Cemeteries in Calcutta: Difference between revisions

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# '''Tiretta's Cemetery''' - "The French or Tiretta's Burial Ground, Park Street" - earliest record 1796, also no longer in extistence.
# '''Tiretta's Cemetery''' - "The French or Tiretta's Burial Ground, Park Street" - earliest record 1796, also no longer in extistence.
# '''Bhowanipore Cemetery''' - "The Military Burial Ground, beyond the General Hospital was opened in the year 1782-3"
# '''Bhowanipore Cemetery''' - "The Military Burial Ground, beyond the General Hospital was opened in the year 1782-3"
# '''Lower Circular Road''' (at 184 Acharya Jagadis Bose Road) - "The New Burial Ground, Circular Road" was opened on 29 April 1840 for the remains of Captain E T Milner's child.  This cemetery is still in use.  However, the condition of the older graves in general is not good.
# '''Lower Circular Road''' (at 184 Acharya Jagadis Bose Road) - "The New Burial Ground, Circular Road" was opened on 29 April 1840 for the remains of Captain E T Milner's child.  This cemetery is still in use.  However, the condition of the older graves in general is not good. The [http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/ Christian Burial Board] now oversees this cemetery and will identify and show visitors to a relevant grave. Burial records are maintained on site and the Board is contactable by email for enquiries. 
# '''Scottish Cemetery''' (3 Karaya Road) - "The Scotch & Dissenters Burial Ground - was purchased in 1820.
# '''Scottish Cemetery''' (3 Karaya Road) - "The Scotch & Dissenters Burial Ground - was purchased in 1820.
# '''Armenian Church & Cemetery''' - the [[Armenian]] Church of St Nazareth built 1724 has a burial ground attached to it.
# '''Armenian Church & Cemetery''' - the [[Armenian]] Church of St Nazareth built 1724 has a burial ground attached to it.
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*The [[Jewish]] Cemetery at 45 Narikeldanga Main Road
*The [[Jewish]] Cemetery at 45 Narikeldanga Main Road
*5 [[Chinese]] Cemeteries
*5 [[Chinese]] Cemeteries
Burial grounds were also located at [[Dum Dum]], [[Barrackpore]], [[Serampore]], [[Chandernagore]], [[Chinsurah]], [[Bandel]] and [[Howrah]] (epitaphs from which are represented in ''The Bengal Obituary'' - see Notes below). Many maritime related burials took place at Howrah, where St Thomas' Church and Cemetery were established in 1833.
Burial grounds were also located at [[Dum Dum]], [[Barrackpore]], [[Serampore]], [[Chandernagore]], [[Chinsurah]], [[Bandel]] and [[Howrah]] (epitaphs from which are represented in ''The Bengal Obituary'' - see Notes below).  
 
==Fort William Burial Ground==
As a result of new construction in the Fort in the 1880s, the ‘old’ burial ground is no longer in existence, and some of the headstones were moved and are now mounted on the walls at South Park Cemetery. <ref>Evers, Maureen [https://web.archive.org/web/20200118055550/https://lists.rootsweb.com/hyperkitty/list/india.rootsweb.com/thread/2240541/  Kolkata research] ''Rootsweb India Mailing List''  21 November 2009, archived. The original advice was from Dr John Roberts, co-author of ''Malabar Christian Memorials at Cannanore, Tellicherry and Mahe 1723-1990'' and ''Nilgiri Hills Christian Memorials 1822-2006'', who has researched in Calcutta.</ref> The ‘new' burial ground is part of the military base and is closed to the public.<ref>Murphy, Sylvia [https://web.archive.org/web/20200118055402/https://lists.rootsweb.com/hyperkitty/list/india.rootsweb.com/thread/2240456/    Kolkata research] ''Rootsweb India Mailing List'' 18 November 2009, archived.</ref>
 
These burial grounds are different burial grounds to those at Bhowanipore Cemetery, the old (separate) part of which is known as the Military Burial Ground.


