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Congregationalist Cemetery, Ponsharden

50°09′50″N 5°05′24″W / 50.1639°N 5.0899°W / 50.1639; -5.0899

A view of the cemetery in 2012, before restoration work commenced
A section of cemetery seen in summer 2012 after tidying

The Congregationalist Cemetery (also known as the "Independent Burial Ground" or the "Dissenters Burying Ground") at Ponsharden, Cornwall was opened in 1808 to serve the Dissenting Christian congregations of Falmouth and Penryn. It received approximately 587 burials over a period of 120 years, before being abandoned in the 1930s.[1] During the 20th century the site experienced significant neglect and extensive vandalism. In May 2012 a volunteer group began to restore the burial ground which (combined with an adjacent Jewish cemetery) is now a protected Scheduled Monument of national importance.[2] The place-name Ponsharden is recorded in 1677 as "Ponshardy"; its meaning is Hardy's bridge.[3]

Location and setting edit

 
The cemetery's tunnel-like entrance, constructed in 1827 through donations from the Dissenting congregations of Falmouth and Penryn

The Congregationalist cemetery is located at Ponsharden, between the towns of Falmouth and Penryn on the south coast of Cornwall. The cemetery sits at the lower end of a small spur of land which runs down to the Penryn River (a branch of the Fal estuary). The site is bounded on the north by the A39 Falmouth Road, to the east by light industrial units, to the south by open ground and to the west by a cleared industrial site.

Site layout and features edit

The cemetery is roughly L-shaped in plan and occupies an area of approximately 0.22 acres (913m²). The cemetery's northern end comprises a steep scarp overlooking the A39 Falmouth Road. Into this embankment is set the site's original entrance, formed from an arched gateway with cut granite steps. At the top of these steps are the remains of a badly vandalised mortuary building. The site's eastern boundary comprises a damaged but well-constructed rubble wall with chamfered granite copings. The southern and western boundaries are formed from hedge banks. Within the cemetery are the remains of 91 monuments of considerable diversity and several unmarked burial mounds. From the top of the entrance steps, a path (with traces of edging in-situ) extends through the centre of the burial ground, terminating at the southern boundary. A number of mature, self-sown sycamore trees are scattered across the site and a single yew tree stands at the cemetery's southern end, its traditional association with sorrow and death indicating it is a deliberate ornamental feature.[4][5]

History edit

Opening of cemetery edit

 
Some of Falmouth's diverse religious groups seen listed in a guidebook from 1827

From the late 17th century Falmouth (and to a lesser extent Penryn) supported a significant number of nonconformist religious groups, including Congregationalists (also known as Independents), Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians and Quakers. A significant Jewish population could also be found in the town.[6] Dissenting Christian congregations often had their own place of worship, but unless they owned a private burial ground they were usually buried in the local parish churchyard (often in unconsecrated ground).[7]

The Dissenters of Falmouth and Penryn acquired their first (and only) dedicated burial ground in early 1808, when they were given a plot of land at Ponsharden ‘through the kindness and liberality of Mr Samuel Tregelles, a reputable Merchant in Falmouth’.[8] The new burial ground stood adjacent to an older Jewish cemetery ‘in the corner of the lower field, adjoining the Turnpike Road’. It was given to the Dissenters free of cost ‘on the simple condition of the ground being enclosed by a good stone wall, to encompass the Jew’s Burial Ground’.[9]

Active years edit

Falmouth and Penryn’s Dissenters began using the new cemetery almost immediately after enclosing it in the summer of 1808. The first of Penryn’s congregation to be buried was Abia, the daughter of John and Dolly Nicholls of Gwennap. Abia died on 18 August 1808 and was buried ‘amid a vast concourse which had filled the Ground from the novelty of a Burial amongst Dissenters’ (over 700 people attended the funeral).[10] Falmouth's first burial was that of Mrs Christiana Daubuz ‘a Lady of eminent piety & one of the chief supporters of the Independent Chapel’ who in November 1808 was interred ‘amid a very large concourse of persons'.[11] The cemetery's burial registers have mostly survived, although the entries are incomplete between the years 1880–1893 and 1906–1935. The volumes offer valuable information on the intensity of use that the cemetery experienced, as follows:[1]

Period Burials
1808–1819 55
1820–1829 66
1830–1839 68
1840–1849 93
1850–1859 79
1860–1869 81
1870–1879 68
1880–1889 10
1890–1899 11
1900–1905 12

This gives a total of 543 recorded burials. However, there are an additional 22 headstones at the cemetery representing names that do not appear in the official registers.[12] These unlisted burials, combined with the above registers, give a total figure of circa 587 interments on site, of which approximately 382 lie in unmarked graves.[13]

Decline and neglect edit

 
The vandalised Glasson family vault, which has been almost entirely destroyed

There are no existing records to indicate that the Congregationalist cemetery was ever officially closed, and the circumstances surrounding its decline and abandonment are presently unclear. The last entry in the burial registers is dated November 1905[14] but existing headstones show that several interments took place after this, including that of Elizabeth Tully Cook in 1912 and four members of the Newcombe family of Penryn in the 1920s and 1930s. The latest known burial on site is that of Mary Elizabeth Newcombe, in April 1935.[15] These late interments involved re-opening established family plots, and it appears no new ground was used during the cemetery's latter days.

The large number of burials that took place at Ponsharden might have been a factor in its closure. The cemetery is only 0.22 acres in size (913m²) and the 587 burials would have stretched its limited capacity. Additionally, in 1854 a new municipal cemetery was opened near Swanpool, Falmouth, complete with a chapel and burial area specifically set aside for Dissenters. The attraction of this spacious new site must also be considered when contemplating the Congregationalist cemetery's decline, although the Ponsharden burial registers do not start to show reduced figures until 20 years after the cemetery at Swanpool was opened.

