This Memorandum was submitted jointly by the owners of Brookwood Cemetery Ltd and The Brookwood Cemetery Society for the House of Commons Select Committee on the Environment, Transport & Regional Affairs. The Committee published its findings on Cemetery Provision in the United Kingdom in April 2001, the first of its kind for 150 years.
The wide-ranging report covered the value of cemeteries, cemeteries in decline, causes for concern, halting decline, and reviewing current legislation. The report addresses the cultural value of cemeteries, their value to the environment and the local community, and their role in urban renaissance. The report also makes valuable comments and recommendations on the ways in which cemeteries may be better funded and maintained, principally via English Heritage, the Heritage Lottery Fund, or the New Opportunities Fund. These recommendations cover both local authority and privately owned cemeteries. The full report of the Select Committee may be read here.
The joint Memorandum, reproduced below, appears as No. 65 in volume II of the published report, and includes a list of monuments and mausolea for restoration.
Memorandum by Brookwood Cemetery Ltd &
The Brookwood Cemetery Society (CEM
64)
I am the owner of the largest private cemetery in Western
Europe: Brookwood Cemetery.
I have enclosed some information which I hope will be relevant to
your enquiry.
My cemetery has been in existence since 1854. It was opened by an
Act of Parliament. However to date the cemetery has been totally neglected by
major funding bodies and also by local sponsors. Brookwood's importance in the
Victorian celebration of death should be formally recognised by the Government
and organisations such as English Heritage, and it should be acknowledged as a
site of national importance.
The cemetery requires vast financial resources to restore the important
structures and the cemetery's unique funerary landscape. Restoration will also
mean these structures remain for the benefit of the local and wider community
for educational and historical uses.
Although privately owned the cemetery does not generate enough
income to maintain the grounds and monuments in a satisfactory manner. The
grounds are approximately 450 acres.
We receive no assistance from our local council—Woking Borough
Council and in fact they oppose us at every opportunity. The cemetery is serving
the local community as well as the wider population. In the past months the
councils has taken action against the cemetery for cutting down dead and dying
trees, self seeded trees, use of a caravan for staff purposes, public rights of
way and illegal dumping of rubbish—changing the use of the cemetery, (we
successfully defended this action albeit as great expense to the cemetery's
purse.)
We would like to seen an action committee set up within the
government where cemetery owners and managements could seek advice and funding
without having to rely on their local council.
The enclosed information has been prepared with the assistance of
Mr John Clarke of the Brookwood Cemetery Society.
Mr R H Guney
Comments by The Brookwood Cemetery Society (submitted by John
Clarke)
(1) ENVIRONMENTAL, HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL SIGNIFICANCE OF CEMETERIES FOR LOCAL COMMUNITIES
Cemeteries provide valuable open spaces of infinite value to the
environment. Due to their planning and design, the planting is often of historic
significance in its own right as a unique landscape. Specimens of trees may be
important for various reasons, for instance rarity, size or maturity, since
cemeteries were often planted as miniature arboretums. Although no systematic
study has yet been undertaken into the flora and fauna at Brookwood, the
benefits of the cemetery in hosting significant species must not be overlooked
or underestimated. Fieldwork so far suggests (for instance) that Brookwood hosts
badgers, birds, deer, rare butterflies and fungi, to name but a few.
By definition cemeteries are historically significant, yet
curiously ignored by architectural historians and others. Brookwood was opened
in 1854, and was designed as the sole solution to London's burial problem.
Served by its own railway funeral service (1854-1941), with a size and grandeur
quite unlike that of any other British cemetery, nevertheless it remains
relatively unknown. Its historical significance covers not only the landscape
(and its size: Brookwood is the largest cemetery in the UK), but the structures
erected within the cemetery grounds. These may include chapels, lodges or other
buildings designed when the cemetery was opened. These are often designed by
architects of national importance. (For instance, the core of the old
Superintendent's Offices at Brookwood were designed by Sydney Smirke, brother of
Robert Smirke who designed the British Museum). Additionally there may be
mausolea or other monuments or sculptures of similar significance. (At Brookwood
it is suspected the memorial to the Vickers family in plot 33 was designed by
Edwin Lutyens.) At present, Brookwood has none of these structures listed (along
with the protection this might offer), with the sole exception of the Memorial
Chapel in the American Military Cemetery.
