Difference between revisions of "Falkland Old Cemetery"

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{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; width:320px; margin-left:10px;"
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{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; width:360px; margin-left:10px;"
 
! colspan="2" | Building summary
 
! colspan="2" | Building summary
 
|-
 
|-
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | [photo awaited]
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| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | [[File:Old Cemetery gates..JPG|340px]] The gates
 
|-
 
|-
 
| style="width:50%"| '''Name''' || Falkland Old Cemetery
 
| style="width:50%"| '''Name''' || Falkland Old Cemetery
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Address''' ||  
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| '''Address''' || High Street West
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''Postcode''' ||  
 
| '''Postcode''' ||  
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Other names''' || Burying ground;<br> Old Burial Ground.
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| rowspan="3" |'''Other names''' || Burying ground
 +
|-
 +
| Old Burial Ground
 +
|-
 +
| Kirkyard<ref>An odd description given that it is not near the kirk; however The 1963 listing for [[Gardens Cottage]] describes it as "west of kirkyard gate"</ref>
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''Date''' || 17th century
 
| '''Date''' || 17th century
 
|-
 
|-
| '''OS grid ref''' || NO 25079 7320
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| rowspan="2" |'''See map''' || [[Map T]] (18)
 +
|-
 +
|[[Map D]] (60)
 +
|-
 +
| '''OS grid ref''' || NO 25079 07320
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''Latitude & longitude''' || 56°15′09″N 3°12′39″W
 
| '''Latitude & longitude''' || 56°15′09″N 3°12′39″W
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Listing''' || Category C
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| '''what3words''' || [https://what3words.com///stags.tall.newspaper ///stags.tall.newspaper]
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|-
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! colspan=2 | HES listing details<ref>[http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/LB31290 HES record for LB31290]</ref>
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|-
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| '''Category''' || C
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Listing reference''' || LB31290
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| '''Reference / Date''' || LB31290 / 01/12/1971
|}
 
__NOTOC__
 
'''[[PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION]]'''
 
 
 
'''Falkland Old Cemetery''' is a cemetery in Falkland, with the entrance in [[High Street West]], but extending to the walls along [[Back Dykes]]. It is no longer used for burials following the opening of the new [[Falkland Cemetery]] on Newton Road.
 
 
 
{| class=wikitable
 
!HES listing details<ref>[http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/LB31290 HES record for LB31290]</ref>
 
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Address/Site Name'''
+
| '''Address/Site Name''' || Graveyard High Street West Port  
Graveyard High Street West Port
 
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Description'''
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| colspan=2 | '''Description:'''
 
Square gatepiers with moulded caps circa 1840: rubble walled enclosure burials from 1670; a few stones 18th century onwards.
 
Square gatepiers with moulded caps circa 1840: rubble walled enclosure burials from 1670; a few stones 18th century onwards.
 
|}
 
|}
 +
__NOTOC__
 +
'''Falkland Old Cemetery''' is a cemetery in Falkland, with the entrance in [[High Street West]], but extending to the walls along [[Back Dykes]]. It is no longer used for burials following the opening of the new [[Falkland Cemetery]] on Newton Road. It contains sthe burial aisle of the Johnston (or Johnstone) family of [[Lathrisk]].
  
 
==Further references==
 
==Further references==
  
"I had a call the other day from the Rev. Mr Johnston, the Parish Minister, and Mr Alex Bonthrone, one of the heritors. They explained that there had been a complaint as to the untidy condition of the Burying Ground, situated you will recollect, on the south side of the main road in the town leading to the approach gates, and that the minister, who explained that the grass was high, proposed to have it cut, they further explained however that the tenant of the property on the west side of the entrance gate to the Burying Ground, belonging to Falkland Estate and tenanted by Mrs George Ramsay, had a hole in the garden wall through which a large number of hens kept by her passed into the Burying Ground, and they wished this hole shut up. They further, I gathered, wished a gate which leads from the inside of the Burying Ground entrance to the garden of the property shut or secured."<ref>Letter from George Gavin, Falkland Estate factor to J. & F. Anderson, solicitors, 4 August 1904, uoted in [[Playfair and Burgess]], page 94.</ref>
+
"I had a call the other day from the Rev. Mr Johnston, the Parish Minister, and Mr Alex Bonthrone, one of the heritors. They explained that there had been a complaint as to the untidy condition of the Burying Ground, situated you will recollect, on the south side of the main road in the town leading to the approach gates, and that the minister, who explained that the grass was high, proposed to have it cut, they further explained however that the tenant of the property on the west side of the entrance gate to the Burying Ground, belonging to Falkland Estate and tenanted by Mrs George Ramsay, had a hole in the garden wall through which a large number of hens kept by her passed into the Burying Ground, and they wished this hole shut up. They further, I gathered, wished a gate which leads from the inside of the Burying Ground entrance to the garden of the property shut or secured."<ref>Letter from [[George Gavin]], Falkland Estate factor, to J. & F. Anderson, solicitors, 4 August 1904, quoted in [[Playfair and Burgess]], page 94.</ref>
 
