Sunday 22 February 2009

Highgate Cemetery - Victorian Valhalla





This weekend I finally managed to visit Highgate Cemetery in London. The journey took us on the London Underground. There are many reports of ghosts on the underground, although we didn't see anything.

It was a bright sunny day, and we walked up Highgate Hill. We didn't realise how steep this hill - which is really a busy thoroughfare for traffic - actually is. However when we reached the top we cut through the delightful Waterlow Park. This is like a green oasis in London. The park is quite large and we saw squirrels, ducks and geese.

The walk through the park leads into Highgate Cemetery. The entrance to the cemetery is an imposing gothic building.

Large cemeteries such as this are renowned for their flore and fauna, and the first thing I noticed as the guided tour began was the abundance of snowdrops carpeting the ground, and growing up between cracks in the broken slabs of stone. The pale winter sun shone thinly through the trees.
Despite the silence and solemnity of the funereal architecture, I felt there was a sense of rebirth and growth which is to do with the early signs of spring.


Our tour guide explained about the history and architecture. Many of the monuments are protected by English Heritage for their architectural and artistic merit.

This is the grave of a young girl, especially poignant because of the chair from which she seems to have suddenly got up and left:



Many of the monuments are overgrown, which makes them very atmospheric and gives them a natural beauty. The Western cemetery was closed in the 1970s after spates of vandalism, and we were some of the first people to have visited it for 30 years.

Our tour guide showed us his own family vault where he said he would like to be buried.


Although most of the graves are old, we found a more recent one, and when we asked who it belonged to, were told it was that of the murdered Russian spy Alexander Litvienko.

The most curious structure in the cemetery is the Egyptian Avenue. This reflects the Victorian's fascination with Ancient Egyptian History and and architecture. Unfortunately none of the familes who have relatives buried here have replied to requests to maintain them, so like most of the other graves, they have fallen into disrepair. Long tresses of ivy overhang the tops of the entrance to the Egyptian Avenue, which leads up into the Lebanon Circle.



There are stone eagles on the top of the Egyptian Avenue which represent guardianship and protection.



We then reached the Circle of Lebanon, which is topped by magnificent Cedar of Lebanon tree. This pre-dates the cemetery itself, and grows out of the circular structure.


I was impressed by this huge gothic entrance to the catacombs, although we were not allowed to enter them.

At this point we peeped through the window of the largest vault in the cemetery, of a Victorian businessman called Beers. The vault is sealed and apparently has a solid gold ceiling, and a gold effigy of a young woman. I noticed lots of ornate decoration while peering through the glass.


One of the more unusual graves has a lion sat on top, this lion was apparently a tame lion which was popular with the public. There are many stone animals, the grave of a famous bare knuckle boxer also has his pet dog.



There is some ornate metal work throughout the cemetery and in places there are traces of the original paintwork, which is described as "racing green". English Heritage hopes to restore some of the metalwork to this original colour.



They have also created new metalwork in an attempt to restore some of the vaults to their original condition.

Parts of the cemetery are so overgrown and shaded by trees, they seem to be in almost perputual darkness, as can be seen from the photograph I took of the grave of Frederick Warne.
Mr Frederick Warne was the original publisher of Beatrix Potter books.



Another magnificent tree in the cemetery is this horse chestnut


Having finished the West Cemetery tour, I bought the English Heritage book and my friend made a donation towards the upkeep of the cemetery, which is run by a charity.

We then went to visit the East Cemetery, the second half, which turned out to be less impressive atmospherically although it still has many graves of famous people. The most popular of which seems to be that of philisopher Karl Marx. He apparently requested a simple headstone, and had this until about 50 years ago when the Communist Party had this new memorial erected, which some have described as tasteless.



I was disappointed that I did not have time to find the graves of Elizabeth Siddell or the Pre-Raphaelites. I may go back in a different season to attempt this. However in the Eastern Cemetery I was very impressed with some of the angels. I think the angels of Highgate were for me the highlight, as they have such melancholy beauty.

