26.27 – Agnes, Jess, George, Wilbert, Martha Ellen and Herbert Sunderland

“Can a woman’s tender care eyre forget?” As you can see from the inscription, this marker was erected by a mother to the last memory of her children. That mother is Martha Sunderland, and her story is a sad one. Draw close and listen, and maybe at the end you’ll say a little prayer for …

V6.5 – Alan, Fred and Hannah Maria Dennett, and Thomas and Margaret Dennett

This grave was highlighted as part of our first Holocaust Memorial Day tour, due to Fred’s membership of the Freemasons – more information has been added to flesh out the lives of the others in this distinctive double vault, with its two identical crosses engraved with Celtic knots. Picture a summer dawn, 1862, Dobroyd. The …

27.20 – the children of Elizabeth Greenwood

Rather than type all their names into the title, here lies seven of Elizabeth and John Ashton Greenwood’s children – Sarah Elizabeth, Evelyn Josephine, John Ashton, Florence, Sybil, Theresa, and Elizabeth Ann. So many children. Elizabeth Ann Greenwood was born Elizabeth Sykes in Preston in June 1860. She is hard to track down before 1881, …

4.2 – Ruth Harcourt, Samuel, Emily, Walter, Clara and Jack Clegg

This post initially focuses on Jack Clegg, one of the subjects of our 2023 Holocaust Memorial Day tour. Following his story below we will return to the rest of his family – and don’t think it isn’t worth continuing to read, because we’re going to touch on a number of famous (occasionally infamous) figures. It …

25.39 – Martha, Ada, Robert, Eleanor and Frederick Hopkinson

This story is very common – high child mortality and a bereaved parent not able to carry on. Eleanor (Dawson) Hopkinson is in the burial register next to another suicide, Annie Marshall, who does not have a gravestone but whose story is told alongside Eleanor’s on our Facebook page. Frederick Hopkinson met Eleanor Dawson probably …