Uncovering The Lost Gravestones Of Church Street Liverpool

St Peter’s Church Street - The Lost Gravestones project has between set up to highlight Liverpool’s greatest ‘discovery’ of over 1,300 gravestones of significant and historical importance.
The Church of St Peter in Church Street, Liverpool, was demolished in 1922. Various parts of the fabric went to other churches in the area. The ten bells were originally removed and stored in the crypt of St Michael’s Church, Upper Pitt Street, before being installed in St Helen’s Parish Church. Whenever they are rung, you could be instantly transported back to Church Street at the start of the 1900’s.
The removal of the dead from the churchyard commenced on the 5th December 1921, and was completed on the 5th September 1922.
The remains were placed in 6,078 wooden shells, each about the size of an ordinary adult coffin. Twenty-two lead shells were found, which were re-interred without being opened. Twenty-eight brick graves were uncovered.
Nearly 100 years later, I (Jonathon Wild) would stumble upon a set of ten gravestones at the rear of Walton Parochial Cemetery by a chance visit to Rice Lane Farm/Cemetery.
Further research lead me to uncovering the following:
The Gravestones numbered 1,375, were removed to the Parochial Cemetery, Rice Lane, Walton.
And thus began a year long correspondence with the Landowner (Liverpool Parish Church) and the site Manager of Rice Lane Farm to be allowed to start to map out this land, to produce numerous health and safety documents and our ‘plan of action’ which will lead to the uncovering of these gravestones so that they can be photographed, and their inscriptions noted.
These gravestones go back to the early 1700’s and were once considered ‘lost’ in that it took historians a great detail of research to uncover exactly what had happened to them and where they were placed.
This Facebook group is a project headed by Jonathon Wild, and administrated by Claire Griffiths & Graham Seaman in which we will lead a team to slowly uncover hundreds of inscriptions from the hidden gravestones from St Peter’s Church. What will they reveal? History on the people, their family, perhaps a note or two about the Church or where they lived.
We plan to uncover these gravestones, photograph them, and add them to a public database so that anyone searching for them can see for themselves - whether relatives or public. They will also be uploaded to Find A Grave and we hope to reveal some exciting finds!
many thanks to Jonathon wild for the invite
his youtube channel is here ‪@LiverpoolTours2023‬
also thanks to Adam for joining me today ‪@BambiSelect‬
also thanks to john for help with old pictures
you can also find the fbook group if you want to get involved which is called st peters church st the lost gravestones..
and if you would like to buy me a coffee you can do below
www.buymeacoffee.com/g2emediag
all money does go back into the channel and of course on hot drinks...cheers
#liverpool #exploreliverpool #merseyside

Пікірлер: 55

  • @fucktheworld1207
    @fucktheworld1207

    GREAT video mate, these people's memories need to be documented..... the sad thing about progress is that Cemeteries are dug up, stones and bodies just moved and dumped somewhere, I'm sure their loved one's didn't think that would happen when they layed them to rest.

  • @AlannahRyane
    @AlannahRyane

    def looking forward to this video. I found a hayes couple from workhouse who may be my 3x great grandparents supposedly buried in Walton's churchyard. 2 generations married baptized at St Mary's Walton and descendents were at St Peters up to when my 14 yr old orphaned great grandfather (bapt 1877 by Rev Charles Garrett Pitt St Chapel and named after him) was shipped to Canada 1892 as a farm boy. I found the Walton cemetery ghost story compelling

  • @magic1968
    @magic1968

    Mammoth task to clean all that up. Cheers George another interesting video.

  • @oktfg
    @oktfg

    Liverpool has so many these lost churches. One of the more important was St George’s on Derby Sq (where Victoria Monument now sits). Built after the castle was demolished. St George’s was built on the moat. Poor foundations caused the tower to subside and was where the Mayor and members of the Corporation worshipped. Church was demolished in 1899 Bodies moved to Everton Cemetery

  • @LiverpoolTours2023
    @LiverpoolTours2023

    A fantastic video mate. Informative and a great little mooch 👍

  • @brianaveriss7972
    @brianaveriss7972

    Thank you George, another great video, That’s a really interesting project to be involved with. Hopefully we will see some progress in future videos,

  • @martinsallenger5526
    @martinsallenger5526

    Hi George, great and very interesting video 👍

  • @SuperDeniseg1
    @SuperDeniseg1

    Wow, what an amazing project, it's going to be amazing. I've joined the page on facebook. I'm really looking forward to watching the progress.

