"The Main Entrance to Nottingham General Cemetery is from Canning Terrace, on Canning Circus (
visit link) . There is a cemetery gatehouse flanked by almshouses (listed Grade II) which were designed by S. S. Rawlinson. There is another entrance on the opposite side the Cemetery, off Waverly Street .
The General Cemetery is one of Nottingham ’s historic Closed Cemeteries - one that is no longer available for burials except to those who have purchased a current right of burial.
It dates from the 1830s, a time when many churchyards were becoming overcrowded, especially in towns and cities. In most places, including Nottingham , private companies were being formed to run cemeteries, usually with some plots being set aside for pauper burials.
The Nottingham General Cemetery Company was set up by an Act of Parliament in 1836. The company purchased 12 acres - the total cost of land, buildings and a chapel was £5,885.
In 1856, the Nottingham Enclosure Act provided for the addition of more land to the lower eastern side of the Cemetery, and a new entrance lodge and chapel for Dissenters were built. The general Cemetery now covered a total of 18 acres.
For many years the Nottingham General Cemetery Company was successful; it maximised its profits by burying people as closely together as possible.
However, by 1923 over 150 000 people had been buried on the site.
The Medical Officer for Health raised concerns about dangers to public health if burials continued on the site and Nottingham Corporation brought a Bill before Parliament which, when passed, effectively prevented further burials, apart from those of close relatives.
After the Second World War, theNottingham General Cemetery Company tried to persuade Nottingham Corporation to take over the running of the Cemetery but they refused. The Company went into voluntary liquidation and the Cemetery became the property of the Crown
During that period, with no maintenance or supervision, the Cemetery quickly deteriorated. In 1955, a Cemetery Action Committee was formed to save the Cemetery from further dereliction.
The following year, the Crown passed responsibility for the Cemetery to Nottingham Corporation, selling them the freehold for 1 shilling (5p).
The Cemetery became part of the Corporation’s Parks and Cemeteries Department. Over the next year or so a team of people worked hard to tame the area with flame guns, scythes, sickles and shovels; both chapels and the lower lodge were judged to be too dilapidated to save, and were demolished."
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