 
A view of the cemetery (looking west) before and after clearance work took place

Once disused, the site was left unattended for a period of almost 80 years. Gradually the cemetery was engulfed by self-sown trees, which caused extensive damage as they grew between (and through) the monuments. Dense brambles, ivy and scrub spread across the burial ground, obscuring a large number of low-lying monuments from view. The overgrown nature of the site meant it was difficult to monitor any activity taking place there, and during the 20th century it experienced extensive vandalism (at least 33 monuments were seriously damaged), which included the smashing of headstones, the deliberate destruction of family vaults, the robbing of slate and granite from monuments and the excavation of at least two graves.[16]

Recent activity edit

In 2002 English Heritage recognised the national importance of the Congregationalist cemetery and an older Jewish burial ground which adjoins it, and both sites were designated a single Scheduled Monument (English Heritage Ref No.15581).[17][5] A Cornwall Council Archaeological Report of 2010 summarised the importance of the cemeteries, stating that "their time spans, rare features, group value, siting, varied evidence of past religious, social and economic life, complexity and natural diversity combine to make them highly significant". However, the report also noted that 'the condition of the Congregationalist's site is very poor and deteriorating, and indeed can be described as deplorable. The cemetery has many interrelated active and potential risks, affecting highly sensitive and unrecorded graves and associated features'.[18]

In May 2012 Falmouth Town Council and English Heritage granted permission for a volunteer group to clear the scrub from the cemetery and undertake a survey of all the surviving monuments (see Site Survey, below).[19] In parallel with the survey, the volunteers also reseeded the site with grass, and efforts were made to re-establish the few examples of native flora (such as the Early Purple Orchid) that had survived amongst the dense brambles and ivy.

In 2013 the volunteers were granted custodianship of the graveyard. Presently, their responsibilities include stabilising its decline, regular tidying and gardening and raising local and national awareness of the cemetery's existence. The volunteers' long-term objectives include raising funds to repair the damaged monuments, entrance-way and boundary walls, as well as officially opening the cemetery as a historic landmark.

Site survey (2012–2013) edit

Until 2012, minimal information existed about the site in terms of burial figures, the quantity of surviving headstones, the families they represent and an understanding of the congregations that utilised the cemetery. Cornwall Council's archaeological report of 2010 highlighted that many of the monuments were deteriorating so rapidly there was a risk the inscriptions would be irretrievably lost before any record of them had been made.[20] However, decades of neglect meant that survey work would be hampered by the invasive vegetation that blanketed the site. It was noted that if an accurate study was to be made, the cemetery would first require methodical clearance by hand to expose the numerous fallen, low-lying or obscured headstones and tombs.

In May 2012 residents of Falmouth formed a volunteer group and approached Falmouth Town Council and English Heritage with the proposal to tidy the site and undertake the urgently required survey. As the cemetery is protected, the works required Scheduled Monument Consent from the Secretary of State.[21] Permission was granted, and between May 2012 and August 2013 the site was completely cleared and a record made of the quantity, style, dimensions and condition of every existing monument, complete with a full transcription of all surviving monumental inscriptions.[22]

The survey represented the most detailed examination of the cemetery to date. Whilst its results have established definitive statistics regarding the quantity, style and condition of surviving monuments, its demographic findings only cover those persons whose names are listed on surviving monuments (202 people), meaning that little is still known about the cemetery's 380+ unmarked graves.[23]

Existing monuments edit

The survey recorded a total of 91 monuments surviving at the cemetery, representing a diverse range of styles from simple slate headstones to ornate vaults with iron railings and stone urns. They record the lives of 202 people (approximately 34% of the total burials registered at Ponsharden) which indicates that the ground contains approximately 383 unmarked graves.[24]

 
A self-sown tree gradually destroying one of the graves at Ponsharden

The monuments survive in varied conditions:

  • 7 are displaced, and their original location unknown
  • 11 have inscriptions that are badly weathered
  • 33 have been damaged by deliberate acts of vandalism
  • 17 have been (or are still being) damaged by self-sown trees

In terms of monument types there are:

  • 57 headstones (with no additional features)
  • 19 headstones combined with some form of grave lining/capping
  • 9 ledger or raised (chamfered) tombs
  • 4 pedestal tombs/vaults
  • 2 unknown monumental forms (due to vandalism)

The following stone types were recorded:

  • Limestone (44 monuments)
  • Slate (29 monuments)
  • Sandstone (10 monuments)
  • Granite (6 monuments)
  • 2 monuments have had been totally destroyed, leaving a footprint in the ground but nothing else. It is therefore not possible to establish the original stone type used

Twenty-nine monuments are inscribed with the name of the mason who erected them, most of whom were members of the congregation and are also buried on site.[25] The majority (80%) of the monuments represent people who either lived or died in Falmouth. The residents of Penryn are only commemorated on 16% of the headstones, despite the cemetery being used by the congregations of both towns. Existing burial registers indicate that the majority of Penryn's residents lie in unmarked graves.[26] A further 4% of monuments are linked to persons who died elsewhere, such as Budock, Mylor or Flushing.[23]

Demography edit

 
The vault of Alexander Robinson, Wine Merchant of Regent St, London

The data collected during the survey is still being processed, and current information only covers the place of birth and professions of those persons listed on the monuments. The volunteers have stated that data relating to gender, age and cause of death will be released towards the end of 2014.[23]

Birthplace edit

The survey highlighted a wide range of birthplaces, a direct result of the graveyard serving two busy ports (Falmouth then being a major gateway to the overseas Empire). A large number of local residents from Falmouth, Penryn and Budock are represented on site, but families from across Cornwall can also be found at Ponsharden, including those from Calstock, Crowan, Gerrans, Gorran, Grade, Illogan, Launceston, Mevagissey, Mullion, Nancarrow, Redruth, Ruan Minor, St Agnes, St Austell, St Columb, St Ives, St Keverne, Sancreed, Stithians, Talland, Wadebridge and Wendron.