+
----
 
"George Johnston (died 1900) had built up the Lathrisk Estate, and was rumoured, probably without much foundation, to be an eccentric recluse. His ancestors are buried in the Johnston family enclosure in the old burying ground in Falkland, and he himself is commemorated on the stone he erected there."<ref>[[Playfair and Burgess]], page 439.</ref>
 
"George Johnston (died 1900) had built up the Lathrisk Estate, and was rumoured, probably without much foundation, to be an eccentric recluse. His ancestors are buried in the Johnston family enclosure in the old burying ground in Falkland, and he himself is commemorated on the stone he erected there."<ref>[[Playfair and Burgess]], page 439.</ref>
 
+
----
 
"On the left just short of an old cottage with tiny windows an iron gate is the entrance to Falkland's Old Burial Ground. it was in use for some two centuries from about 1670. Its gravestones, although many are broken and removed from their proper locations, still have decipheral inscriptions and could yet be immensely useful to a local historian. Emilia Geddie's tombstone is on the East Wall.<ref>''[[A Falkland Guide]]'', page 10.</ref>
 
"On the left just short of an old cottage with tiny windows an iron gate is the entrance to Falkland's Old Burial Ground. it was in use for some two centuries from about 1670. Its gravestones, although many are broken and removed from their proper locations, still have decipheral inscriptions and could yet be immensely useful to a local historian. Emilia Geddie's tombstone is on the East Wall.<ref>''[[A Falkland Guide]]'', page 10.</ref>
  
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<references />
 
<references />
  
<!--
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==Further images==
==Gallery==
 
[Click on a picture below to see the image full-size]
 
<div style="clear:both;"></div>
 
 
<gallery mode=packed>
 
<gallery mode=packed>
 +
File:Falkland Old Burial 1 2018.JPG|General view
 +
File:Johnston Aisle.JPG|Johnston family burial enclosure
 +
</gallery>
  
</gallery>
 
-->
 
 
[[Category:Category C listed buildings]]
 
[[Category:Category C listed buildings]]
 
[[Category:Royal Burgh of Falkland]]
 
[[Category:Royal Burgh of Falkland]]
 
[[Category:Falkland Conservation Area]]
 
[[Category:Falkland Conservation Area]]
[[Category:Pages with no pictures]]
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[[Category:Cemeteries]]

Latest revision as of 15:18, 29 February 2024

Building summary
Old Cemetery gates..JPG The gates
Name Falkland Old Cemetery
Address High Street West
Postcode
Other names Burying ground
Old Burial Ground
Kirkyard[1]
Date 17th century
See map Map T (18)
Map D (60)
OS grid ref NO 25079 07320
Latitude & longitude 56°15′09″N 3°12′39″W
what3words ///stags.tall.newspaper
HES listing details[2]
Category C
Reference / Date LB31290 / 01/12/1971
Address/Site Name Graveyard High Street West Port
Description:

Square gatepiers with moulded caps circa 1840: rubble walled enclosure burials from 1670; a few stones 18th century onwards.

Falkland Old Cemetery is a cemetery in Falkland, with the entrance in High Street West, but extending to the walls along Back Dykes. It is no longer used for burials following the opening of the new Falkland Cemetery on Newton Road. It contains sthe burial aisle of the Johnston (or Johnstone) family of Lathrisk.

Further references

"I had a call the other day from the Rev. Mr Johnston, the Parish Minister, and Mr Alex Bonthrone, one of the heritors. They explained that there had been a complaint as to the untidy condition of the Burying Ground, situated you will recollect, on the south side of the main road in the town leading to the approach gates, and that the minister, who explained that the grass was high, proposed to have it cut, they further explained however that the tenant of the property on the west side of the entrance gate to the Burying Ground, belonging to Falkland Estate and tenanted by Mrs George Ramsay, had a hole in the garden wall through which a large number of hens kept by her passed into the Burying Ground, and they wished this hole shut up. They further, I gathered, wished a gate which leads from the inside of the Burying Ground entrance to the garden of the property shut or secured."[3]


"George Johnston (died 1900) had built up the Lathrisk Estate, and was rumoured, probably without much foundation, to be an eccentric recluse. His ancestors are buried in the Johnston family enclosure in the old burying ground in Falkland, and he himself is commemorated on the stone he erected there."[4]


"On the left just short of an old cottage with tiny windows an iron gate is the entrance to Falkland's Old Burial Ground. it was in use for some two centuries from about 1670. Its gravestones, although many are broken and removed from their proper locations, still have decipheral inscriptions and could yet be immensely useful to a local historian. Emilia Geddie's tombstone is on the East Wall.[5]

Notes

  1. An odd description given that it is not near the kirk; however The 1963 listing for Gardens Cottage describes it as "west of kirkyard gate"
  2. HES record for LB31290
  3. Letter from George Gavin, Falkland Estate factor, to J. & F. Anderson, solicitors, 4 August 1904, quoted in Playfair and Burgess, page 94.
  4. Playfair and Burgess, page 439.
  5. A Falkland Guide, page 10.

Further images