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Cemetery and crematorium
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Cemetery and crematorium


The City of London Cemetery is unique in the national and worldwide context due to the nature and quality of its landscape, and it is exceptional in the range and continuity of its burial provision, which represents all of the main trends in British funerary culture over the past 150 years.

The land was purchased by the City Corporation in 1853 to provide space to alleviate the problem of overcrowded burial grounds in the City.

Laid out to the designs of William Haywood, the accomplished City Surveyor, the Cemetery was opened in 1856 as a sophisticated landscape that successfully combined beauty with functionality, and contained a range of structures and buildings of high architectural quality. Haywood managed to provide both a work for posterity and an eminently practical working environment, whilst balancing the conflicting interests and demands of the different denominations which were to use it.

The Cemetery has been of significance to many generations of Londoners, especially from the East End, as the final resting place of their loved ones. In addition to its importance to relatives as a place of remembrance, the Cemetery is a public space of some dignity even for those who have no personal connection to it.

Chapel engravingIts historical significance is also noteworthy, as one of the largest Victorian cemeteries, that unlike many others has always offered plots to the full spectrum of society, and which remains well tended by a dedicated staff. The sensitivity of the management to the changing needs of society, combined with the Cemetery’s unusually large size, has led to the creation of new and interesting types of landscape with each successive expansion of burial land. These landscapes have come to reflect the evolution of taste through the intervening ages without destroying the legacy of former generations. There are at present eight buildings listed Grade II, and the grounds themselves are Grade II* registered as a Park and Garden of Historic Special Interest in recognition of their unique quality and size.

More information about the Cemetery and crematorium 

Conservation Management Plan

The Cemetery is a working environment, in which the management of burials and cremations, and caring for the bereaved, are of pre-eminent importance. The needs of conservation policies have to be reconciled with service management and financial requirements, as well as public aspirations, to give a coordinated strategy. The City of London commissioned a Conservation Management Plan in September 2003, to act as a tool to help give an understanding of both the fabric of the Cemetery and the issues surrounding its use, and to inform the production of a ten-year service management plan. It is intended that this plan will be adopted by the City of London, the Cemetery management, the London Borough of Newham, English Heritage, and other interested parties. It will guide the future management and development of the site, including all its physical elements of landscape, architecture, roads, traffic and ecology.

The preparation of this report has been generously supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund.

The Plan has been drafted in two parts. The first part, comprising chapters 2-5, gives an account of the history and importance of the Cemetery and its various constituent buildings and landscapes. It also discusses the issues affecting their conservation, and presents policies which will help address those issues. The second part, contained in chapters 6-9, offers a specific strategy for the future management of the Cemetery that seeks to balance the various issues, and presents priorities for its conservation over a ten-year period.

A significant amount of supporting information, of peripheral importance to the central narrative, has been placed apart from the main text in order to make it more navigable. These include a bibliography, details of the planning context, archaeology, and official building and landscape listings. They also provide more detail on the individual buildings and landscapes, including their present condition, their design and arrangement, the nature of any previous alterations, and issues regarding mechanical and electrical services, roads and maintenance.

Following consultation, the plan is currently being finalised and will be available shortly.


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