Hamilton Cemetery
Location of Hamilton Cemetery | |
Details | |
---|---|
Established | 1847[1] |
Location | 777 York Boulevard, Hamilton, Ontario |
Country | Canada |
Coordinates | 43°16′36″N 79°53′25″W / 43.276643°N 79.890186°WCoordinates: 43°16′36″N 79°53′25″W / 43.276643°N 79.890186°W |
Type | Cemetery |
Owned by | Hamilton, Ontario |
Size | ~100 acres[2] |
No. of graves | 21500 |
No. of interments | ~20 |
No. of cremations | ~30 |
Find a Grave | Hamilton Cemetery |
Hamilton Cemetery on York Boulevard in Hamilton, Ontario is the oldest, public burial ground in the city of Hamilton. It is located on Burlington Heights, a high sand- and gravel isthmus that separates Hamilton's harbor on the east from Cootes Paradise on the west.
Historically, the cemetery consists of three, separate burial grounds over 100 acres: Burlington Heights Cemetery, the Christ Church Grounds, and the Church of Ascension Grounds. It has been a contentious issue whether a flood, around the 1860s inundated the city, necessitating the re-collecting of gravestones to be amassed in one place. From 1850 until 1892, each burial ground was administered separately, but by the beginning of the 1890s, the church wardens were encountering difficulty paying for the maintenance-and upkeep of their areas of the grounds. In 1892, an agreement with the City of Hamilton who assumed responsibility for all the grounds, which were renamed "Hamilton Cemetery".
Notables buried there[]
A large number of the mayors of Hamilton are buried/interred there,[3] including:
- Colin Campbell Ferrie (1808 – 1856)
- John Rose Holden (1821 – 1879)
- James Cummings (1815 - 1894)
- Charles Magill
- John Francis Moore (1816 - 1870)
- George Hamilton Mills
- Benjamin Ernest Charlton (1835 - 1901)
- Hutchison Clark (1806 – 1877)
- James Edwin O'Reilly (1833 - 1907)
- George Murison
- George Roach
- Francis Edwin Kilvert
- John James Mason
- Alexander McKay
- William Doran
- David McLellan
- Peter Campbell Blaicher
- George Elias Tuckett (1835 - 1900)
- Edward Alexander Colquhoun
- John Strathearn Hendrie
- Wellington Jeffers Morden
- Sanford Dennis Biggar
- Thomas Joseph Stewart
- George Harmon Lees
- John Allan
- Charles Goodenough Booker
- George Charles Coppley
- Thomas William Jutten
- Freeman Ferrier Treleaven
- William Burton
- John Peebles
- Herbert Earl Wilton
- Samuel Lawrence
Others include[]
- George Hamilton (1788–1836, stone only - buried at family plot at Mountainside Park)
- James Gage (1774 – 1854)
- Peter Hunter Hamilton
- Peter Hess
- Richard Butler
- James Jolley
- Andrew Ross
- William W. Cooke
- John Syme - former director of Hamilton Parks & Recreation circa 1885-1968
- Adam Beck - founded the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario
- Lillian Beck (d. 1921)
- Robert Land Jr (1772 - 1867)
- Robert Land Sr (1736 - 1818) - First settler in Head-Of-The-Lake (later Hamilton).
- (d.1865) - supposed half-sister of Queen Victoria.
- William Eli Sanford - Senator
- Harcourt Burland Bull - Senator
- Andrew Trew Wood - Senator
- Donald MacInnes - Senator
- Adam Hope - Senator
- John Milne - Senator
- William Case - first doctor in the area of the city of Hamilton.
- Martha Julia Cartmell - founder of Toyo Eiwa Jogakuin Private Academy for Girls, Japan
- Ebenezer Park Stinson - founder of the Stinson Savings Bank
- Thomas Stinson
- Hugh Cossart Baker Sr. - founder of the first life insurance company in Canada, the Canada Life Assurance Company
- Hugh Cossart Baker Jr. - telephone pioneer
- Sir John Strathearn Hendrie - 11th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- John Charles Fields - mathematician, founder of the Fields Medal
- Thomas McQuesten - politician
- Allan Studholme - politician
- Arthur Crisp - artist
- Hortense Gordon - artist
- Neil Hope - actor (Degrassi Junior High)
Common stones[]
A large number of the stones contain masonic symbols, as well as a number of carved tree-stumps.[4] Several family vaults are also found here, including the Sanford Vault, the Tuckett vault, the Thomas C Watkins vault, the Col. Land Family Vault and the Stinson Family Mausoleum. Oddly, there is indication that these crypts are renovations of an existing (ancient) stone building. Even more curious, is that these crypts are half-buried in a mound of earth.
War Graves[]
The cemetery contains the war graves of 139 Commonwealth service personnel, 127 from World War I and 12 from World War II.[5]
References[]
- ^ "Hamilton Cemetery". City of Hamilton. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
- ^ "CEMETERIES 12.0 - City of Hamilton" (PDF). p. 2. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
- ^ "Mayors of Hamilton". Hamilton Public Library. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
- ^ irisheyesjg (July 14, 2010). "Wordless Wednesday: Cemetery Trees". Over thy dead body. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
- ^ [1] CWGC Cemetery Report. Breakdown obtained from casualty records.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hamilton Cemetery. |
- Ontario: Hamilton Cemetery, Wentworth County - CanadaGenWeb Cemetery Project
- Hamilton Cemetery at Find a Grave
- Cemeteries in Ontario