==Crematorium==
==Crematorium==
A crematorium was erected in Calcutta in 1903, situated to the east of the Circular Road Cemetery. There was provision for the erection of a monument not exceeding 2 feet by 2 feet. It was intended mainly for the use of Europeans, Anglo- Indians and Indians who had adopted a European style of living.<ref>''Municipal Calcutta'' by SW Goode 1916, available to read online, computer page 261, on the Digital Library of India website. Refer [[Online books#Digital Library of India| Online books-Digital Library of India]] for more details about this site.</ref> The [http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/statistics.html Mini Cemetery with a closed Gas Crematorium] (150 graves) is now under the control of the Christian Burial Board, Kolkata
A crematorium was erected in Calcutta in 1903, situated to the east of the Circular Road Cemetery. There was provision for the erection of a monument not exceeding 2 feet by 2 feet. It was intended mainly for the use of Europeans, Anglo- Indians and Indians who had adopted a European style of living. (More details.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.33547/page/n260 Page 222] ''Municipal Calcutta'' by SW Goode 1916. Archive.org, Public Library of India Collection.</ref>)
The crematorium was built by a French company Toisoul Fradet & Co. based in Paris, which specialised in crematoriums,<ref>[https://indianvagabond.com/2015/11/21/a-french-crematorium-for-the-christians-and-brahmos-of-calcutta/ "A French Crematorium for the Christians and Brahmos of Calcutta"] by Subhadip Mukherjee  November 21, 2015 indianvagabond.com.</ref> and continued operating until the early 1980s, when erratic gas supply caused it to close.<ref>[https://rangandatta.wordpress.com/2015/12/09/gas-crematorium-crematorium-street-kolkata/ Gas Crematorium: Crematorium Street, Behind Lower Circular Road Cemetery, Kolkata] by Rangan Datta  December 9, 2015 rangandatta.wordpress.com.</ref>


==Records==
The [http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/statistics.html Mini Cemetery with a closed Gas Crematorium] (150 graves) is now under the control of the Christian Burial Board, Kolkata
===BACSA records at the British Library===
The [[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|'''BACSA Archive''']] at the '''[[British Library]]''', shelfmark '''Mss Eur F370''' includes  entries in its catalogue under Cemetery Files . The Notes advise: The arrangement of this list and the names of provinces, places and cemeteries are based on the list which BACSA took over in 1976 from the British High Commission in India. The cemetery status (i.e. whether open or closed) is based on the information to hand, and may since have changed. If a particular cemetery is not in the list, some details of it may sometimes be found in the general file for the province or town in which it is situated.


The BACSA British Library archive catalogue is now available online at the BACSA website. Under the category  Cemetery Files and Registers,  BACSA Archive  references at the British Library may be found for Calcutta on [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=200&np=24&tn=1188 pages 5 and 6].
==Maps of Calcutta==
In the vicinity of Calcutta:
For location of the cemeteries see [[Calcutta#Maps|Calcutta - Maps]], where a number of maps produced at different dates are available.
Bandel [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=50&np=24&tn=1188 page 2], Barrackpore, and Berhampore [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=100&np=24&tn=1188 pages 3 and 4], Chandernagore [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=250&np=24&tn=1188 page 6],  Chinsura [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=300&np=24&tn=1188 page 7], Dum Dum [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=400&np=24&tn=1188 page 9], Howrah [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=500&np=24&tn=1188 page 11], Serampore [http://bacsa.frontisgroup.com/bin/aps_browse_sources.php?mode=browse_dataset&id=209&s_id=86&sort=0&st=1050&np=24&tn=1188 page 22]


Under the heading Publications - Calcutta there are the following references, also part of shelfmark Mss Eur F370
==Records==
*1207 Illustrated handbook to St John's Church (Old Cathedral) Calcutta [by E W Madge and K N Dhar] (66 pp. Calcutta, 1909)
===BACSA records===
*1208 St John's Church (1787-1987) by Nisith S Ray. (21 pp., 1987) 2 copies with copies of Parish Magazine 1973-74
*[[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|BACSA (British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia)]] cemetery publications are
*1209 A visit to St John's Church, Calcutta [by J A Gonsalves] (3 pp., 1971)
**''Calcutta: South Park Street: Register of Graves and Standing Tombs (from 1767)'' 1992 "128pp, 9 plans, also serves as index to tomb photos in BACSA archive"
*1210 St Andrew's Church of Scotland, Calcutta 1815-1965 with copies of Church magazines, July 1974 and Jan 1977 (20 pp., 1965)
**''Calcutta: South Park Street'' by Maurice Shellim, 1986 (2nd edition) "On progress in restoring 'The Great Cemetery'. 28pp, 8 illustrations, 2 plans"
*: St Paul’s Cathedral Calcutta: see Mss Eur F370/1330
**''Calcutta: French Cemetery'' by Basil La Bouchardiere, 1983 "Cemetery cleared in 1977 - a complete record. 28pp, 8 illustrations, 4 maps/plans"
*1211 South Park Street Cemetery, Calcutta. Register of graves and standing tombs: from 1767 by Maurice Shellim and others (BACSA 1992)
:See [http://indian-cemeteries.org/bacsa/html/bacsa_books.html BACSA Books].  
*1212 The South Park Street Cemetery, Calcutta by Aurelius Khan and others (BACSA 1978)
 
