Friar's Bush Graveyard Explained

Friar's Bush Graveyard is Belfast's oldest Christian burial site,[1] located on the Stranmillis Road in South Belfast.

History

The mysterious Friar's stone in the cemetery bears the inscription AD 485.[1] The oldest headstone in the cemetery was erected to the memory of Thomas Gibson who died in 1717. During the 1800s, the cemetery was repeatedly raided by body-snatchers, including in 1823 when the bodies of a woman and a child were stolen from the graveyard, although they were later returned.[1]

The cemetery is the resting place of thousands of victims of the Cholera epidemic of the 1830s and the Great Irish famine of the 1840s.[1] These people were buried in a mound dubbed 'Plaguey Hill', which is located just inside the cemetery's main gates.[2] Also located inside the graveyard's main gates is the "Pauper's Pit", which is the resting place of those too poor to afford a headstone. By the mid 19th-century, the cemetery was becoming overcrowded, and only families with burial rights were allowed to be interred,[2] and in 1869 it was replaced by Milltown Cemetery as the city's main Catholic burial site.[1]

The graveyard is the resting place of the famed baker and philanthropist Bernard (Barney) Hughes who died in 1878.[3]

Friar's Bush has been maintained by the Belfast City Council since 2000, having previously been owned by the Catholic Church.[2]

See also

External links

54.5818°N -5.935°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Friar's Bush Graveyard | Culture Northern Ireland . 5 June 2019 . 5 June 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190605153843/https://www.culturenorthernireland.org/article/2304/friar-s-bush-graveyard . dead .
  2. Web site: Friar's Bush. Belfastcity.gov.uk.
  3. Web site: The Dictionary of Ulster Biography. Newulsterbiography.co.uk.