  • @barbhenderson4867
    @barbhenderson4867

    Wow just watched this, I wish I still lived up north I would defo help, great video x,

  • @bobbyladd
    @bobbyladd

    A sythe, a ½ tonne builders bag, plenty of trips to the bin yard, a sprayer and a few litres of wet & forget (has a pH of 8). Sorted 😄

  • @joyceswift8160
    @joyceswift8160

    There’s some wooden carving from St Peter’s church in Liverpool in st cuthberts church Southport George. It’s lovely and worth a visit if you can catch the church open.

  • @CarolWoosey-ck2rg
    @CarolWoosey-ck2rg

    Great stuff; so kind to find these people and share their history- respect to all involved 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @scouseblood275
    @scouseblood275

    What a great video and a great project well done George brill video as always

  • @AlannahRyane
    @AlannahRyane

    I should have guessed you would be the videographer on this. What an awesome project the ancestors are cheering you all on! I Love exposing their stories. I subd to Jonathons channel when you directed me there. Find a Grave and A billion graves have volunteers in every location they would probably be interested in this?

  • @tj..aworkinprogress1102
    @tj..aworkinprogress1102

    just an idea , try the police training - they might use it as a "search" exersise , they might do the mapping ...

  • @voodoowomble
    @voodoowomble

    Fantastic video George, I discovered those gravestones a few years ago and started documenting them on "Findagrave". I remember someone complaining that I couldn't possibly have found those graves where they were as they were meant to be somewhere else lol. What days do the volunteers meet to clean the graves? Cheers

  • @EXPLORINGWITHMEDAVE
    @EXPLORINGWITHMEDAVE

    Wow loved this fellas so good, and great to see jonathon Wild to..Sandfield tower forever Gwalia.

  • @levitation25
    @levitation25

    Great video George. Interesting seeing what looked like a French inscription on that gravestone you were looking at. I couldn't make out any names in the text but it said something like, 'Here lies the body of ... Liverpool ...June 18?? ...'.

  • @bernadettefarrell8161
    @bernadettefarrell8161

    Hi George, I don’t know if you remember that I mentioned about that graveyard a while ago while you were looking at other lost graves. I’m so pleased that you are involved in this because I never knew Sp Peters gravestones had been moved there. This site is historically important to Liverpool for obvious reasons but also because as far as I have read in the past the poorer people couldn’t afford headstones and a lot of those headstones will have been of merchants who may have been involved or became well off because of the slave trade and the ensuing wealth to the city. This is of personal interest to me because when researching my family tree years ago I found a gentleman whose family mine had married into in Ireland. I became fascinated with his story and he had arrived in the 1700s from Ireland. He was a bespoke tailor and owned a large shop in Bold Street. He was also one of the first people to own a house in Faulkner Square. The Architect owned and lived in the first one. One of the Gladstones lived a couple of doors away. The chap I was researching had a brother who was a plantation owner and so did Gladstones father or brother. When slavery was abolished all of the plantation owners were compensated by the Government several million pounds and I think that was in that economy so it was a fortune. The chap I researched worshipped at St Peter’s and his children were baptised there. When the famine hit Ireland and hundreds of thousands or more I don’t know the figures settled in Liverpool, there were a huge number of deaths because of lack of sanitation there was cholera and and the rich as well as the poor died in an epidemic. The tailors wife and children died and were buried around the church walls along with priests and dignitaries because he was a generous benefactor. I always wondered what happened to their graves so there is a good chance they might be uncovered. Regarding the graveyard be careful I understand there used to be a lot of rats there. Also I think you might benefit from a go fund me page to get professional gardeners in who would get the ivy and unsafe trees gone a lot quicker than volunteers who are older. Or speak to the history department at the Uni and see if you can get young volunteers. I read a lot about the rich and benefactors of Liverpool and there would be lots of content for you, let me know if you want any info. Thanks George for bringing this to everyone’s attention.

  • @FlickeringEmber
    @FlickeringEmber

    I used to work in Primark there and I remember some spooky shit on the night shifts. That was when one of my colleagues told me about the history of Church Street. Not skitting you but I swear Primark is haunted.

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