*1213 The South Park Street Cemetery, Calcutta 1978-1986 by Aurelius Khan and others (2nd ed, BACSA 1986)
:[[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|BACSA]] have put the indexes to these cemetery books online and these indexes are free to browse. If an indexed name is of interest then application can be made to BACSA for details of the relevant burial inscription - charges apply for this service
*1214 The South Park Street Cemetery Calcutta 1978-1997 (3rd ed, APHCI, 1997)
*1215 French Cemetery, Park Street, Calcutta (BACSA 1983)
*1216 "Préserver nos cimetiéres, l'example de nos collègues anglais: le cimetière francais de Calcutta" par Xavier Guyot, La Vie Généalogique, n.s. 3, no 13, (1996), pp. 17-22.
*: Therefore Forward ! The Story of Carey Church Calcutta: see Mss Eur F370/1388


===Other records===
====BACSA records at the British Library====
''Bengal Past and Present: Journal of the Calcutta Historical Society'', available at the [[British Library]] has a list of burials based on the original registers in Calcutta, two articles written  by Rev W. K. Firminger. They are probably mostly covered by the Ecclesiastical Returns in the B.L., however there may be some additional entries which never made it to England (e.g. the ship carrying the returns to England was lost). There are also some biographical details.
The [[British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia|'''BACSA Archive''']] at the '''[[British Library]]''', shelfmark '''Mss Eur F370''' includes  entries in its catalogue under Cemetery Files . The Notes advise: The arrangement of this list and the names of provinces, places and cemeteries are based on the list which BACSA took over in 1976 from the British High Commission in India. The cemetery status (i.e. whether open or closed) is based on the information to hand, and may since have changed. If a particular cemetery is not in the list, some details of it may sometimes be found in the general file for the province or town in which it is situated.
*Burials 1713-1755 Volume 10 (1915) pages 257-284 (author not known)
*Burials 1759-1761 Volume 5 (Jan-June 1910) pages 136-142
*Burials 1762-1774 Volume 6 (July-Dec 1910) pages 92-126.
 
==Notes==
<references />


The BACSA British Library archive catalogue is now available online at the BACSA website. Under [http://www.bacsa.org.uk/?page_id=697 BACSA Cemetery files] select Calcutta and West Bengal.
 
== External links ==
== External links ==
*[http://www.burialsinindia.net/ Christian Burial Board] The Christian Burial Boards online search facility for access to grave records and pottahs of burials dating back to the 1700s
*[http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/home.html Christian Burial Board, Kolkata]
 
**[http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/burialrecords.html Burial Records]
*[http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/archaeology.html South Park Cemetery] from [http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/index.html Christian Burial Board Kolkata]
**[http://www.christianburialboardkolkata.com/archaeology.html South Park Cemetery]  
 
*[https://www.flickr.com/search/?text=%22South%20Park%20Street%20Cemetery%22  Photographs of  South Park Street Cemeteryincluding a small group by [http://www.flickr.com/search/?w=35582639@N04&q=South%20Park%20Street%20Cemetery  ron de lightbox] Flickr.com
*This [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/INDIA/2009-07/1248700329 July 2009] post and this [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/INDIA/2009-08/1249307371 Aug 2009] post from the [[Mailing lists|India List]] are about Lower Circular Road Cemetery.