The cemetery also holds the remains of many people born outside of Cornwall, including natives of Scotland and Wales as well as Devon, Dorset, Dover, Essex, Liverpool, London, Somerset, Suffolk and Wiltshire. Several of the deceased were travellers who died whilst passing through Falmouth or Penryn; Walter Morris, a Welshman, died at the Greenbank Hotel after returning from a voyage to Madeira (where he was trying to restore his health)[27] and one vault contains the remains of Alexander Robinson, a wine merchant from Regent Street, London who died whilst in Falmouth.[28] When Robinson's wife (also a Londoner) died twelve years later, her body was brought from the capital to Ponsharden and laid to rest alongside her husband.[29]

Trades and professions edit

A broad spectrum of trades and professions were found to be represented on site, many of which reflect Ponsharden's proximity to the sea. The cemetery contains numerous mariners, including a packet ship steward, naval surgeons, master mariners and officers in the Royal Navy and the Packet, Merchant and Coastguard services. Several headstones commemorate persons whose bodies were lost, but whose deaths were linked to the sea, including William Downing who died in the mid-Atlantic[30] and Thomas Webber, who died from Yellow Fever in Rio de Janeiro.[31] Other marine trades represented at Ponsharden include ship owners, ship builders, ship carpenters, ropers and merchants. On site can also be found tailors and drapers, boot and shoe makers, builders and carpenters, doctors, surgeons and druggists, grocers and fruit merchants, tea and spirit dealers, a lawyer, accountant and two clerks. Whilst not a trade as such, the burial ground contains numerous affluent annuitants and house proprietors who spent their entire lives living by independent means due to legacies left in wills.

Notable burials edit

 
Elizabeth Elliott (c1733–1827), who is credited with introducing the printing press to Cornwall
 
Captain William Kirkness (c. 1783–1852), of the Queen Charlotte packet ship

The cemetery holds the remains of many interesting and important people, including:

