Author Topic: Nantwich Cemetery  (Read 6780 times)

Offline kathb

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Re: Nantwich Cemetery
« Reply #9 on: Saturday 17 May 14 00:08 BST (UK) »
Mothermacree, I am sending you a Private Message. Regards Kathb
Census information is Crown Copyright from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
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Offline elzabels

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Re: Nantwich Cemetery
« Reply #10 on: Saturday 17 May 14 00:32 BST (UK) »
Hello Pamela

To be buried in the grave yard you needed to live in the Parish and that holds today.....my father & family are Gresty people but as he lived and died away from the area we have been unable to have him interred in the family grave....

There are 2 grave yards at St Chad Wybunbury the old surrounding the remains of the Church and the new across the road. As far as I am aware, each has been transcribed. I have a book issued by the local family history Society for the new grave yard ( just cannot find it at present ) but I suspect it will be to late for your ancestor, You could contact Crewe library ( Email: crewe.library@cheshireeast.gov.uk) see this link

http://www.fhsc.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=386:wybunbury-st-chads-monumental-inscriptions-old-part&catid=57:crewe-news&Itemid=317

Cheshire Parish Registers which were referred to are on this link www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~cprdb/

Other info
http://www.dustydocs.com/link/5/25121/179156/parish-page-familysearch.html

Have you looked at Cheshire Trade Directory for details of Edward's business

Just struggling for a picture of Shavington Hall it is a listed building built circa 1870

Some of this maybe of interest.look at the map at the end!
http://www.scgpc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/Shavington-cum-Gresty-Parish-Plan-A4-Single.pd

and another

http://archives.cheshire.gov.uk/




Offline AdrianB38

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Re: Nantwich Cemetery
« Reply #11 on: Tuesday 20 May 14 21:03 BST (UK) »
There are (or were) 3 major cemeteries / graveyards in Nantwich. If someone is in the burial register of St. Mary's, Nantwich, then before 1849, they would have been buried in the graveyard immediately adjacent to the church. As a result of the cholera epidemic of 1849, which claimed some 180 lives, the original graveyard began to run out of space and a new site out at The Barony, originally known as Finger Post Field, was purchased from the Workhouse. The first burial took place there on 21 July 1849. This became known as All Saints. (Somewhere in Rootschat for Cheshire you will find lots of images for it). The chapel of All Saints was opened in 1884, but was closed and demolished in 1985.

The 3rd was the municipal cemetery, which is separate again.

FamilySearch has indexed all the burial parish registers for Cheshire (errors and omissions excepted).

I am never clear whether an entry appears in a church's burial register if someone has a funeral there but is buried in a municipal cemetery. I think the answer is "Not usually, but..."

NB - in the UK "graveyard" is used for plots adjacent to a church, "cemetery" is an area not linked to a church, usually owned by a municipal corporation. All Saints' name is therefore a puzzle as it had no church to start with, then had one, and now doesn't have one. Cemetery or graveyard? Ah - the delights of the English language.

This link may be useful for the cemetery at Middlewich: http://www.mikewalton.org.uk/mhsweb/mhslook_up.htm