*This  India List [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/INDIA/2010-04/1271358656 April 2010 post] mentions several cemeteries, including Lower Circular Road.
*[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2319595/scottish-cemetery Images of over 2,000 graves in Scottish Cemetery, Kolkata] findagrave.com
**[http://readinggamesplayingbooks.com/scots/node/194 The Scottish Cemetery Project] includes  [http://readinggamesplayingbooks.com/scots/full-list-of-tombs Full list of tombs] and an advance search. It is stated on the Main Page that “The digitized versions of the burial records of St. Andrew’s Kirk have been made available to us”. However, as far as can be established, this website does not include those digitised burial records, neither can an online source for the burial records be established. Perhaps they may be held by St Andrew’s Church, for the use of Church staff.
**[http://www.dhtcollections.com/item/Brand_GravesofJuteMillmanagersburiedinIndia_0_0_28576_1.html Graves of Jute Mill managers buried in India] Dundee Heritage Trust. Includes wives. Contains twenty five records at the Scottish Cemetery in Calcutta, fourteen at Barrackpore Cemetery and one of Tollygunge Cemetery. Graves date from 1881 to 1951, covering workers at the four of the major Indian mills - Titaghur, Samnuggur, Angus and Victoria.
**[http://scottishcemeterykolkata.wordpress.com/ Scottish Cemetery Kolkata] The official blog for the team who went to Kolkata in 2008 to survey the Scottish Cemetery for The Kolkata Scottish Heritage Trust 
**[http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/search/?keyword=Kolkata&submit=search Photographs] of Scottish Cemetery, Park Street Cemetery, St Andrew's Church BBD Bagh, Bishop's House


*[http://scottishcemeterykolkata.wordpress.com/ Scottish Cemetery Kolkata] The official blog for the team who went to Kolkata in 2008 to survey the Scottish Cemetery for The Kolkata Scottish Heritage Trust
*Mullickbazar grave of ''Economist'' founder James Wilson, died 11 August 1860[https://web.archive.org/web/20171011181309/https://www.telegraphindia.com/1090811/jsp/calcutta/story_11343895.jsp "Taxman rediscovers father of taxation"] by Sumatra Das from the ''Telegraph'', Calcutta 11 August 2009, now an archived webpage. ‘Father of Indian finance',  he was finance member of the Viceroy of India Council, akin to the post of chancellor of the Indian Exchequer.
 
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20180217175111/http://www.indian-cemeteries.org:80/ www.indian-cemeteries.org], now archived, has photographs and transcriptions from the following cemeteries. Although an archived website, the internal links appear to be still working.
*[http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/search/?keyword=Kolkata&submit=search Photographs] of Scottish Cemetery, Park Street Cemetery, St Andrew's Church BBD Bagh, Bishop's House
 
*Mullickbazar grave of ''Economist'' founder James Wilson, died 11 August 1860, in this [http://www.telegraphindia.com/1090811/jsp/calcutta/story_11343895.jsp link] from the ''Telegraph'', Calcutta. ‘Father of Indian finance',  he was finance member of the Viceroy of India Council, akin to the post of chancellor of the Indian Exchequer.
 
*[http://www.indian-cemeteries.org www.indian-cemeteries.org] has photographs and transcriptions from the following cemeteries:
**Lower Circular Road Cemetery.  
**Lower Circular Road Cemetery.  
**North Park Street Cemetery.  
**North Park Street Cemetery.  
Line 83: Line 76:
**St Johns Church Black Hole Memorial.  
**St Johns Church Black Hole Memorial.  
**St Pauls Cathedral.  
**St Pauls Cathedral.  
 