  • William Patterson Banks (1817–1848):
Born in Scotland / Surgeon in the Royal Navy, serving aboard the H.M.S. Fearless.[32]
  • Elizabeth Tully Cook (1842–1912):
Daughter of the Reverend William Dennis, Independent Minister of Wrington / Died in a mental asylum in Wales, although her body was returned to Falmouth for burial.[33]
Doctor of Law and Independent Minister at the New Street Chapel in Penryn.[34]
  • Dr James Cornish (1792–1868):
Doctor and Surgeon / Twice Mayor of Falmouth (1829-30 & 1836) and a dominant figure in Falmouth’s political and social circles. Cornish entertained future Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli in 1830 and was a close friend of Barclay Fox (of the philanthropic Quaker family).[35]
  • Josiah Devonshire (1796–1872):
Builder and Surveyor to Lord Wodehouse / In 1836 (and again in 1871) Devonshire was responsible for moving and rebuilding the landmark Killigrew Pyramid which can still be seen opposite Arwenack Manor in Falmouth.[36]
  • Elizabeth Elliott (c. 1733–1827):
Printer, Bookseller and Stationer / During her industrious life, Elliott is credited with introducing the printing press to Cornwall.[37]
  • William Glasson (1781–1843):
Merchant and Ship Owner / Part funded the establishment of the Classical and Mathematical School in Falmouth in 1824.[38]
  • Captain William Green (1786–1857):
Master in the Royal Navy / Captain of the H.M.S. Crane packet ship, sailing between Falmouth and South America.[39]
  • Reverend William James (1795–1853):
Independent Minister of Portscatho Chapel, whose 'one luxury in life was conveying divine truth over the threshold of the cottager's door'.[40]
  • Captain William Kirkness (c. 1783–1852):
Captain of the Queen Charlotte packet ship, whose exploits included intentionally engaging American privateers (although outnumbered), tricking the French navy and outrunning a hurricane in St Kitts.[41]
  • John McDowell (c. 1750–1825):
Mercer and Draper / Leading figure at the Independent Church in Falmouth, holding the office of Deacon. Also Treasurer of the County Auxiliary Missionary Society[42]
  • William McDowell (1794–1849):
Cabinet Maker, Upholsterer and Auctioneer / McDowell met John Stuart Mill in Falmouth c. 1840.[43]
  • James Martin (c. 1836–1896):
Grocer and Merchant / Magistrate, Alderman and Justice of the Peace in Penryn.
  • Walter Morris (c.1802–1839):
Son of eminent Welsh Calvanistic Methodist preacher Ebenezer Morris.[44]
  • Richard Newcombe (1810–1893):
Lime and coal merchant / Member of the 'Star of the West' Oddfellows Lodge and Alderman of Penryn in 1864.[45]
  • John Richards (c. 1764–1842):
Parish Clerk for Mylor, and benefactor to the London Missionary Society and Foreign Bible Society.[46]
  • Alexander Robinson (1792–1849):
Wine Merchant of 194 Regent Street, London. Died whilst in Falmouth.[47]
  • Mary Snell (c.1779–1847):
Wine and Spirit Dealer with vaults at Market Strand, Falmouth.[48]
  • Alfred Sidney Stephens (1818–1887):
Draper / Alderman and later Mayor of Penryn in 1867.[49]
  • John Still (1807–1880):
‘Boot and Shoe Maker to his Majesty'.[50]
  • John Symons (c.1770–1837):
‘Surgeon and Druggist' of Penryn. Contributed funds towards the building of a wall around the cemetery.[51]
  • Samuel Tresidder (1793–1873):
Builder and Surveyor / Responsible for the construction of many of Falmouth's houses in the mid-19th century and Superintendent of the Congregationalist Sunday School in Falmouth.[52]
  • Dr James Trevosso (1764–1830):
Doctor and Surgeon / Trevosso provided free medical care to the disadvantaged through his voluntary efforts at Falmouth's Public Dispensary, founded 1806.[53]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cornwall Record Office – Falmouth and Penryn Independent Church Burial Records X850/1, X850/2, X850/3, X850/25, X850/26
  2. ^ Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries, Cornwall. Archaeological Assessment. Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects. 2010. C. Parkes; page 13
  3. ^ Weatherhill, Craig (2009). A Concise Dictionary of Cornish Place-Names. Westport, Co. Mayo: Evertype. ISBN 9781904808220; p. 57
  4. ^ Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries, Cornwall. Archaeological Assessment. Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects. 2010. C. Parkes. Page 27-29
  5. ^ a b Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1020815)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  6. ^ A Falmouth Guide, 1815. p.43-48 / A Panorama of Falmouth, 1827 p.43-50 / History and Description of the Town of Falmouth 1827 p.85
  7. ^ . FamilySearch. Archived from the original on 28 January 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  8. ^ Cornwall Record Office – X850/1 Independent Church Burial Records
  9. ^ Cornwall Record Office – X850/1 Independent Church Burial Records
  10. ^ Cornwall Record Office - X850/1. p16. / X850/24
  11. ^ Cornwall Record Office: X850/1 ‘Commencement of Burials at Ponsharden Cemetery in 1808’
  12. ^ See Monuments No.1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 17, 18, 23, 28, 32, 39, 40, 41, 43, 44, 45, 46, 53, 54, 55, 57 and 89 (as per official site survey plan 2012 Nunn & Weller)
  13. ^ Surviving headstones only represent 205 of the listed burials. Burial figures extracted from Cornwall Record Office – Falmouth and Penryn Independent Church Burial Records X850/1, X850/2, X850/3, X850/25, X850/26
  14. ^ Cornwall Record Office: X850/3 - No.5 Jemima Eliza Trenery, Died Nov 1905, Aged 79 (buried in family vault)
  15. ^ From inscription visible on site - Congregationalist Cemetery, Cornwall
  16. ^ "Cemetery Desecrated" The West Briton Newspaper. 20 August 1998
  17. ^ Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries, Cornwall. Archaeological Assessment. Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects. 2010. C. Parkes. Page 32
  18. ^ Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries, Cornwall. Archaeological Assessment. Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects. 2010. C.Parkes. Page 16.
  19. ^ English Heritage Scheduled Monument Consent No. S00045765
  20. ^ Falmouth Jewish Congregationalist cemeteries, Cornwall - Archaeological Assessment. Report No.2010R039. C. Parkes 2010. p.11-13 Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects
  21. ^ Consent No. S00045765
  22. ^ The Dissenters' Burying Ground Ponsharden - Monument Survey. Robert Nunn & Tom Weller. 2014
  23. ^ a b c The Dissenters' Burying Ground, Ponsharden - Monument Survey. Robert Nunn & Tom Weller. 2012-2013 (currently being edited for publication)
  24. ^ There are 203 names on headstones and approx. 585 burials
  25. ^ The Devonshire, Halligey, Olver and Tresidder families
  26. ^ Cornwall Record Office: See registers X850/25 & X850\26 for Penryn's congregation
  27. ^ Falmouth Packet (newspaper) notice of death: 15 June 1839 "Mr Walter Morris, died at Selley’s Green Bank Hotel, Falmouth, on his return from Madeira, where he spent the winter in hope of recruiting his health."
  28. ^ Cornwall Record Office: X850/25 No.136: "Alexander Robinson Esq. Died: 13 April 1849. Wine Merchant. Resided 194 Regent Street, London"
  29. ^ Cornwall Record Office: X850/2 No.267: Harriet Robinson / Died: September 1861 / ‘Of London’
  30. ^ Falmouth Packet. Notice of Death: 31 May 1873 - "Died at sea in lat. 28 52 N, 49 3 W. on 27th April April, on his passage from the West Indies"
  31. ^ Falmouth Packet (newspaper): Notice of Death: 1 October 1870: ‘At Rio de Janeiro, on the 22January last, Thomas Albert Webber'
  32. ^ Extracts from Navy Lists, 19th Century. Naval Surgeons. P. Benyon
  33. ^ Death Certificate: Elizabeth Tully Cook - 11 September 1912
  34. ^ Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. 1-20, 22. pg. 1092
  35. ^ Lord Beaconsfield’s Letter, 1830. pg2-3 / Falmouth Packet (newspaper); 25 September 1858
  36. ^ ‘Old Falmouth’ by Susan Gay (1903); p. 190
  37. ^ ‘Old Falmouth’. Susan E. Gay. Printed 1903, Headley Bros, London. Pg. 163
  38. ^ A Brief Account of the Classical and Mathematical School, Established at Falmouth A.D. 1824. Printed by Lake, Falmouth. 1825
  39. ^ Falmouth Packet Obituary: July 1857: ‘At Middle Terrace, Falmouth, on Tuesday last, Commander Green R.N. aged 71 years.
  40. ^ Obituary: The West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser; 18 November 1853.
  41. ^ ‘Old Falmouth’. Susan E. Gay. Printed 1903, Headley Bros, London. Pg. 134
  42. ^ Cornwall Record Office: CRO X850/2: ‘An Historical Account of This Church’
  43. ^ Additional Letters of John Stuart Mill. p. 52 University of Toronto Press
  44. ^ The National Library of Wales Journal; Vol. 12 No. 1 Summer 1961 p.87-88
  45. ^ Warn's Directory and Guide to Falmouth and Penryn. 1864. p. 125
  46. ^ Cornwall Record Office: X850/1 No.133: Mr John Richards... For many years Clerk of the Parish Church at Mylor
  47. ^ Notice of death in West Briton newspaper: "20th April 1849, Mr Alexander Robinson, Late of the firm Robinson Brothers"
  48. ^ Census Returns of England and Wales, 1841 Class: HO107; Piece: 154; Book: 4; Civil Parish: Falmouth; County: Cornwall;
  49. ^ Falmouth Packet (newspaper), Notice of death. 9 April 1887
  50. ^ Falmouth Packet (newspaper). Advertisement dated 24 September 1830
  51. ^ Cornwall Record Office: X850/25 - Minister's notes
  52. ^ Congregational Sunday School. Its Origin and Development. Printed 1890. p.6
  53. ^ Obituary: Falmouth Packet (newspaper). 5 June 1830

