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Wardsend Cemetery is an abandoned Victorian cemetery in the Owlerton district of Sheffield, England, consecrated by the Archbishop of York in 1859 and closed to legal burial in 1968. ==History== The ground on which the cemetery stands was originally purchased by John Livesey in 1857, the Vicar of the nearby St. Philip's Church as an overspill burial ground.〔Jordan Lee Smith, ''A Crisis of Confidence: The Public Response to the 1862 Sheffield Resurrection Scandal'' (unpublished, 2013)〕 The first burial at Wardsend was of a 2-year-old girl named Ann Marie Marsden in 1857. She is, in keeping with tradition, the "Guardian of the Cemetery". The graveyard is also noteworthy for being the final resting place of George Lambert, a highly decorated Irish soldier,〔(Burial Location – VC Holders, South Yorkshire )〕 for holding graves of many victims of the Great Sheffield Flood of 1864, and being the only cemetery in Britain with an active railway line passing through it. Sheffield Archives offers much material on the history of the cemetery, perhaps most significantly a detailed narrative account of the 1862 riot and subsequent court hearings entitled ''Extraordinary Doings in a Cemetery in Sheffield'' by Ivor Haythorne,〔Ivor Haythorne, ''Extraordinary Doings in a Cemetery in Sheffield'' (unpublished, 1986).〕 and a 2013 dissertation project (heavily influenced by the history from below movement spearheaded by E.P. Thompson and George Rudé) called ''Crisis of Confidence: The Public Response to the 1862 Sheffield Resurrection Scandal'' by Jordan Lee Smith.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Wardsend Cemetery」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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