*[http://www.academia.edu/5121162/The_Greek_Cemetery_of_Kolkata  "The Greek Cemetery of Kolkata"] by Helen Abadzi. academia.edu.
*[[Jewish]] records: [https://web.archive.org/web/20110704132728/http://www.americansephardifederation.org/PDF/genealogy/calcuttagraves.xls.pdf Calcutta Grave Records] from [https://web.archive.org/web/20110219144254/http://sephardiclibrary.org/genealogy.html Genealogy] National Sephardic Library, now archived webpages.
:[http://www.jewishcalcutta.in/exhibits/show/cemeteries Exhibit 09 Jewish Cemetery In Calcutta, Narkeldanga], which in turn includes a list of the graves. This data comes from handwritten cemetery registers which were digitised c 1999.<ref>[http://double-dolphin.blogspot.com/2014/10/jewish-cemetery-narkeldanga-main-road.html "Jewish Cemetery, Narkeldanga Main Road"] 16 October 2014. The Concrete Paparazzi.</ref>  “Recalling Jewish Calcutta: Memories Of The Jewish Community In Calcutta”. jewishcalcutta.in
:[http://www.sephardicgen.com/databases/CalcuttaCemeterySrchFrm.html Calcutta Cemetery Search] Index Search. SephardicGen.
:The Jewish Cemetery was restored in 2017.<ref>
[https://rangandatta.wordpress.com/2018/01/05/restoration-of-jewish-cemetery-kolkata/  "Jewish Cemetery, Kolkata"] by Rangan Datta January 5, 2018  rangandatta.wordpress.com. </ref>
:The Oseh Haised Board [Jewish Burial Board] also maintained the Jewish cemetery in Darjeeling.<ref> From a page "A Historical Review of the Calcutta Jewish Cemetery" www.indianjews.org/english, no longer available.
Also mentioned in  [http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/jspui/bitstream/10603/164753/12/12_chapter%208.pdf  "Chapter 8"],  ''The Jewish world of Calcutta 1798 to 1948'' by  Kaustav Chakrabarti, 2010 thesis University of Calcutta. shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in  </ref>
*[https://indianvagabond.com/2022/11/07/portuguese-burial-ground-kolkata/  "Portuguese Burial Ground Kolkata"] by Subhadip Mukherjee November 7, 2022. indianvagabond.com
*[http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/92010/CALCUTTA%20(BHOWANIPORE)%20CEMETERY,%20KOLKATA Inscriptions from Bhowanipore Cemetery, Kolkata] Over 700 names from Commonwealth War Graves Commission. cwgc.org. The Commission also has responsibility for the care of 233 non-war burials in the cemetery, who  are not named.
*[http://www.business-standard.com/article/beyond-business/buried-history-112060300010_1.html Buried history] by Shine Jacob  Kolkata June 3, 2012 business-standard.com. Calcutta cemeteries. Includes advice that the [http://www.eict.org.in/tiki-index.php East India Charitable Trust] answers queries about Bhowanipore Cemetery in respect of the section they manage.(not War Graves)  (Note: this function is not mentioned on the EICT website, although it is stated  the Trust is actively associated with the [[BACSA|British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia (BACSA)]]. Select “Contact Us” in the EICT website for contact details). (In 2005 it was advised the Bhowanipore Cemetery was maintained by APHCI, the Association for the Preservation of Historical Cemeteries in India, the sister organisation of BACSA), with contact details given.<ref>Kendall, John [https://web.archive.org/web/20181025102253/https://lists.rootsweb.com/hyperkitty/list/india.rootsweb.com/thread/6410770/  "preserving Fort William Cemetery record"] ''Rootsweb India Mailing List'',  22 October 2005, archived.</ref>)


===Historical books online===
===Historical books online===
*''Asiaticus : In Two Parts. Part One, Ecclesiastical, Chronological and Historical Sketches. [http://books.google.com/books?id=xHYIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR23 Part Two, the Epitaphs in the Different Burial Grounds in and about Calcutta]'' by John Hawkesworth 1803. (80 pages) (Google Books)
*''Asiaticus : In Two Parts. Part One, Ecclesiastical, Chronological and Historical Sketches. [http://books.google.com/books?id=xHYIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA61 Part Two, the Epitaphs in the Different Burial Grounds in and about Calcutta]'' by John Hawkesworth 1803. (80 pages) (Google Books)


*''[http://books.google.com/books?id=3HYIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PP11 The Complete Monumental Register: Containing All the Epitaphs in the Different Churches and Burial Grounds in and about Calcutta]'' by M Derozario 1815 (230 pages) (Google Books).  [http://books.google.com/books?id=3HYIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA225 Index of names].
*''[http://books.google.com/books?id=3HYIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PP11 The Complete Monumental Register: Containing All the Epitaphs in the Different Churches and Burial Grounds in and about Calcutta]'' by M Derozario 1815 (230 pages) (Google Books).  [http://books.google.com/books?id=3HYIAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA225 Index of names].