We also saw a robin perched on one of the headstones which seemed very picturesque. As we left the cemetery through Waterlow Park, we saw more squirrels. All in all it was a very eccentric place to visit, yet rich in historical and aesthetic value (not to mention all the flora and fauna..).

  1. Highgate Cemetery official website
  2. Highgate entry in Dictionary of Hammer Horror

Saturday 14 February 2009

Big Belly Oak, Savernake Forest









A Tree Council Press release states:

"According to legend, the devil appears to anyone who dances naked at midnight twelve times anticlockwise around the Big Belly or Decanter Oak in Savernake Forest. "

The tree is reached by a short walk down a busy and quite dangerous road, the A346. Savernake Forest itself is wonderful; it is full of sleepy hollow style trees. There are so many ancient trees here it is amazing. I have walked through most of it, and it is the sort of place where you might expect to meet a werewolf or see vampire bats. The National Trust Shop in nearby Avebury does sell a book about British Wolves, and the forest is a reminder that much of Britain was once covered in forest like this. A recent TV programme, Britain from Above, found an iron age temple in the forest.
Savernake Forest is said to have many ghosts. When walking through it, sometimes you are startled by a deer crashing through the undergrowth. This can make you jump. The forest is on long term lease to the Forestry Commission, although is is owned by the Seymour family (as in Jane Seymour).

Andrew Green says in his book Our Haunted Kingdom (1973) "the lichen-covered twisted curves of the old beech trees and the wrinkled, gnarled branches of the oaks must on moonlit nights present a weird ghostly atmosphere for any visitor. Imagination could really run riot in the creepy cluster of clawing arms, albeit wooden ones"

Mr Green says the 2000 acre forest which has been left largely untouched, has ghosts which are seen both at night and during the day. Apparently the most well known of these is a spectral headless lady on a white horse, who was last seen in 1969. She is possibly a member of a royal hunting party who died after her horse bolted into the woods.



West Kennet Long Barrow & A Ghost Caught on Film?


The walk up to West Kennet Long Barrow is one of my favourites. It is only half a mile but it is a lovely walk, it crosses the river Kennet then passes a "dressed tree" which has been decorated with ribbons and other things (people decorated trees in the past to honour the spirits in the tree)


Then you walk up a gentle slope and see the top of one of the stones of the barrow come into view, as if it is an organic thing growing out of the earth. When you get to the top you can sit there, have a flask of tea and enjoy the views of Silbury Hill and the Marlborough Downs.

West Kennet Long Barrow is said to be haunted by a figure with a white dog, that appears on Midsummer Day. It has been speculated that this could be a folk memory of a ritual that took place here a long time ago, and if so this could be Britain's oldest ghost.

Sonia Smith also says in her book about haunted Wiltshire, that a lady who visited the barrow near dusk went inside and was apparently touched by a large number of invisibly hands.

I took some photos inside the barrow, and was surprised to find this strange white mist turn up on one of my pictures:


Swallowhead Springs & Silbury Hill






Swallowhead Springs is a sacred well, and has been a sacred site for thousands of years. It is fairly close to Silbury Hill and I noticed that from the Springs, the hill appears to be perfectly symmetrical.


I walked through a flooded water meadow to get to the Springs, and knew I had found it because the willow trees there were decorated with ribbons. There were stepping stones but I was not about to attempt to cross. Perhaps in the summer I will go back and do this.

The water starts out as a trickle

And becomes quite a substantial flow, which passes under a bridge where one can walk to West Kennet Barrow

Bronze Age Barrows & the Sanctuary






This site known as Soerfon Barrows is not far from Avebury. I have been to Avebury many times and it has almost become my second home. The world famous stone circle is of course hugely impressive, but Avebury is part of a designated World Heritage Site, and there is a landscape to explore which contains many prehistoric monuments. Most of which are connected in some way.

What I am trying to do now is to explore some of the less well known and yet equally important sites in the area.

The barrows are close to the Sanctuary, which is a timber circle. It is very similar to Woodhenge. As it was made of wood nothing remains however there are marker posts. Perhaps some day someone will pay to have this rebuilt.