congregationalist, cemetery, ponsharden, 1639, 0899, 1639, 0899, view, cemetery, 2012, before, restoration, work, commenced, section, cemetery, seen, summer, 2012, after, tidying, congregationalist, cemetery, also, known, independent, burial, ground, dissenter. 50 09 50 N 5 05 24 W 50 1639 N 5 0899 W 50 1639 5 0899 A view of the cemetery in 2012 before restoration work commenced A section of cemetery seen in summer 2012 after tidying The Congregationalist Cemetery also known as the Independent Burial Ground or the Dissenters Burying Ground at Ponsharden Cornwall was opened in 1808 to serve the Dissenting Christian congregations of Falmouth and Penryn It received approximately 587 burials over a period of 120 years before being abandoned in the 1930s 1 During the 20th century the site experienced significant neglect and extensive vandalism In May 2012 a volunteer group began to restore the burial ground which combined with an adjacent Jewish cemetery is now a protected Scheduled Monument of national importance 2 The place name Ponsharden is recorded in 1677 as Ponshardy its meaning is Hardy s bridge 3 Contents 1 Location and setting 2 Site layout and features 3 History 3 1 Opening of cemetery 3 2 Active years 3 3 Decline and neglect 3 4 Recent activity 4 Site survey 2012 2013 4 1 Existing monuments 4 2 Demography 4 2 1 Birthplace 4 2 2 Trades and professions 5 Notable burials 6 ReferencesLocation and setting edit nbsp The cemetery s tunnel like entrance constructed in 1827 through donations from the Dissenting congregations of Falmouth and Penryn The Congregationalist cemetery is located at Ponsharden between the towns of Falmouth and Penryn on the south coast of Cornwall The cemetery sits at the lower end of a small spur of land which runs down to the Penryn River a branch of the Fal estuary The site is bounded on the north by the A39 Falmouth Road to the east by light industrial units to the south by open ground and to the west by a cleared industrial site Site layout and features editThe cemetery is roughly L shaped in plan and occupies an area of approximately 0 22 acres 913m The cemetery s northern end comprises a steep scarp overlooking the A39 Falmouth Road Into this embankment is set the site s original entrance formed from an arched gateway with cut granite steps At the top of these steps are the remains of a badly vandalised mortuary building The site s eastern boundary comprises a damaged but well constructed rubble wall with chamfered granite copings The southern and western boundaries are formed from hedge banks Within the cemetery are the remains of 91 monuments of considerable diversity and several unmarked burial mounds From the top of the entrance steps a path with traces of edging in situ extends through the centre of the burial ground terminating at the southern boundary A number of mature self sown sycamore trees are scattered across the site and a single yew tree stands at the cemetery s southern end its traditional association with sorrow and death indicating it is a deliberate ornamental feature 4 5 History editOpening of cemetery edit nbsp Some of Falmouth s diverse religious groups seen listed in a guidebook from 1827 From the late 17th century Falmouth and to a lesser extent Penryn supported a significant number of nonconformist religious groups including Congregationalists also known as Independents Methodists Baptists Presbyterians and Quakers A significant Jewish population could also be found in the town 6 Dissenting Christian congregations often had their own place of worship but unless they owned a private burial ground they were usually buried in the local parish churchyard often in unconsecrated ground 7 The Dissenters of Falmouth and Penryn acquired their first and only dedicated burial ground in early 1808 when they were given a plot of land at Ponsharden through the kindness and liberality of Mr Samuel Tregelles a reputable Merchant in Falmouth 8 The new burial ground stood adjacent to an older Jewish cemetery in the corner of the lower field adjoining the Turnpike Road It was given to the Dissenters free of cost on the simple condition of the ground being enclosed by a good stone wall to encompass the Jew s Burial Ground 9 Active years edit Falmouth and Penryn s Dissenters began using the new cemetery almost immediately after enclosing it in the summer of 1808 The first of Penryn s congregation to be buried was Abia the daughter of John and Dolly Nicholls of Gwennap Abia died on 18 August 1808 and was buried amid a vast concourse which had filled the Ground from the novelty of a Burial amongst Dissenters over 700 people attended the funeral 10 Falmouth s first burial was that of Mrs Christiana Daubuz a Lady of eminent piety amp one of the chief supporters of the Independent Chapel who in November 1808 was interred amid a very large concourse of persons 11 The cemetery s burial registers have mostly survived although the entries are incomplete between the years 1880 1893 and 1906 1935 The volumes offer valuable information on the intensity of use that the cemetery experienced as follows 1 Period Burials 1808 1819 55 1820 1829 66 1830 1839 68 1840 1849 93 1850 1859 79 1860 1869 81 1870 1879 68 1880 1889 10 1890 1899 11 1900 1905 12 This gives a total of 543 recorded burials However there are an additional 22 headstones at the cemetery representing names that do not appear in the official registers 12 These unlisted burials combined with the above registers give a total figure of circa 587 interments on site of which approximately 382 lie in unmarked graves 13 Decline and neglect edit nbsp The vandalised Glasson family vault which has been almost entirely destroyed There are no existing records to indicate that the Congregationalist cemetery was ever officially closed and the circumstances surrounding its decline and abandonment are presently unclear The last entry in the burial registers is dated November 1905 14 but existing headstones show that several interments took place after this including that of Elizabeth Tully Cook in 1912 and four members of the Newcombe family of Penryn in the 1920s and 1930s The latest known burial on site is that of Mary Elizabeth Newcombe in April 1935 15 These