*[http://books.google.com/books?id=T-HwSiLns14C&printsec=frontcover ''The Bengal Obituary: or, a record to perpetuate the memory of departed worth, being a compilation of tablets and monumental inscriptions from various parts of the Bengal and Agra presidencies''] 1851 Google Books has many records for cemeteries in Calcutta. [http://books.google.com/books?id=T-HwSiLns14C&pg=PA399 Index of Names]
*[http://books.google.com/books?id=T-HwSiLns14C&printsec=frontcover ''The Bengal Obituary: or, a record to perpetuate the memory of departed worth, being a compilation of tablets and monumental inscriptions from various parts of the Bengal and Agra presidencies''] 1851 Google Books has many records for cemeteries in Calcutta. [http://books.google.com/books?id=T-HwSiLns14C&pg=PA399 Index of Names]
*[https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/65995 '' List of inscriptions on tombs or monuments in Bengal possessing historical or archaeological interest''] by C R  Wilson, 1896 is available to read online, or download, at [[Online books#FamilySearch Digital Library|FamilySearch]]. You need to be registered and sign in first. Includes index. Part I contains the Calcutta inscriptions; part II (whose Contents precedes page 121) contains inscriptions from the Lower Provinces. (c 248+ additional pages).
:Also available Archive.org, mirror from Central Secretariat Library (CSL) [Delhi] Digital Repository : [https://archive.org/details/dli.csl.6657/mode/2up 1896 edition] ([https://archive.org/details/dli.csl.6716/mode/2up 1895 edition]).
:Also available from [https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/98/List_of_inscriptions_on_tombs_or_monuments_in_Bengal.pdf wikimedia.org] as a pdf.
*[https://archive.org/details/thackeraysinind01huntgoog ''The Thackerays in India and some Calcutta Graves''] by Sir William Wilson Hunter 1897 archive.org
== References ==
<references />
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[[Category:Cemeteries]]
[[Category:Cemeteries]]
[[Category:Calcutta]]
[[Category:Calcutta]]

Latest revision as of 19:13, 16 March 2024

Information on cemeteries in Calcutta.

Bengal Obituary

Calcutta cemeteries listed in the Bengal Obituary,[1] are:

  1. St John's Churchyard - from 1709 and maybe earlier.
  2. South Park Street Cemetery - "The Great Burial Ground of Chowringhee" - opened on 25 August 1767.
  3. North Park Street Cemetery "New burial ground Chowringhee" - probably opened in 1799 - on the opposite side of the road to South Park Street but no longer in existence. It was the final resting place of Richmond Thackeray (father of novelist), Lt Col James Achilles Kirkpatrick (the White Mughal) and other well known persons.
  4. The Mission Cemetery - "The Mission Burial Ground, Chowringhee, commonly called Mr Kiernander's" - opened in or by 1773 for the wife of Rev John Zachariah Kiernander but no longer in existence.
  5. Tiretta's Cemetery - "The French or Tiretta's Burial Ground, Park Street" - earliest record 1796, also no longer in extistence.
  6. Bhowanipore Cemetery - "The Military Burial Ground, beyond the General Hospital was opened in the year 1782-3"
  7. Lower Circular Road (at 184 Acharya Jagadis Bose Road) - "The New Burial Ground, Circular Road" was opened on 29 April 1840 for the remains of Captain E T Milner's child. This cemetery is still in use. However, the condition of the older graves in general is not good. The Christian Burial Board now oversees this cemetery and will identify and show visitors to a relevant grave. Burial records are maintained on site and the Board is contactable by email for enquiries.
  8. Scottish Cemetery (3 Karaya Road) - "The Scotch & Dissenters Burial Ground - was purchased in 1820.
  9. Armenian Church & Cemetery - the Armenian Church of St Nazareth built 1724 has a burial ground attached to it.
  10. Greek Church & cemetery - the Greek Church of the Transfiguration of Our Blessed Redeemer on Mount Tabor was consecreted 6 August 1781, but demolished and a new one built at Kalighat in 1926. "Greek cemetery at 105 Narkeldanga Main Road is forlorn" (NB: Interestingly I have a CD of pictures of Greek gravestones which was given to me, but need transcribing).
  11. Portuguese Church & burial grounds of which there seem to be several, the most notable may be the Portuguese Burial Ground at Boithakhana, opened on 8 February 1786.
  12. St Pauls Cathedral

3, 4 and 5 above adjoined opposite the South Park Street Cemetery which has been recently restored to a good standard. The sites of these cemeteries are now occupied by tall buildings.

