Waverley Cemetery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Waverley Cemetery
[[Image:{{{image}}}|{{{imagesize}}}]]
{{{caption}}}
Cemetery Details
Year established: 1877
Country: Australia
Location: Sydney, New South Wales
Type: Category II Local Govt Business
Owned by: Waverley Council
Size: 41 acres
Number of gravesites: 50000
Website: Waverley Cemetery
See also: Category:Burials at Waverley Cemetery

The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a major cemetery at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. Waverley Cemetery is a self funding fully operational cemetery offering earth burial and cremation options.

It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian landscape nature and its huge number of white Italian marble monuments. Waverley Cemetery conducts funerals everyday except Sundays, and is open for grave visitation from 7am until sunset every day.

Interment options include earth burial cremation, memorials and Mausolea. It is in a spectacular scenic location on the top of the ocean cliffs. The cemetery is a self funded business and relies on continued burial and cremation interments. To date over 86,000 interments, both coffin burial and cremation have taken place in the 50,000 allotments.

Although not a tourist attraction as such Waverley Cemetery has quite a few celebrities, actors, writers, artists, and political leaders buried there and is often used as a dramatic location for filming work.

Special guided tours are offered during the year by the cemetery management and the volunteer Friends group. The Friends raise money for specific restoration works to some monuments.

The Cemetery business has been in operation since 1877 and was devised along similar lines to Père Lachaise in Paris and General Cemetery Companys' Kensal Green Cemetery in London. Mr Martin Forrester-Reid is the current and 6th Cemetery Manager.

The Office, Waverley Cemetery
The Office, Waverley Cemetery

Contents

[edit] Historical Context

The need for a cemetery in the Waverley area was discussed as early as 1863. In 1866, a delegation of representatives was sent to the Minister of Lands to talk about the proposal. In 1868, Waverley Council committed to the cemetery’s management on the provision that it would “incur no cost in doing so,” and a government grant of £1200 was provided.

Waverley Cemetery initially consisted of five acres along Trafalgar St, purchased for £200 in 1875. Over the next two years, fences were built, trees planted and trenches laid. The first internment occurred in the afternoon of the 4th August, 1877.

By 1894, the cemetery had grown to its present size: forty-one acres bounded by Trafalgar, Boundary and St Thomas streets. In 1893, a private fund had been established to pay for the upkeep of the cemetery during times of insufficient income.

Originally, Waverley Cemetery was seen as a choice location for family graves of the well-healed and influential of Sydney’s early society. It was viewed as a special place where the opportunity to secure a site was valued more highly than at any other cemetery.

Today, the cemetery is still functioning. According to Bronwyn Kelly of Waverley Council, the cemetery manager “has adopted a pro-active approach to enhance what is now a “boutique-style” cemetery product”. Traditions from the early days have been maintained, with all graves and memorials still prepared by hand. An increase in demand for monumental allotments has occurred since the 1990s and as a result, the cemetery is regaining some of its previous importance to the people of the Eastern Suburbs. Each year there are 190 interments, five film shoots take place and 36,000 visitors come through the main gates.

As the cemetery moves towards the future, it is facing a major funding crisis. $700000 is required each year to run the cemetery, and this cost will only be sustainable until space runs out in about ten years. Also, $10 million is urgently required to repair roads, stabilise monuments and combat constant vandalism. One proposal that has been suggested is the construction of a pavilion style crematorium; however this has been vehemently protested by local residents and many councillors.

[edit] Historical Significance

Grave of Henry Lawson
Grave of Henry Lawson
Grave of George Freeman
Grave of George Freeman
Graves of George and Charlotte Sargent
Graves of George and Charlotte Sargent