late interments involved re opening established family plots and it appears no new ground was used during the cemetery s latter days The large number of burials that took place at Ponsharden might have been a factor in its closure The cemetery is only 0 22 acres in size 913m and the 587 burials would have stretched its limited capacity Additionally in 1854 a new municipal cemetery was opened near Swanpool Falmouth complete with a chapel and burial area specifically set aside for Dissenters The attraction of this spacious new site must also be considered when contemplating the Congregationalist cemetery s decline although the Ponsharden burial registers do not start to show reduced figures until 20 years after the cemetery at Swanpool was opened nbsp A view of the cemetery looking west before and after clearance work took place Once disused the site was left unattended for a period of almost 80 years Gradually the cemetery was engulfed by self sown trees which caused extensive damage as they grew between and through the monuments Dense brambles ivy and scrub spread across the burial ground obscuring a large number of low lying monuments from view The overgrown nature of the site meant it was difficult to monitor any activity taking place there and during the 20th century it experienced extensive vandalism at least 33 monuments were seriously damaged which included the smashing of headstones the deliberate destruction of family vaults the robbing of slate and granite from monuments and the excavation of at least two graves 16 Recent activity edit In 2002 English Heritage recognised the national importance of the Congregationalist cemetery and an older Jewish burial ground which adjoins it and both sites were designated a single Scheduled Monument English Heritage Ref No 15581 17 5 A Cornwall Council Archaeological Report of 2010 summarised the importance of the cemeteries stating that their time spans rare features group value siting varied evidence of past religious social and economic life complexity and natural diversity combine to make them highly significant However the report also noted that the condition of the Congregationalist s site is very poor and deteriorating and indeed can be described as deplorable The cemetery has many interrelated active and potential risks affecting highly sensitive and unrecorded graves and associated features 18 In May 2012 Falmouth Town Council and English Heritage granted permission for a volunteer group to clear the scrub from the cemetery and undertake a survey of all the surviving monuments see Site Survey below 19 In parallel with the survey the volunteers also reseeded the site with grass and efforts were made to re establish the few examples of native flora such as the Early Purple Orchid that had survived amongst the dense brambles and ivy In 2013 the volunteers were granted custodianship of the graveyard Presently their responsibilities include stabilising its decline regular tidying and gardening and raising local and national awareness of the cemetery s existence The volunteers long term objectives include raising funds to repair the damaged monuments entrance way and boundary walls as well as officially opening the cemetery as a historic landmark Site survey 2012 2013 editUntil 2012 minimal information existed about the site in terms of burial figures the quantity of surviving headstones the families they represent and an understanding of the congregations that utilised the cemetery Cornwall Council s archaeological report of 2010 highlighted that many of the monuments were deteriorating so rapidly there was a risk the inscriptions would be irretrievably lost before any record of them had been made 20 However decades of neglect meant that survey work would be hampered by the invasive vegetation that blanketed the site It was noted that if an accurate study was to be made the cemetery would first require methodical clearance by hand to expose the numerous fallen low lying or obscured headstones and tombs In May 2012 residents of Falmouth formed a volunteer group and approached Falmouth Town Council and English Heritage with the proposal to tidy the site and undertake the urgently required survey As the cemetery is protected the works required Scheduled Monument Consent from the Secretary of State 21 Permission was granted and between May 2012 and August 2013 the site was completely cleared and a record made of the quantity style dimensions and condition of every existing monument complete with a full transcription of all surviving monumental inscriptions 22 The survey represented the most detailed examination of the cemetery to date Whilst its results have established definitive statistics regarding the quantity style and condition of surviving monuments its demographic findings only cover those persons whose names are listed on surviving monuments 202 people meaning that little is still known about the cemetery s 380 unmarked graves 23 Existing monuments edit The survey recorded a total of 91 monuments surviving at the cemetery representing a diverse range of styles from simple slate headstones to ornate vaults with iron railings and stone urns They record the lives of 202 people approximately 34 of the total burials registered at Ponsharden which indicates that the ground contains approximately 383 unmarked graves 24 nbsp A self sown tree gradually destroying one of the graves at Ponsharden The monuments survive in varied conditions 7 are displaced and their original location unknown 11 have inscriptions that are badly weathered 33 have been damaged by deliberate acts of vandalism 17 have been or are still being damaged by self sown trees In terms of monument types there are 57 headstones with no additional features 19 headstones combined with some form of grave lining capping 9 ledger or raised chamfered tombs 4 pedestal tombs vaults 2 unknown monumental forms due to vandalism The following stone types were recorded Limestone 44 monuments Slate 29 monuments Sandstone 10 monuments Granite 6 monuments 2 monuments have had been totally destroyed leaving a footprint in the ground but nothing else It is therefore not possible to establish the original stone type used Twenty nine