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Nottingham Road Cemetery, Derby (1855): A Historic Victorian Burial Place

Wed 17th Jun

Nottingham Road Cemetery (1855) is Derby’s greatest Victorian garden cemetery. This tour explores how and why it was created.

Like many growing industrial and manufacturing centres, Derby faced problems by the early nineteenth century associated with overcrowded churchyards and the burial of the dead. Rising population, and fears about the spread of disease, fuelled these concerns. To take the pressure off overcrowded parish graveyards, new specially-designed burial grounds were created. Many were inspired by the garden and arboretum cemetery movement which associated the new type of burial ground with beautiful public walks and parks. However, the design and management of these new cemeteries caused some controversy and faced opposition from those who believed places for the dead should remain sacred, associated with churches, not be designed like pleasure parks, and never run as businesses. This tour explores the greatest of Derby’s Victorian garden cemeteries on Nottingham Road. It examines how and why the cemetery was created, how it was designed and planted and how social class and religious divisions shaped these elements. We will consider the religious, landscape gardening and civic ideas which inspired it, and how and why the cemetery changed through time (including the addition of extensions), examining these within the context of the development of Victorian urban burial grounds more broadly.

Venue: starts outside the main entrance lodge, Nottingham Road Cemetery (DE21 6FN)
Time: 2pm – 3.30pm
Cost: £10
More information: Nottingham Road Cemetery, Derby 1855

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