There are Roman Catholic cemetries at 22 Convent Road and 169 Baliaghata Main Road.

Also mentioned are:

  • The Jewish Cemetery at 45 Narikeldanga Main Road
  • 5 Chinese Cemeteries

Burial grounds were also located at Dum Dum, Barrackpore, Serampore, Chandernagore, Chinsurah, Bandel and Howrah (epitaphs from which are represented in The Bengal Obituary - see Notes below).

Fort William Burial Ground

As a result of new construction in the Fort in the 1880s, the ‘old’ burial ground is no longer in existence, and some of the headstones were moved and are now mounted on the walls at South Park Cemetery. [2] The ‘new' burial ground is part of the military base and is closed to the public.[3]

These burial grounds are different burial grounds to those at Bhowanipore Cemetery, the old (separate) part of which is known as the Military Burial Ground.

Crematorium

A crematorium was erected in Calcutta in 1903, situated to the east of the Circular Road Cemetery. There was provision for the erection of a monument not exceeding 2 feet by 2 feet. It was intended mainly for the use of Europeans, Anglo- Indians and Indians who had adopted a European style of living. (More details.[4]) The crematorium was built by a French company Toisoul Fradet & Co. based in Paris, which specialised in crematoriums,[5] and continued operating until the early 1980s, when erratic gas supply caused it to close.[6]

The Mini Cemetery with a closed Gas Crematorium (150 graves) is now under the control of the Christian Burial Board, Kolkata

Maps of Calcutta

For location of the cemeteries see Calcutta - Maps, where a number of maps produced at different dates are available.

Records

BACSA records

  • BACSA (British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia) cemetery publications are
    • Calcutta: South Park Street: Register of Graves and Standing Tombs (from 1767) 1992 "128pp, 9 plans, also serves as index to tomb photos in BACSA archive"
    • Calcutta: South Park Street by Maurice Shellim, 1986 (2nd edition) "On progress in restoring 'The Great Cemetery'. 28pp, 8 illustrations, 2 plans"
    • Calcutta: French Cemetery by Basil La Bouchardiere, 1983 "Cemetery cleared in 1977 - a complete record. 28pp, 8 illustrations, 4 maps/plans"
See BACSA Books.
BACSA have put the indexes to these cemetery books online and these indexes are free to browse. If an indexed name is of interest then application can be made to BACSA for details of the relevant burial inscription - charges apply for this service

BACSA records at the British Library

The BACSA Archive at the British Library, shelfmark Mss Eur F370 includes entries in its catalogue under Cemetery Files . The Notes advise: The arrangement of this list and the names of provinces, places and cemeteries are based on the list which BACSA took over in 1976 from the British High Commission in India. The cemetery status (i.e. whether open or closed) is based on the information to hand, and may since have changed. If a particular cemetery is not in the list, some details of it may sometimes be found in the general file for the province or town in which it is situated.

The BACSA British Library archive catalogue is now available online at the BACSA website. Under BACSA Cemetery files select Calcutta and West Bengal.