monuments are inscribed with the name of the mason who erected them most of whom were members of the congregation and are also buried on site 25 The majority 80 of the monuments represent people who either lived or died in Falmouth The residents of Penryn are only commemorated on 16 of the headstones despite the cemetery being used by the congregations of both towns Existing burial registers indicate that the majority of Penryn s residents lie in unmarked graves 26 A further 4 of monuments are linked to persons who died elsewhere such as Budock Mylor or Flushing 23 Demography edit nbsp The vault of Alexander Robinson Wine Merchant of Regent St London The data collected during the survey is still being processed and current information only covers the place of birth and professions of those persons listed on the monuments The volunteers have stated that data relating to gender age and cause of death will be released towards the end of 2014 23 Birthplace edit The survey highlighted a wide range of birthplaces a direct result of the graveyard serving two busy ports Falmouth then being a major gateway to the overseas Empire A large number of local residents from Falmouth Penryn and Budock are represented on site but families from across Cornwall can also be found at Ponsharden including those from Calstock Crowan Gerrans Gorran Grade Illogan Launceston Mevagissey Mullion Nancarrow Redruth Ruan Minor St Agnes St Austell St Columb St Ives St Keverne Sancreed Stithians Talland Wadebridge and Wendron The cemetery also holds the remains of many people born outside of Cornwall including natives of Scotland and Wales as well as Devon Dorset Dover Essex Liverpool London Somerset Suffolk and Wiltshire Several of the deceased were travellers who died whilst passing through Falmouth or Penryn Walter Morris a Welshman died at the Greenbank Hotel after returning from a voyage to Madeira where he was trying to restore his health 27 and one vault contains the remains of Alexander Robinson a wine merchant from Regent Street London who died whilst in Falmouth 28 When Robinson s wife also a Londoner died twelve years later her body was brought from the capital to Ponsharden and laid to rest alongside her husband 29 Trades and professions edit A broad spectrum of trades and professions were found to be represented on site many of which reflect Ponsharden s proximity to the sea The cemetery contains numerous mariners including a packet ship steward naval surgeons master mariners and officers in the Royal Navy and the Packet Merchant and Coastguard services Several headstones commemorate persons whose bodies were lost but whose deaths were linked to the sea including William Downing who died in the mid Atlantic 30 and Thomas Webber who died from Yellow Fever in Rio de Janeiro 31 Other marine trades represented at Ponsharden include ship owners ship builders ship carpenters ropers and merchants On site can also be found tailors and drapers boot and shoe makers builders and carpenters doctors surgeons and druggists grocers and fruit merchants tea and spirit dealers a lawyer accountant and two clerks Whilst not a trade as such the burial ground contains numerous affluent annuitants and house proprietors who spent their entire lives living by independent means due to legacies left in wills Notable burials edit nbsp Elizabeth Elliott c1733 1827 who is credited with introducing the printing press to Cornwall nbsp Captain William Kirkness c 1783 1852 of the Queen Charlotte packet ship The cemetery holds the remains of many interesting and important people including William Patterson Banks 1817 1848 Born in Scotland Surgeon in the Royal Navy serving aboard the H M S Fearless 32 dd Elizabeth Tully Cook 1842 1912 Daughter of the Reverend William Dennis Independent Minister of Wrington Died in a mental asylum in Wales although her body was returned to Falmouth for burial 33 dd Reverend Richard Cope LL D 1776 1856 Doctor of Law and Independent Minister at the New Street Chapel in Penryn 34 dd Dr James Cornish 1792 1868 Doctor and Surgeon Twice Mayor of Falmouth 1829 30 amp 1836 and a dominant figure in Falmouth s political and social circles Cornish entertained future Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli in 1830 and was a close friend of Barclay Fox of the philanthropic Quaker family 35 dd Josiah Devonshire 1796 1872 Builder and Surveyor to Lord Wodehouse In 1836 and again in 1871 Devonshire was responsible for moving and rebuilding the landmark Killigrew Pyramid which can still be seen opposite Arwenack Manor in Falmouth 36 dd Elizabeth Elliott c 1733 1827 Printer Bookseller and Stationer During her industrious life Elliott is credited with introducing the printing press to Cornwall 37 dd William Glasson 1781 1843 Merchant and Ship Owner Part funded the establishment of the Classical and Mathematical School in Falmouth in 1824 38 dd Captain William Green 1786 1857 Master in the Royal Navy Captain of the H M S Crane packet ship sailing between Falmouth and South America 39 dd Reverend William James 1795 1853 Independent Minister of Portscatho Chapel whose one luxury in life was conveying divine truth over the threshold of the cottager s door 40 dd Captain William Kirkness c 1783 1852 Captain of the Queen Charlotte packet ship whose exploits included intentionally engaging American privateers although outnumbered tricking the French navy and outrunning a hurricane in St Kitts 41 dd John McDowell c 1750 1825 Mercer and Draper Leading figure at the Independent Church in Falmouth holding the office of Deacon Also Treasurer of the County Auxiliary Missionary Society 42 dd William McDowell 1794 1849 Cabinet Maker Upholsterer and Auctioneer McDowell met John Stuart Mill in Falmouth c 1840 43 dd James Martin c 1836 1896 Grocer and Merchant Magistrate Alderman and Justice of the Peace in Penryn dd Walter Morris c 1802 1839 Son of eminent Welsh Calvanistic Methodist preacher Ebenezer Morris 44 dd Richard Newcombe 1810 1893 Lime and coal merchant Member of the Star of the West Oddfellows Lodge and Alderman of Penryn in 1864 45 dd John Richards c 1764 1842 Parish Clerk for Mylor and benefactor to the London Missionary Society and Foreign Bible Society 46 dd Alexander