Waverley Cemetery acts as an open air history lesson of the last 131 years. It contains the graves of many people who shaped Australia and its development, so it is recognised as a place to express thanks for so many excellent deeds done by so many great Australians. People who are buried in the cemetery include: Henry Lawson, one of Australia’s most famous poets; Jules Archibald, founder of The Bulletin and benefactor of the Archibald portrait prize and the Archibald fountain; gold medal swimmer Fanny Durack; George and Charlotte Sargent of Sargent’s Pies; Premier Sir James Martin, after whom Martin Place is named; and aeronautical pioneer Sir Lawrence Hargrave. Unlike books, newspaper clippings or other electronic resources, the cemetery serves as a permanent physical record of the lives of these Australians. Through recent grave restorations undertaken by various organisations, visitors to Waverley Cemetery are now able to appreciate the significance of their lives to a greater extent than ever before, better ensuring that they will be remembered by many future generations to come. The cemetery’s 50,000 allotments are also proving invaluable to the family historian because they provide an unrivalled record of the details of many Sydneysiders who have come to rest there over the past decades. Additionally, the graves of many less well known people who helped to characterise Australian society can be found at Waverley. For example, the grave of “Nosey Bob,” the NSW executioner from 1875 to 1904 is located there. The cemetery also accommodates the grave of George Freeman, “one of Sydney’s leading criminals” as stated by the NSW premier of the time.

The cemetery’s graves and monuments contain records of major events involving Australia, especially those with a military association. This is significant because it is another way by which these events will be remembered even when the last of the people involved die, as has already happened in some cases.The cemetery contains over 200 war graves from various past conflicts. The front gates are devoted to the dead of World War One and World War Two by Waverley Council and the Returned Servicemen’s League respectively. Inside the main gates is a memorial to the military forces of NSW which houses the remains of several officers killed in an 1891 sea mine explosion at Middle Head. Over 11 US Civil War veterans are also buried there, including Phineas S Thompson. Another major event which has been well documented within the cemetery is the Fenian Rising of 1867. The Irish Martyr’s memorial, which was contrasted over two years from 1897 at a cost of £2600, is a memorial to those who made the ultimate sacrifice for Ireland’s independence from Britain. It contains the names of many Irish patriots who died in Australia and overseas from 1798 to 1981.

Waverley Cemetery is significant to Australian history in that it showcases exceptional examples of masonry and funerary art, dating back from the 19th century. It has been said in Australian Parliament that the cemetery “represents in many ways a history of Sydney and Australia in stone and marble.” Waverley cemetery is noted for its quality monuments, including statues ranging from gothic statues and angels to Victorian columns and drapery. Some remind the viewer of the deceased’s own life, such as one particular statue of a stone racing car driver, complete with goggles and a steering wheel. The predominant materials that were used in the cemetery are white marble and sandstone. The 19th century cemetery landscape has been maintained, full of charm and character from as early as the 1860s. At the same time, however, the cemetery has also adapted to the changing expectations of its clientele, for example when cremation gardens were introduced in 1915. This is important because Waverley Cemetery is able to act as a reference point for other cemeteries which are currently facing heritage issues themselves.

Waverley Cemetery is set in a unique environment. Because of this, it has become Sydney’s pre-eminent cemetery and the only one to offer “the beauty of a traditional cemetery by the open ocean.” (Martin Forrester-Reid, Cemetery Manager) The dramatic hillside necropolis is located on the cliffs of Bronte, one of the most beautiful and visited coastal domains in Australia. It is open to the Bondi to Coogee coastal walk and has commanding views of Bondi Beach, Coogee Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Also, it is one of the last remaining open spaces along the coast of Sydney’s most densely populated electorate. The cemetery is a very peaceful and tranquil place, with its own ecosystem of plants and animals. This natural beauty is furthered by the fact that it is sacred to millions of Australians who descend from those resting there as well as the families of more recent internments.

[edit] Use in TV & film & art

The earliest known motion picture filmed at the cemetery was the 1976/7 Itallian/Australian production The Pyjama Case Girl, an odd forensic tinged tale of love and betrayal based on a true story, also the early Mel Gibson film Tim was shot there. Baywatch used the cemetery while filming its Australian movie length espisode, and Home and Away buried one of their loved characters at Waverley in 2004. Notable recent films include Dirty Deeds. It was also pictured in the Bollywood Blockbuster Dil Chahta Hai in a musical sequence. The Cemetery has been a place of inspiration for many artists since 1877, Henry Lawson who ultimately ended up there was fond of using the location in his stories, either as direct reference or more subliminal, Early works of the cemetery grounds by famed Australian landscape artist Pamela Griffiths have also recently come to light.

[edit] External links