Rahul Sharma (Editor)

South Park Street Cemetery

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Established
  
1767

Country
  
India

No. of graves
  
1600 graves or tombs

Phone
  
033 2284 7685

Location
  
Park Street, Kolkata

Owned by
  
Private

Founded
  
1767

South Park Street Cemetery

Style
  
The tombs are an admixture of the Gothic with a rich flavour of the Indo-Saracenic style. Of the latter, mention may be made of a unique and composite brick structure built in the ‘panchyatana’ manner, with a central dome flanked by miniature replicas of Orissan ‘rekha deul’ on four sides. Coupled with this peculiarity, the black basalt carvings on the frontal façade indicate a distinct respect for the Hindu faith.

Address
  
184, Acharya Jagadish Chandra Bose Road, Park Street area, Kolkata, West Bengal 700017

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–4:30PMTuesday10AM–4:30PMWednesday10AM–4:30PMThursday10AM–4:30PMFriday10AM–4:30PMSaturday10AM–4:30PMSunday10AM–4:30PMMonday10AM–4:30PMSuggest an edit

Burials
  
Henry Louis Vivian Derozio, William Jones, Charles Stuart

The south park street cemetery


South Park Street Cemetery is located on Mother Teresa Sarani, Kolkata, India. The road used to be called Park Street, and prior to that Burial Ground Road.

Contents

Built spaces walkthrough of south park street cemetery


History

The Park Street Cemetery was one of the earliest non-church cemeteries in the world, and probably the largest Christian cemetery outside Europe and America in the 19th century. Opened in 1767 on what was previously a marshy area, the cemetery was in use until about 1830 and is now a heritage site, protected by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). The cemetery was opened to relieve the pressure on the old burial ground in the heart of the city. The road leading to the cemetery came to be known as the Burial Ground Road but was subsequently renamed Park Street after the park around Vansittart's garden house. By the year 1785 the burial ground had been extended on the northern side of Park Street and by 1840 a vast new cemetery was opened to the east of the Lower Circular Road. The Europeans started to disuse it in the year 1790. It has been confirmed by a marble plaque at the gate which reads "South Park Street, Opened:1767, Closed:1790".

Tollywood's Bengali film, Gorosthaney Sabdhan (literal translation: Beware in the cemetery) was shot here. The film was based on the novel of the same name by Satyajit Ray.

Notable Tombs

  • Rose Aylmer (died 1800)
  • Elizabeth Barwell (died 1779)
  • George Bogle (1746–1781), diplomat
  • Lieutenant-General Sir John Clavering (c.1722-1777), army officer
  • Augustus Cleveland (d. 1784), colonial administrator
  • Captain Edward Cooke, (1772-1799), Royal Navy officer
  • Henry Louis Vivian Derozio (1809–1831), teacher and poet
  • Sir Elijah Impey (1732-1809), judge
  • Sir William Jones (1746–1794), Indologist, founder of the Asiatic Society
  • Colonel Robert Kyd (1746–1793), botanist
  • Lieut. Col. Colin Mackenzie (1754–1821), Surveyor General of India
  • Sir John Hadley D'Oyly, 6th Baronet (1754–1818), politician
  • Major-General Charles Stuart (1758–1828), army officer and Indophile popularly known as "Hindoo Stuart"
  • Walter Landor Dickens, son of English novelist Charles Dickens. He was buried initially in Bhowanipore war cemetery and the tombstone was later moved here in 1987
  • The memorials are almost all architecturally imposing and replete with classical details and sculptures. Among the interesting professions mentioned in the epitaphs are: breeder of cattle, jail-keeper, silversmith, schoolteacher, architect, translator, livery, printer, head tide-waiter, park superintendent, cooper, postmaster and surgeon.

    Grave 363 and the oldest

    This grave contains only the following epitaph, possibly indicating that the person wished to remain anonymous: "A virtuous mother (died 1825)". The oldest grave in this graveyard is of Mrs.S.Pearson.(1768)

    Features

    The tombs are a mix of Gothic and the rich flavour of the Indo-Saracenic style. Among the Indo-Saracenic tombs is a unique and composite brick structure built in the ‘panchyatana’ manner, with a central dome flanked by miniature replicas of Orissan ‘rekha deul’ on four sides. Coupled with this peculiarity, the black basalt carvings on the frontal façade indicate a distinct respect for the Hindu faith.

    North Park Street Cemetery

    The former North Park Street Cemetery is now the site of the Assembly of God Church School and the Mercy Hospital with only a sole grave standing that recalls its past. The Lower Circular Road cemetery still exists today and is used for burial, although it has fewer monuments.

  • South Park Street Cemetery Gallery
  • References

    South Park Street Cemetery Wikipedia