Robinson 1792 1849 Wine Merchant of 194 Regent Street London Died whilst in Falmouth 47 dd Mary Snell c 1779 1847 Wine and Spirit Dealer with vaults at Market Strand Falmouth 48 dd Alfred Sidney Stephens 1818 1887 Draper Alderman and later Mayor of Penryn in 1867 49 dd John Still 1807 1880 Boot and Shoe Maker to his Majesty 50 dd John Symons c 1770 1837 Surgeon and Druggist of Penryn Contributed funds towards the building of a wall around the cemetery 51 dd Samuel Tresidder 1793 1873 Builder and Surveyor Responsible for the construction of many of Falmouth s houses in the mid 19th century and Superintendent of the Congregationalist Sunday School in Falmouth 52 dd Dr James Trevosso 1764 1830 Doctor and Surgeon Trevosso provided free medical care to the disadvantaged through his voluntary efforts at Falmouth s Public Dispensary founded 1806 53 dd dd References edit a b Cornwall Record Office Falmouth and Penryn Independent Church Burial Records X850 1 X850 2 X850 3 X850 25 X850 26 Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries Cornwall Archaeological Assessment Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects 2010 C Parkes page 13 Weatherhill Craig 2009 A Concise Dictionary of Cornish Place Names Westport Co Mayo Evertype ISBN 9781904808220 p 57 Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries Cornwall Archaeological Assessment Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects 2010 C Parkes Page 27 29 a b Historic England Details from listed building database 1020815 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 1 October 2015 A Falmouth Guide 1815 p 43 48 A Panorama of Falmouth 1827 p 43 50 History and Description of the Town of Falmouth 1827 p 85 England Nonconformist Church Records Learn FamilySearch org FamilySearch Archived from the original on 28 January 2014 Retrieved 17 January 2014 Cornwall Record Office X850 1 Independent Church Burial Records Cornwall Record Office X850 1 Independent Church Burial Records Cornwall Record Office X850 1 p16 X850 24 Cornwall Record Office X850 1 Commencement of Burials at Ponsharden Cemetery in 1808 See Monuments No 1 4 5 6 7 17 18 23 28 32 39 40 41 43 44 45 46 53 54 55 57 and 89 as per official site survey plan 2012 Nunn amp Weller Surviving headstones only represent 205 of the listed burials Burial figures extracted from Cornwall Record Office Falmouth and Penryn Independent Church Burial Records X850 1 X850 2 X850 3 X850 25 X850 26 Cornwall Record Office X850 3 No 5 Jemima Eliza Trenery Died Nov 1905 Aged 79 buried in family vault From inscription visible on site Congregationalist Cemetery Cornwall Cemetery Desecrated The West Briton Newspaper 20 August 1998 Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries Cornwall Archaeological Assessment Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects 2010 C Parkes Page 32 Falmouth Jewish and Congregationalist Cemeteries Cornwall Archaeological Assessment Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects 2010 C Parkes Page 16 English Heritage Scheduled Monument Consent No S00045765 Falmouth Jewish Congregationalist cemeteries Cornwall Archaeological Assessment Report No 2010R039 C Parkes 2010 p 11 13 Cornwall Council Historic Environment Projects Consent No S00045765 The Dissenters Burying Ground Ponsharden Monument Survey Robert Nunn amp Tom Weller 2014 a b c The Dissenters Burying Ground Ponsharden Monument Survey Robert Nunn amp Tom Weller 2012 2013 currently being edited for publication There are 203 names on headstones and approx 585 burials The Devonshire Halligey Olver and Tresidder families Cornwall Record Office See registers X850 25 amp X850 26 for Penryn s congregation Falmouth Packet newspaper notice of death 15 June 1839 Mr Walter Morris died at Selley s Green Bank Hotel Falmouth on his return from Madeira where he spent the winter in hope of recruiting his health Cornwall Record Office X850 25 No 136 Alexander Robinson Esq Died 13 April 1849 Wine Merchant Resided 194 Regent Street London Cornwall Record Office X850 2 No 267 Harriet Robinson Died September 1861 Of London Falmouth Packet Notice of Death 31 May 1873 Died at sea in lat 28 52 N 49 3 W on 27th April April on his passage from the West Indies Falmouth Packet newspaper Notice of Death 1 October 1870 At Rio de Janeiro on the 22January last Thomas Albert Webber Extracts from Navy Lists 19th Century Naval Surgeons P Benyon Death Certificate Elizabeth Tully Cook 11 September 1912 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 20 22 pg 1092 Lord Beaconsfield s Letter 1830 pg2 3 Falmouth Packet newspaper 25 September 1858 Old Falmouth by Susan Gay 1903 p 190 Old Falmouth Susan E Gay Printed 1903 Headley Bros London Pg 163 A Brief Account of the Classical and Mathematical School Established at Falmouth A D 1824 Printed by Lake Falmouth 1825 Falmouth Packet Obituary July 1857 At Middle Terrace Falmouth on Tuesday last Commander Green R N aged 71 years Obituary The West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser 18 November 1853 Old Falmouth Susan E Gay Printed 1903 Headley Bros London Pg 134 Cornwall Record Office CRO X850 2 An Historical Account of This Church Additional Letters of John Stuart Mill p 52 University of Toronto Press The National Library of Wales Journal Vol 12 No 1 Summer 1961 p 87 88 Warn s Directory and Guide to Falmouth and Penryn 1864 p 125 Cornwall Record Office X850 1 No 133 Mr John Richards For many years Clerk of the Parish Church at Mylor Notice of death in West Briton newspaper 20th April 1849 Mr Alexander Robinson Late of the firm Robinson Brothers Census Returns of England and Wales 1841 Class HO107 Piece 154 Book 4 Civil Parish Falmouth County Cornwall Falmouth Packet newspaper Notice of death 9 April 1887 Falmouth Packet newspaper Advertisement dated 24 September 1830 Cornwall Record Office X850 25 Minister s notes Congregational Sunday School Its Origin and Development Printed 1890 p 6 Obituary Falmouth Packet newspaper 5 June 1830 Portal nbsp Cornwall Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Congregationalist Cemetery Ponsharden amp oldid 1208247746, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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