Skip to main content

Ancestors found in Brompton Cemetery



Launch event at Brompton Cemetery reunites Deceased Online user with her ancestors

After we uploaded the final set of records from Brompton Cemetery last week, we were inundated with messages via email, and on our Facebook and Twitter pages, from users who found their ancestors in the records. With over 200,000 burial records from the cemetery online, it is perhaps not surprising that many family historians with London ancestors have found them here.

The Gate Lodge of Brompton Cemetery
This week, we held a launch event at Brompton Cemetery which was attended by the Charles Williams, the Mayor of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, renowned genealogist Dr. Nick Barratt, representatives of the Friends of Brompton Cemetery, as well as staff from the Royal Parks, the cemetery itself, The National Archives and other local authorities. The event was a great success and the highlight was when family historian, Jan Ellis, was able to visit the grave of her ancestors after seven long years of searching.

 
BBC journalist Josephine McDermott reported on the story and you can read her interview with Jan at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-22974465.

Also at the event was the official historian of Chelsea Football Club, Rick Glanvill. Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge stadium overlooks Brompton Cemetery and the club’s founder, Henry ‘Gus’ Mears, is buried in its shadow. Rick told me, 'As the official club historian I am naturally aware of the close physical and family connections between the cemetery and its noisy neighbours – Chelsea F. C. Several of the first directors of the club have Brompton as their final resting place. Hordes of supporters always stroll through the cemetery to the game on match days and Gus's memorial is usually adorned with a blue and white scarf or flag after a trophy win. It's lovely that the burial records are so accessible: Blues fans can now easily find out whether they have ancestors of their own buried next door to Stamford Bridge.’ Rick was also delighted to have found the graves of two of his own Glanvill relatives in the Brompton collection.

A few years ago Rick produced a guided tour booklet exploring the Chelsea F. C./ Brompton links, and he now plans to conduct tours of the graves in conjunction with the Chelsea Supporters Trust and the Friends of Brompton Cemetery on the first weekend of the new football season. Read more about the history of the football club on Rick’s blog at http://thehistoryofchelseafc.blogspot.co.uk.

Twitter Competition
We are delighted to have well over 900 followers on Twitter. Thank you all very much! Unfortunately, we can’t follow more of you until we have reached our 2000 limit. We are trying to reach 1000 followers as we really want to follow all of you. In honour of this, we would like to give the 1000th follower 100 credits to use on the Deceased Online website. So, if you’re not following already, please click ‘follow’ on our Twitter page and hopefully win some credits!

London's Cemeteries
Next week we will have the full list of winners and the answers to the London's Cemeteries book competition. Thank you to all who took part.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

London's Spa Fields

Deceased Online has just uploaded around 114,000 burial records from Spa Fields in the modern London borough of Islington Spa Fields today, with the Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer in the background Spa Fields Burial Ground became notorious in the 19th century for its overcrowded and insanitary conditions. Located in the parish of St James, Clerkenwell, the grave yard was not far from the ever-increasing City of London. Spa Fields was known also as Clerkenwell Fields and Ducking-pond Fields in the late 18th century, hinting at a dark side to what was then a summer evening resort for north Londoners. What would become a cemetery was a ducking pond in the rural grounds of a Spa Fields public house. It was here in 1683 that six children were drowned while playing on the ice. In his History of Clerkenwell (1865) William J. Pinks wrote that visitors, "came hither to witness the rude sports that were in vogue a century ago, such as duck-hunting, prize-fighting, bull-baiting

Haslar and Netley Military Hospital Cemeteries

Following on from last week's post, I'm looking further into Deceased Online 's latest collection of burials. These military burials were digitized in partnership with The National Archives .  Two notable institutions in the collection are Haslar Royal Navy Cemetery and the Royal Victoria Hospital in Netley. Both Haslar and Netley (as it was more commonly known) were Britain's foremost military hospitals during the bloodiest years of war in the western hemisphere The Royal Hospital Haslar and Clayhill Royal Navy Cemetery, Gosport, Hampshire The Royal Hospital Haslar dates from 1753. For over two hundred and fifty years Haslar served as one of main hospitals caring for sailors and marines of the Royal Navy and merchant services. Patients came from ships as well as from naval and seamen institutions in nearby Portsmouth and Gosport. The hospital closed as the last official military hospital in 2007. The Haslar Cemetery closed in April 1859 but the neighbouring Cl

Wakefield Collection: Cremation Records now available on Deceased Online

Records for both crematoria in Wakefield, Yorkshire have been added to the Deceased Online database Above: Pontefract Crematorium The two sets of crematoria records have been added to Deceased Online 's Wakefield Collection .  Wakefield district contains nineteen cemeteries and two crematoria. Many of the records go back to the mid and late 19th century when the cemeteries opened, and range across a wide geographical area. The full list of  Wakefield  cemeteries live on Deceased Online,  with opening dates in brackets,   is as follows: 1.  Altofts Cemetery  – Church Road, Altofts, Normanton  (1878)   2.  Alverthorpe Cemetery  – St Paul’s Drive, Alverthorpe, Wakefield  (registers from 1955) 3. Castleford Cemetery  – Headfield Road, Castleford  (1857) 4.  Crigglestone Cemetery  – Standbridge Lane, Crigglestone, Wakefield  (1882) 5. Featherstone Cemetery  – Cutsyke Road, North Featherstone  (1874) 6. Ferrybridge Cemetery  – Pontefract Road, Ferrybridge, P