Cultural aspects cover many areas. Brookwood is a multicultural
cemetery, and a walk through its different sections is a cultural education by
itself. Brookwood includes the first Muslim burial ground in the UK, the only
Zoroastrian burial ground in Europe, along with many other fascinating Muslim
groups. The educational value of this is immeasurable, quite apart from its
significance in the history of British thanatology. The Brookwood Cemetery
Society conducts guided walks throughout all sections of the cemetery each year,
and continues to promote the cemetery to local and not so local visitors and
groups. Further details may be found on our Website.
(2) THE ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENTS IN THE MANAGEMENT AND PROTECTION OF CEMETERIES
The Government should be more active in promoting and protecting
historically significant cemeteries. Although Brookwood is acknowledged as an
important landscape and garden cemetery design, so far Government's role has
been merely to list or catalogue this fact. No promotion is given. No support
(financial or otherwise) is granted to cemeteries like Brookwood that have never
received any funding from any central source to restore or repair important
memorials. (The few that have been restored by the Brookwood Cemetery Society
have been undertaken with funds raised by the Society or by the Society
approaching relevant private organisations for financial support.) Government
has been consistently ignorant of the importance of historically significant
cemeteries, and has had no co-ordinated approach from its various departments or
agencies. Government should establish a key list of historically significant
cemetery sites (which should be published) as a basis for building a policy to
support (financially and otherwise) these sites so that they are preserved
intact for future generations. This protection might be granted within (say)
English Heritage or a similar national organisation. The current muddled
situation has led for instance to part of Brookwood Cemetery being redeveloped
with an office block and destroying part of a sensitive historic landscape. And
this despite the local Council's so-called "Conservation" of the
cemetery area. Despite opposition from the Society, this development went ahead
with the Council's misguided blessing.
(3) FUNDING AND ECONOMIC VIABILITY OF CEMETERIES
Cemeteries are by definition a wasting asset and many Victorian
cemetery sites are now full and unlikely to yield any profit. Elsewhere, even
where land remains for burial, the level of business may mean the future of the
cemetery is by no means assured. It should be possible for historically
significant cemeteries, whether privately owned or not, to bid for national
funds like the National Lottery or from English Heritage. Brookwood remains
privately owned yet, despite sympathetic management, it is impossible for the
current owners to undertake major restoration work of important memorials and
monuments, and indeed the landscape in general, out of current receipts.
Government should recognise this shortfall and make appropriate funds available
for restoration work, and allow national funds to be used for this purpose.
BENT MEMORIAL (PLOT
34)
c1860. Bath stone(?) Architect unknown.
Gothic-style gabled and lanterned memorial. Apparently
constructed of Bath stone, this has badly weathered in recent years and much of
the memorial is incomplete. It requires extensive reconstruction. Photographs
exist showing how it used to look.
BOULTON MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
34)
c1919-20. Probably marble. Architect unknown.
Fine classical-style building. The bronze door (now hidden due to
vandalism) includes a relief of Christ as the good shepherd. The roof needs
attention and the glazing (at the rear) is broken.
BRAINE MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
74)
c1935-6. Largely marble. Architect unknown.
This mausoleum has an attractive green pantiled roof and is
constructed of marble(?) The bronze door (now hidden) has a 1930s style domestic
front door. There was a circular stained glass window at the rear, which is
almost certainly broken.
CHARLES BRADLAUGH (PLOT
108)
c1892-93. Pink granite, bronze and cast iron.
This was the first public memorial to Bradlaugh, a prominent
19th-century politician (died 1891). It has been incomplete since c1938 when the
bronze bust (by F. Verheyden) was mysteriously removed from the memorial. It has
never been traced. A bronze wreath, which was affixed to the front of the
plinth, has been removed in more recent times. A photograph is known of the
memorial in its complete form, and the National Secular Society may have some
information on this, although their premises were bombed in the last war.
COLQUHOUN MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
'57A'—FAR END
OF ST MARK'S
AVENUE)
1858. Stone unidentified. Architect J. Johnson. Mason W. Boulton of
Guildford.
Probably the earliest mausoleum in the cemetery. It may have been
designed as a chapel of ease before use by this family as a private chapel and
burial ground. The chapel was last restored in 1924 (see inside building). The
structure includes fantastically fine carved figures of knights in armour on the
exterior gable ends. The floor has partly given way, the doors are incomplete,
and the burial vault is prone to flood in winter. Requires extensive restoration
and repair.
COLUMBARIUM (PLOT 26)
c1890. Marble? Architect unknown.
The largest mausoleum in the cemetery and used as the Society's
logo. Built originally for the 4th Earl Cadogan (died 1915), it was sold back to
the Necropolis Company in 1910 and then converted into a columbarium. In
desperate need of major repairs to the dome and roof. Inside, there is an
underground vault which is prone to flood in winter.
