Good evening,
A little more for you,
1. I was wrong, the Zoar Baptist chapel does have some burials although I don't recall ever seeing any headstones. They are probably all fairly old so will ask Paster Bradstock if I see him.
2. The chapel that used to stand opposite was Wesleyan.
3. There was also at one time another place of worship beside the Baptist Chapel, Plymouth Bretheren.
4. The Roman Catholic Church in Staplefield may have been a chapel of some description before it became RC, will look into that one.
5. I incorrectly described the two parish churches as having graveyards, they don't. They have churchyards, apparently there is a legal difference all to do with ownership. Graveyards are public burial grounds not necessarily with a place of worship attached. This I found out when enquiring as to where non-conformists would normally be buried particularly at the time we are looking at.
So we may be looking at a possibility of the burials being some distance from Handcross at a public burial ground which was open at that time.
These days that usually means Worth crematorium.
John915
PS. Further to lizdb, in many Baptist chapels it means you have to become a member of the church, non-members may still attend services but can't take communion. You also have to be an adult usually over 16, and you have to stand and make a declaration of devotion to be accepted. OH is a Baptist and has been through all this.