Author Topic: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project  (Read 90968 times)

Offline Luzzu

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #54 on: Monday 04 August 14 13:15 BST (UK) »
Manchester General Cemetery's Oldest Resident?

Until recently William Draper (Consecrated 3536) held the record as being the Cemetery's oldest resident.  He was 101 years old when he died in 1903.  This has now been beaten by Mary Walker who was buried on 14 December 1862.  She was aged 106 years and a resident of Lamb Lane, Collyhurst.  It was reported in the local press that "she had never been compelled to resort to the use of spectacles".  Apparently until the last two years of her life, she always fetched her own water from the well and always fetched the 5s 6d per week allowed to her by the Guardians.  Mary Walker was interred in a public grave (Unknown 18621214) and as far as we know there is no gravestone.

Luzzu
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Armitage, Slaithwaite; Buck, Staffs & Hampshire; Buckley, Bolton & Manchester; Temple, London & Hampshire; Crummett, Norfolk & Burnley; Osborne, Cornwall & Burnley; Haigh, Manchester & Todmorden; Gralton/Grant, Manchester & Ireland; France, Manchester & Slaithwaite; Shackleton, Burnley & Yorkshire; Dicks, Nottingham & Wiltshire; Sowter, Derbyshire

Offline Luzzu

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #55 on: Tuesday 16 September 14 13:37 BST (UK) »
The number of visitors to the MGCTP website topped 50,000 today  ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

www.mgctp.moonfruit.com

The project has just passed its 4th Birthday (9th September 2014).

Thanks Cancan for your fantastic planning, co-ordination and motivation.  Thanks to all the MGCTP Team members for your hard work and support.

Thanks to everyone for your friendship.  It has been and continues to be a great privilege to work on this project and be part of a fantastic team.  I am sorry that my location prevents me from doing more.

Luzzu  :D
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Armitage, Slaithwaite; Buck, Staffs & Hampshire; Buckley, Bolton & Manchester; Temple, London & Hampshire; Crummett, Norfolk & Burnley; Osborne, Cornwall & Burnley; Haigh, Manchester & Todmorden; Gralton/Grant, Manchester & Ireland; France, Manchester & Slaithwaite; Shackleton, Burnley & Yorkshire; Dicks, Nottingham & Wiltshire; Sowter, Derbyshire

Offline Cancan

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #56 on: Sunday 05 October 14 16:10 BST (UK) »
Celebrating Today!!!


Today 5th Oct 2014 we are celebrating as we have now completed the Church Sections of
the General Cemetery. 
We have uncovered every single flat stone in the Church Sections,
barring about 10 stones as they were covered by a tree or tree roots to big to get any details from.
Some of these have been very deep and hard to uncover, but the Team got stuck in
and uncovered them!

The best part of this part of the Cemetery is that if anyone buried in Church sections
 who died before 26th March 1886, there are NO RECORDS of them being buried in the Cemetery.

We have concentrated mainly on these sections to get these gravestones for this reason.

We are Celebrating our Anniversary of the Project soon and we will be starting the 5th year of it!!

Many Thanks to ALL!!
The Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project, Bookmark our website to see updates and information also. http://mgctp.com

Offline Luzzu

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #57 on: Wednesday 29 October 14 13:27 GMT (UK) »
Two more Notable Burials added to the MGCTP website – www.mgctp.moonfruit.com -  researched by fellow Rootschatter and MGCTP team member, BarbaraH.

Edward Nightingale (circa 1809-1861)
Edward Nightingale was landlord of the General Abercrombie public house in Great Ancoats Street, Manchester and was a well-known Chartist activist. He was a marshal at the famous Chartist meeting on Kersal Moor in September 1838 and a speaker at other events. He was not always popular with other Chartists however; he gained a reputation for heckling and ‘strong-arm tactics’ and was known as the “Dictator of New Cross”.  Around 1840, he went into business with fellow reformer Elijah Dixon, as partner in the timber and match-making firm of Dixon and Nightingale. In the mid-1840s he moved to Newton Heath and lived with his family at Heath Hall, a large house at the junction of Oldham Road and Droylsden Road. He later became one of the Poor Law Guardians for the township of Newton. Edward died on 17th July 1861 at his residence, Heath Hall,  and was  buried with his wife Mary and two of his daughters, Phoebe Sophia and Sarah Frances.

