Abney Park is situated on Stoke Newington High Street in Hackney London N16 and managed by the Abney Park Trust. If you would like to join Friends of the Trust and receive a quarterly newsletter keeping you uptodate with events and our work, please send a cheque for £12 or £6 concessions, to 'Abney Park Cemetery Trust', Stoke Newington High St, N16 OLN. Donations are put towards the maintenance of the site and our free activities.
We research memorials and grave locations for £8 each; we offer a digital photo service for memorial stones for £10; and a susidised maintenance programme for memorials, which comprises four clearances @ £24 a year.
Upcoming activities
Beginners stone carving - every tuesday 10.00am to 12.00 starting Sept 2nd (free to Hackney residents, donation required from others)
Green woodworking from September dates to be confirmed.
General History guided walk Sunday 14th September at 2pm
Moth and Bat walk Saturday 13th September 7.30pm
Newly developed history walks available, free to schools call 0207 275 7557 to book
Volunteering is a great way to get some fresh air, some exercise, meet new people, learn about trees and wildlife and gain new skills. The Trust holds a drop in day every Tuesday and Thursday from 09.30am to 3.30pm. No experience is necessary. Tools, tea and gloves are provided. For more details click on volunteering in the right hand coloumn.
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Welcome
 
 
Aims:
We
are a charity aiming to maintain a historic park that became the first
non-denominational Victorian London cemetery. It was also the first
private cemetery near London to be open to all classes of people.
Unique in many other ways too, the park is now a nature reserve, place
of memory and outdoor learning centre. Our park is part of a ring of
London walks and has a classroom and visitor facilities which we hope
to upgrade. This website includes history and ecology, how to
volunteer, find out about family history, join training courses and
children's workshops, or simply explore the park with its varied
programme of events and enjoy one of London's green spaces.
Introduction:
Abney Park is a historic C18th century parkland preserved in memory of
Dr Isaac Watts and Lady Mary Abney. These are the grounds where Isaac
Watts wrote a number of his hymns and verses; the site of a novel
Quaker girl's school where the first school bus in the world was
introduced, and an early Methodist training college. In 1840 most of
the historic park was set aside as the first wholly non-denominational
garden cemetery in Europe; a largely Congregationalist enterprise. It
became a celebrated example of a Victorian 'rural cemetery' modelled on
Mount Auburn in America. At this time it also contained a free public
arboretum of immense proportions.
Today
Abney Park is a local nature reserve and centre for arts and stone
masonry training. It also offers a school classroom and associated
out-doors activities. Some parts of Abney Park are still, ocassionally,
buried in as a courtesy to people who once held family plots from the
private cemetery company before it closed in 1978; this is
discretionary and requires the permission of Hackney Council.
Architecture:
The listed frontage includes the earliest example in Europe of cemetery
buildings designed in the 'Egyptian Revival' style, comprising two
Temple Lodges, pylons and gates. Abney Park Cemetery has the only
complete cemetery frontage designed in this non-European style (which
caused controversy at the time) - it is beautifully decorated with
sacred lotus flowers and hieroglyphics, now over 150 years old.
In
the heart of the park is the dramatic Abney Park Chapel; also a century
and a half old and uniquely and purposefully designed in every detail.
It is the first example of a non-denominational cemetery chapel in
Europe, contributing a new style of cemetery architecture. The cemetery
chapel became the first to use a single chamber open to all, and to
portray its non-denominational chacter further it demonstrated a
careful balance of both gothic and romanesque features. The chapel
includes rare ten-part (botanical) rose windows, and an elaborately
decorated south face with castellated turrets containing newell
staircases for viewing. These lie either side of an ornamented ogee
arch facing the axial vista toweards Church Street in memory of Dr
Watts and Lady Mary Abney.
Educational Tree
Collection:
Originally Abney Park also had the largest arboretum of any European
cemetery, containing 2,500 trees and shrubs arranged this in an unusual
alphabetical fashion, along with a rosarium, conifer walk, and other
landscape attractions.
Today,
Abney Park is the only surviving landscape work of George Loddiges and
the remains of the tree collection can still be found. Modern-day Urban
Oasis Today this splendid park is conserved as an osais of open space
of international historical, religious and architectural importance,
and of regional nature conservation significance. This precious
woodland estate is jointly managed by both the local community and the
council under an arrangement that has now been ongoing for nearly
fifteen years.
Notes for
Visitors:
Although the park is managed in a manner similar to a disused burial
ground or Open Space, and more than 21 years has elapsed since the
cemetery company closed, some parts are still ocassionally buried in as
a courtesy to people who once held family plots from the private
cemetery company; so please respect their relatives' wishes and
quietitude. The calm, quiet nature of the park is particularly
attractive to birdlife, for which the estate is renowned, along with an
equally uncomon butterfly population, making this an important Local
Nature Reserve.
The
grounds, which form part of the Capital Ring strategic walk through
London, are normally open each day to visitors for free public and
community use; ocassional exceptions to this are notified in advance.
There
are photography charges and location fees for commercial and
non-commercial film makers who should apply to the Trust for
permission and prices. Access for community and artistic events, early
morning bird spotting etc., can be arranged outside the public hours by
permission of the Trust, but please note that for such events there may
be an entry charge.
For
use of the environmental classroom and children's garden, or to join
accredited training courses for adults, please inquire as
above.
The
Trust produces a quarterly newsletter and would be grateful for any
interesting articles from people in connection with the site. To
receive the newsletter you can join the 'Friends of Abney Park' for twelve pounds sterling
per year or half price for
concessions.
See also (external sites)
Discuss
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