DRAKE MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
31)
c1890. Marble, pink granite columns, bronze, wood, copper clad roof
(largely decayed), and mosaic (largely lost). Architect unknown.
Italianate style building. The roof requires complete rebuilding
and the barrel vaulting over the structure is suffering from water penetration
and will collapse in time. Bronze plaques on the rear wall have been stolen over
the years—these recorded details of the family buried blow. The mosaic frieze
("Because I Live Ye Shall Live Also") was executed by the Salviatis
(see below). The pathway leading to the mausoleum from St George's Avenue might
also be repaired. Its boundaries were marked by small granite stones set in the
ground, some of which survive.
DUDGEON MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
19)
Late 1930s. Rusticated grey granite. Architect unknown.
Of massive construction, this structure would require its
boundary hedge being trimmed back and the door being restored. It is not known
if there are any stained glass windows to the structure, nor is the state of the
interior known.
EGYPTIAN MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
19)
Date unknown. Pink granite. Architect unknown.
Very little is known of this building. It is one of very few in
the Egyptian style at Brookwood. The boundary hedge requires trimming to make
the building visible again. The state of the roof and interior are unknown.
FORMER CATHOLIC CHAPEL
(PLOT 124)
Completed 1899. Brick, stone, slate, wood and metal. Architect almost
certainly Cyril B Tubbs (died 1927, plot 32).
Although the original design was burned down in about 1990, the
structure could be completely restored inside and out. Photographs exist of the
original design and it may be possible to track down some of the architect's
drawings from appropriate archives or the architectural press of the time.
GARLAND MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
29)
Late 1910s. Probably marble. Architect unknown.
The door (probably wooden) and glazing requires attention, and
also the roof. There is a very similar mausoleum near the entrance to the
"new" part of Highgate Cemetery, although that design was constructed
in pink granite.
GLADES OF REMEMBRANCE:
THE LAKE
The Glades were officially opened in 1950 and the lake has always
formed a prominent feature of the entrance area. The whole lake area should be
restored and replanted. It might be possible to bid for the drainage channels to
be cleared and repaired (e.g. the bridge over the ditch at the end of the main
area of the Glades).
GLORNEY MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
76)
Mid 1930s. Rusticated grey granite. Architect unknown.
The door and roof require attention. The 1930s stained glass was
smashed years ago—it may have been by Tiffany. The state of the roof and
interior are unknown.
GREENFIELD MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
80)
1890/1 (in gable). Polychrome marbles and granites. Architect unknown.
The door has the family name cast in it. The roof requires
attention, as does the doorway. This mausoleum is well-sited since it forms part
of a vista as seen from the opposite end of St Jude's Avenue. The state of the
interior is unknown.
HEG (GWINNER) MAUSOLEUM (PLOT 3)
Date not known. Marble? Architect unknown.
Very little is known of this building. The door is believed to be
wooden. The state of the roof and interior are unknown.
SIR
JOSHUA JEBB (PLOT 25)
c1864. Grey granite.
Engineer and designer of prisons, Jebb died in 1863. This large granite
obelisk is in danger of falling over and needs to be set upright again.
KEITH FAMILY MAUSOLEUM
(PLOT 4)
c1890. Polychrome marble. Architect unknown.
Gothic style. This building used to have stained glass windows
and the cast iron door has the family name cast upon it. The coffins are above
ground level which may complicate any restoration work.
MACDONALD OBELISK (PLOT
15)
Late 19th century. Possibly York stone, although of an unusual reddish
hue. Architect unknown.
This obelisk is gothicised and the design is certainly unique at
Brookwood. The obelisk has somehow shifted on its base, whilst the pedestal is
also out of true. Unfortunately the inscription panels are starting to lift, so
any remedial work would need to take possible damage to these panels into
account.
NICHOLS MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
131)
c1898-9. Marble. Architect unknown.
This mausoleum commemorates the founder of London's Cafe Royal
(Daniel Nichols, died 1897). The wooden door and the windows need restoring,
along with the interior.
NORMAND MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
25)
c1890s. Marble. Architect unknown.
The door and interior would need restoring. The roof may need
attention. The bronze plaque commemorating the artist Henrietta Normand (nee
Rae, died 1928), needs replacing since it has been stolen.
PELHAM-CLINTON MEMORIAL
(PLOT 4)
c1893-4. Bronze sculpture on marble pedestal. Sculptor unknown.
