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The Friends of Key Hill and Warstone Lane Cemeteries

GRADE II* NEWS FOR KEY HILL CEMETERY!

The listing of Key Hill Cemetery on the national Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Interest has been raised from Grade II to Grade II* with effect from 30th November. The new category designates it as ‘a particularly important site of more than special interest.’ This is very welcome news as it considerably increases protection for the cemetery ensuring that it and the immediate surrounding area is properly preserved.
In the letter announcing the change English Heritage said that the site had been designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:
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Key Hill Cemetery is a good example of an early Victorian garden cemetery (opened in 1836).
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The cemetery design makes effective use of a former quarry to produce a varied and picturesque layout with sandstone cliffs, rock-hewn paths and catacombs.
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The original planting was carried out by a notable local nursery, John Pope & Sons of Handsworth; some of the planting appears to survive.
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The cemetery contains a very good collection of funerary monuments reflecting the social and economic development of Birmingham in the 19th century; it also contains a group of late 19th century pauper or “Guinea graves.”
This news will give added impetus to the Friends campaign for more investment and better protection of the cemetery. It is hoped to have a more detailed article about the listing and the cemetery’s features in the next edition of our newsletter.
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Previous Features

WHAT A LIBERTY!

AN IMPORTANT MEMORIAL – LOST TO KEY HILL

It had long been rumoured that one of the memorials at Key Hill once boasted a copy of the Statue of Liberty. Thanks to the detective work of a member of the Friends and a chance encounter with visitors to the cemetery, its existence has finally been proved. Now the race is on to find a way to get this fantastic memorial restored to its former glory.

In October during one of our regular conducted tours of Key Hill, two visitors joined the group. They were on holiday in England and had come to Key Hill to see if they could find any reference to the Meredith family. They were related to John Child Meredith who was believed to have founded a Missionary Society in America which they still served, being currently based in Germany. They were amused to find that the memorial was immediately by one of our first stops on the tour, a point at which the story of the adjacent memorials to Joseph Hall and William Murphy is related to visitors. After the tour they told the group that the memorial had originally held a Statue of Liberty and promised to contact the Friends again once they had returned to Germany.

There matters rested until another Friend, Chris Summerton, wrote having read about our efforts to get memorials at Key Hill restored. He had uncovered a photograph of the Meredith memorial which he thought might be a candidate for inclusion in the programme and wanted to know if we could help him bring this about.

As will be seen from the photograph, the statue rests on top of a tall, fluted column which in turn rises off a square inscribed base. The second photograph, taken in December 2009 shows that much of the memorial is still on site, although the column and the stature are missing, presumed stolen. Most of the kerbs, corner stones and footstone are still present but have been badly displaced by the adjacent tree.

It can be taken as read that efforts will be made to restore this memorial which would provide a magnificent centre-piece for the cemetery and an important and interesting talking point for visitors. Our first step will be to try to generate some publicity for the loss. It’s a long shot, but always possible, that somebody will know where the memorial went or has seen the statue and its column – perhaps in some Birmingham back garden.

Monumental masons are also being consulted about the likely cost of replacing the missing elements. Not many firms remain who would be able to take on such a complex task and it is likely to be expensive as a result. Fortunately the memorial is close to a path and so access should not be too difficult.

Chris Summerton has promised an article about the family and its memorial for our newsletter in the New Year and hopefully our missionaries will get in contact from Germany to add more to the story.

 

Monumental masons are also being consulted about the likely cost of replacing the missing elements. Not many firms remain who would be able to take on such a complex task and it is likely to be expensive as a result. Fortunately the memorial is close to a path and so access should not be too difficult.

Chris Summerton has promised an article about the family and its memorial for our newsletter in the New Year and hopefully our missionaries will get in contact from Germany to add more to the story.

This photograph was taken just before Christmas. Note the cap stone which would sit on the inscribed base. The missing pillar and statue would rise up off of this.

Chris Summerton has promised an article about the family and its memorial for our newsletter in the New Year and hopefully our missionaries will get in contact from Germany to add more to the story.

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