relief of HMS Black Prince, the vessel in which he served. On
the south-west terrace, c 20m south-south-west of the west chapel, a stone headstone
commemorating Corporal Frederick Rhodes of the 105 Company, Canadian Forestry Corps,
who was killed on active service in May 1918, is decorated with the insignia of the
Corps, a pair of forester's axes.
Great Torrington Cemetery is little changed in layout since the early-C20. It remains
a good example of a rural cemetery established by a Burial Board and retains many
features reflecting its mid-C19 origins.
REFERENCES
Alexander J J and Hooper W R, The History of Great Torrington in the County of Devon
(1948), 82 Brooks C, Mortal Remains (1989), 49, 67, 135 Brooks C, English Historic
Cemeteries, (English Heritage theme study 1994), 66
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1886, published 1890 2nd edition published
1906 OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1886, published 1887 2nd edition published
1904
Archival items Minutes of Great Torrington Burial Board (Great Torrington Museum)
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION Great Torrington Cemetery is designated at Grade II for the
following principal reasons: * Great Torrington Cemetery is a High Victorian cemetery
(1856) laid out by a provincial Burial Board. * The layout of the cemetery survives
intact, together with substantial areas of original planting. * The cemetery contains
contemporary associated structures including two chapels, a lodge and entrance gates.
* The cemetery contains a good collection of C19 funerary monuments which reflect
the development of this small rural market town during the C19.
Description written: October 2001 Amended: November 2001 Register Inspector: JML Edited:
December 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, 8 December 2016.
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 8 December 2016 from https://www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk/memorial/140575
War Memorials Register, accessed 8 December 2016 from http://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/25924