Charles Edward Ullathorne (1845-1904)
The inscription reads “In Loving Memory of Charles Edward Ullathorne of Kingston upon Hull, born April 11th 1845 died May 2nd 1904”
Charles Edward (Charlie) was a cricketer who played at county level in Yorkshire in the 1860’s-1870’s.  He was born in Hull, and his obituary in the Hull Daily Mail described him as “a good batsman, but his fielding even excelled his batting in its usefulness, his speed, accuracy of throwing in, alertness and agility being famous in his day.”  Another obituary in the Sheffield Daily Telegraph stated that he lived in the Manchester area for about 10 years before his death and had been a groundsman for Eccles Cricket Club. In 1897 he had four of his children baptised at St Thomas’ Church, Red Bank, where he was recorded as a commercial traveller living at 84 Stocks Street. He died of TB and is buried with his wife Edith and three grandchildren.

Luzzu  :)




Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Armitage, Slaithwaite; Buck, Staffs & Hampshire; Buckley, Bolton & Manchester; Temple, London & Hampshire; Crummett, Norfolk & Burnley; Osborne, Cornwall & Burnley; Haigh, Manchester & Todmorden; Gralton/Grant, Manchester & Ireland; France, Manchester & Slaithwaite; Shackleton, Burnley & Yorkshire; Dicks, Nottingham & Wiltshire; Sowter, Derbyshire


Offline Barbara.H

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #58 on: Tuesday 06 January 15 13:06 GMT (UK) »
Here's an ambitious project - hoping to map all Cumbria's burial grounds in the next two years using drones (unmanned flying drones that is, not volunteer transcribers!  ;D )

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-30684803

Be interesting to see how much they can achieve in two years!

 :) Barbara
LANCS:  Greenwood, Greenhalgh, Fishwick, Berry,
CHES/DERBYS:  Vernon
YORKS/LINCS: Watson, Stamford, Bartholomew,
Census information is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline LizzieW

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #59 on: Tuesday 06 January 15 15:09 GMT (UK) »
Barbara - That would have saved my husband and me lots of footwork when we visited the area last year.  ::)

Offline Cancan

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #60 on: Tuesday 06 January 15 19:39 GMT (UK) »
What a great idea!

Lets hope other counties follow and have companies offering the same kind of grants!

The Manchester General Cemetery have some photos of how the Cemetery looked and showing gravestones and plots on the fabulous website

http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk

Take a look it's free! If you register (that's free too!) you can zoom in showing a lot more!! 

for the General Cemetery just put 'Harpurhey' in the search box, brings up Hendham Vale but shows the Cemetery in great detail!  Even showing the pauper graves at the far back of the Cemetery!

You can help out the website by putting 'tags' on the photo's to show places, names and streets that you know of!  Most of the photo's are of streets etc., that are no longer there! 1919-1953!!

Great for the genealogists looking for long gone homes of ancestors!

Happy searching!! :)

Keeping Fingers crossed for a mild winter!! 

Cannot wait to get back to digging!!

The Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project, Bookmark our website to see updates and information also. http://mgctp.com

Offline Cancan

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Re: Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project
« Reply #61 on: Thursday 19 March 15 10:22 GMT (UK) »
Hi All,

The weather has been pretty mild and we are now getting ready to back to the Cemetery.

We visited on Sunday and the Council have repaired by re-tarmacking parts of the path.
The Ivy and trees have been cleared away on the left had side of the Cemetery next to the wall,
making it a lot easier for people to get to the gravestones.
There has been a general clean up of the grounds, getting rid of leaves, branches and the trees pruned.

We are thinking that if the weather is good to us this year, we can complete.

Still looking for more Volunteers!  if anyone has a free Sunday, even if it is just a couple of hours please lend a hand!!

Will be posting the Sundays dates here for when we go!!

Hope to see you soon!!

Cancan :)
The Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project, Bookmark our website to see updates and information also. http://mgctp.com

Offline Cancan

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Groundwork Date: Sunday 10th May 2015
« Reply #62 on: Friday 08 May 15 20:30 BST (UK) »
Weather permitting we are hoping to be at the cemetery on

Sunday 10th May 2015

For plenty of digging and recording of the gravestones
All Hands welcome
!
The Manchester General Cemetery Transcription Project, Bookmark our website to see updates and information also. http://mgctp.com