Probably the most important memorial at Brookwood. It
commemorates Lord and Lady Pelham-Clinton, members of Queen Victoria's personal
household. The bronze is very early and a remarkable example of the Victorian
celebration of death. The inscription panels on the base are missing, as are the
chains around the grave space. The whole sculpture group is starting to lean
forward, and requires setting upright. The surrounding trees may require pruning
since these have been allowed to mature around this memorial.
PHIPSON MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
22)
c1910. Marble and bronze. Architect unknown.
Small mausoleum that contained the ashes of Weatherley Phipson
(died 1909) in a fine porcelain(?) urn placed on a shelf opposite the door. The
interior has been vandalised and the urn smashed. The current state of the
interior and the roof are unknown.
THE RING (PLOT
35)
A circular plot containing many interesting graves. This area
might provide the core of a restoration of the cemetery landscape back to its
Victorian finery. The Ring might be tidied up, memorials repaired and cleaned,
and some of the planting restored (eg: replacing the ring of monkey puzzle
trees).
ST ALBAN'S
LYCHGATE (PLOT 46)
c1893-4. Brick, slate and wood. Architect unknown.
Erected as a memorial to a parishioner who dies in 1892, this
most attractive structure could be repaired and restored to its original
condition. Some tiles need replacing, but generally speaking the structure
appears to be sound.
ST ANNE'S
SOHO: OBELISKS (PLOT
1)
1855. Cast iron. Supplied by Messrs Cottain & Hallow of Oxford Street,
London.
The only surviving pair of unusual cast iron obelisks that marked
the burial grounds of St Anne's Soho (Westminster). They require setting upright
and one requires some attention at the top, whilst the plates at the bases
(which identified the parish ground) are missing. They should be restored to
their original sand colour, so they appear to be made of stone rather than cast
iron.
ST GEORGE THE
MARTYR: OBELISK (PLOT
81)
1900. Marble. A copy of the obelisk in St George's Circus, Southwark.
It was erected over the plot where reburials from the church in
London were placed in 1899. Unfortunately the plot has sunk over the years and
consequently the obelisk has toppled over. The ground should be levelled and
stabilised, and the obelisk rebuilt.
GUILIO SALVIATI (PLOT
25)
c1899. Marble, pink granite and mosaic. Mosaics by Salviati & Company.
Guilio Salviati died in 1898, and this remarkable memorial was
erected to his memory. The base, supporting an angel figure, has four separate
mosaic panels. Each is showing signs of damage from damp, moss, and similar
ageing. Each panel is of the highest quality of craftsmanship. The memorial used
to have some sort of cast iron decorative fence to it, but it is not known what
the exact design was.
SUPERINTENDENTS OFFICE, CEMETERY
PALES
1854. Brick and tiled roof. Architect Sydney Smirke (1798-1877).
The core of this much-altered building, with the two chimney
stacks, is believed to be the original "Parsonage House" constructed
for the opening of the Cemetery in November 1854. Smirke was Architect to the
London Necropolis Company, the founders of Brookwood Cemetery. The Company's
chaplains disliked the cottage and it was subsequently occupied by the Cemetery
Surperintendent. The porch is a later addition. The structure has been renovated
and altered (eg a replacement roof destroying the original decorative tiling)
with the very regrettable adjacent office development. However this building
could be re-used as the cemetery office, forming a focal point once again in the
cemetery. It could also be used as a visitor's centre and as an educational
resource.
UNKNOWN MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
34)
Date unknown. Largely marble. Architect unknown.
This tiny mausoleum has been vandalised in the past and requires
restoration and renovation. It is believed the coffin(s) are stored above ground
which may complicate restoration work.
HENRI VAN LAUN
(PLOT 80)
c1897. Terracotta and marble. Designed by Emmeline Halse (died 1923,
believed to be buried in plot 36).
Unique memorial with unusual terracotta base and relief profile
portrait of the deceased on top (van Laun died in 1896). Some general renovation
of the memorial is required.
WINCH MAUSOLEUM (PLOT
3)
1890s. Largely marble. Architect unknown.
Apparently quite sound from the exterior, nevertheless it may
well require attention to the roof and interior.
WOOD FAMILY MAUSOLEUM
(PLOT 30)
Late 1850s?. Largely marble. Architect unknown.
Classical style mausoleum which requires fairly extensive
repairs. The roof is damaged and parts of the stone decoration on the walls has
decayed badly. The coffins are stored above ground which may complicate
restoration work. The glass window at the rear has been smashed (although it is
bricked up). The family at one time lived at nearby Ottershaw Park, so this
mausoleum is of considerable local interest.
John Clarke, Chairman, The Brookwood Cemetery Society
R H Guney, Director, Brookwood Cemetery Ltd
October 2000