Death and community in rural settlements: changing burial culture in small towns and villages, c. 1850-2007

DOI

A dataset of all places in which burial took place since 1850 in the local authority areas of Hambleton, Harrogate and Ryedale in North Yorkshire.This inventory of burial grounds contains 351 cases, with each case comprising a single burial location: cemetery, churchyard or burial ground. The data contains the location, religious denomination and ownership of each burial location and associated church buildings, with dates of opening, closure, restorations and expansions and other relevant variables.The project considered the history of burial in rural and market-town areas after 1850. This study of cemeteries and churchyards used national and county archives to explore for the first time how local communities responded to churchyard closures and new cemetery creation. Hitherto, historians and sociologists have described a shift from the ‘traditional’ sacred churchyard to the municipal, secular and ‘scientific’ cemetery. This is a false dichotomy. New burial board cemeteries were managed largely by parish vestries and, until the Burial Act of 1900, consecrated cemetery land was in law regarded as an extension to parish burial space. In churchyards and cemeteries alike, the proliferation of complex monuments increased through the nineteenth century. Churchyard extensions created space for such expectations, particularly for families to be buried together and ‘in perpetuity’, undermining the tradition of churchyard re-use. A new aesthetic is the most persuasive explanation for the changing landscape of twentiethcentury churchyards and cemeteries, as ‘cluttered’ Victorian styles fell out of favour. Furthermore, maintenance was easier. The incidence of cremation increased substantially but has not necessarily undermined rural churchyard use: space for cremated remains has often been made available, for example in gardens of remembrance. For rural communities today, continued use of a churchyard remains a preference where possible. Patterns of churchyard closure differed between regions, being much more likely in the midlands, and less so than in North Yorkshire, where the majority of churchyards remain in use. However, in both locations, the need to secure more burial space remains problematic.

Data collected through postal survey, archival research and interviews with key stakeholders. Detailed methodology provided in end of award report.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-852370
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=9717b129c40e89bc4d6e6c7b90ff95f0c84cbe061e5d5ddc7d050dda0aacdd83
Provenance
Creator Rugg, J, University of York
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2016
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Julie Rugg, University of York
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric
Discipline History; Humanities
Spatial Coverage Yorkshire; Hambleton; Harrogate; Ryedale; England