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London Burials 19th Century

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Trevbet | 16:12 Mon 24th May 2010 | History
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London Churchyard burials stopped early to mid 19th Century but was the practice of family burials in the same graves allowed from a husband buried in 1834 to a wife buried with him who died in 1872.
Thinking in particular of St Giles Church Camberwell. grateful or any help.

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Hi ancestry.co.uk have records of burials there up to 1856, St Giles burnt down and a new St Giles was bult in 1844, St George Camberwell did have burials in the late 1800s but there is a gap from the 1850s up to 1899. The civic cemetary that covers Camberwell is Nunhead:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nunhead_Cemetery
If you are not an ancestry subscriber I could look up the burial registers or Camberwell or you could contact the Nunhead cemetary.
East Surrey Family History Society have some indexes for Camberwell but they do not appear to hold an index to the Monumental Insciprions there.
This history of the Parish confirms there were no MIs recorded:
http://www.stgilescam...=blog&id=54&Itemid=69

If the husband was buried with the wife in the churchyard then there wil be an entry in the burial book, which does not mean the funeral was held at the Church, and by the same token, if he was buried in a civic cemetary, that does not mean his funeral was not heald at the church, and the church records should show a record of the funeral as opposed to a burial. This is an area people often confuse.
I think the simple answer will be yes, Trevbet, as long as the originally purchased plot was deep enough to accommodate extras. The 1850's and later legislation stated minimum depth requirements for burials. I have seen burials take place in deeply urban and apparently closed cemetries even in the 1970's, where the ownership of the plot and the space available allowed 'room on top'.

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