External links

  • Images of over 2,000 graves in Scottish Cemetery, Kolkata findagrave.com
    • The Scottish Cemetery Project includes Full list of tombs and an advance search. It is stated on the Main Page that “The digitized versions of the burial records of St. Andrew’s Kirk have been made available to us”. However, as far as can be established, this website does not include those digitised burial records, neither can an online source for the burial records be established. Perhaps they may be held by St Andrew’s Church, for the use of Church staff.
    • Graves of Jute Mill managers buried in India Dundee Heritage Trust. Includes wives. Contains twenty five records at the Scottish Cemetery in Calcutta, fourteen at Barrackpore Cemetery and one of Tollygunge Cemetery. Graves date from 1881 to 1951, covering workers at the four of the major Indian mills - Titaghur, Samnuggur, Angus and Victoria.
    • Scottish Cemetery Kolkata The official blog for the team who went to Kolkata in 2008 to survey the Scottish Cemetery for The Kolkata Scottish Heritage Trust
    • Photographs of Scottish Cemetery, Park Street Cemetery, St Andrew's Church BBD Bagh, Bishop's House
  • Mullickbazar grave of Economist founder James Wilson, died 11 August 1860. "Taxman rediscovers father of taxation" by Sumatra Das from the Telegraph, Calcutta 11 August 2009, now an archived webpage. ‘Father of Indian finance', he was finance member of the Viceroy of India Council, akin to the post of chancellor of the Indian Exchequer.
  • www.indian-cemeteries.org, now archived, has photographs and transcriptions from the following cemeteries. Although an archived website, the internal links appear to be still working.
    • Lower Circular Road Cemetery.
    • North Park Street Cemetery.
    • Scotts Cemetery.
    • South Park Street Cemetery.
    • St Johns Church.
    • St Johns Church Black Hole Memorial.
    • St Pauls Cathedral.
  • "The Greek Cemetery of Kolkata" by Helen Abadzi. academia.edu.
  • Jewish records: Calcutta Grave Records from Genealogy National Sephardic Library, now archived webpages.
Exhibit 09 Jewish Cemetery In Calcutta, Narkeldanga, which in turn includes a list of the graves. This data comes from handwritten cemetery registers which were digitised c 1999.[7] “Recalling Jewish Calcutta: Memories Of The Jewish Community In Calcutta”. jewishcalcutta.in
Calcutta Cemetery Search Index Search. SephardicGen.
The Jewish Cemetery was restored in 2017.[8]
The Oseh Haised Board [Jewish Burial Board] also maintained the Jewish cemetery in Darjeeling.[9]
  • "Portuguese Burial Ground Kolkata" by Subhadip Mukherjee November 7, 2022. indianvagabond.com
  • Inscriptions from Bhowanipore Cemetery, Kolkata Over 700 names from Commonwealth War Graves Commission. cwgc.org. The Commission also has responsibility for the care of 233 non-war burials in the cemetery, who are not named.
  • Buried history by Shine Jacob Kolkata June 3, 2012 business-standard.com. Calcutta cemeteries. Includes advice that the East India Charitable Trust answers queries about Bhowanipore Cemetery in respect of the section they manage.(not War Graves) (Note: this function is not mentioned on the EICT website, although it is stated the Trust is actively associated with the British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia (BACSA). Select “Contact Us” in the EICT website for contact details). (In 2005 it was advised the Bhowanipore Cemetery was maintained by APHCI, the Association for the Preservation of Historical Cemeteries in India, the sister organisation of BACSA), with contact details given.[10])

Historical books online

Also available Archive.org, mirror from Central Secretariat Library (CSL) [Delhi] Digital Repository : 1896 edition (1895 edition).
Also available from wikimedia.org as a pdf.

References

  1. The full Bengal Obituary (1851) can be viewed online at archive.org or Google Books
  2. Evers, Maureen Kolkata research Rootsweb India Mailing List 21 November 2009, archived. The original advice was from Dr John Roberts, co-author of Malabar Christian Memorials at Cannanore, Tellicherry and Mahe 1723-1990 and Nilgiri Hills Christian Memorials 1822-2006, who has researched in Calcutta.
  3. Murphy, Sylvia Kolkata research Rootsweb India Mailing List 18 November 2009, archived.
  4. Page 222 Municipal Calcutta by SW Goode 1916. Archive.org, Public Library of India Collection.
  5. "A French Crematorium for the Christians and Brahmos of Calcutta" by Subhadip Mukherjee November 21, 2015 indianvagabond.com.
  6. Gas Crematorium: Crematorium Street, Behind Lower Circular Road Cemetery, Kolkata by Rangan Datta December 9, 2015 rangandatta.wordpress.com.
  7. "Jewish Cemetery, Narkeldanga Main Road" 16 October 2014. The Concrete Paparazzi.
  8. "Jewish Cemetery, Kolkata" by Rangan Datta January 5, 2018 rangandatta.wordpress.com.
  9. From a page "A Historical Review of the Calcutta Jewish Cemetery" www.indianjews.org/english, no longer available. Also mentioned in "Chapter 8", The Jewish world of Calcutta 1798 to 1948 by Kaustav Chakrabarti, 2010 thesis University of Calcutta. shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in
  10. Kendall, John "preserving Fort William Cemetery record" Rootsweb India Mailing List, 22 October 2005, archived.