Hostname: page-component-77f85d65b8-zzw9c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-03-29T18:02:10.352Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

COMMEMORATION AND IMPROVEMENT: PARRAMATTA ST JOHN’S CEMETERY, NEW SOUTH WALES, IN ITS CONTEXT 1788−c 1840

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2020

Harold Mytum*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, University of Liverpool, 12−14 Abercromby Square, Liverpool L69 7WZ, UK. Email: H.Mytum@liverpool.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Parramatta was the second British settlement established in mainland Australia, and for a time was the largest. Its burial ground and monuments, the oldest surviving British cemetery in mainland Australia, provides important evidence for the aspirations, attitudes and practices within this fledgling community. It reveals the role of improvement concepts and practices in popular as well as governmental culture, representing an experiment in secular control over burial decades before the urban non-denominational cemetery first appears in England. The primary chronological focus here is from the foundation of settlement in 1788 to c 1840, by which time free settlers as well as emancipists had transformed Parramatta from a convict settlement into a colonial town.

Information

Type
Research paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Society of Antiquaries of London, 2020
Figure 0

Fig 1. Location of Parramatta, Sydney and the main farming areas in the region by 1796 (after Perry 1963). Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 1

Fig 2. Map of Parramatta 1792 showing the main buildings, convict plots and huts (though many buildings were not constructed at this stage). 1: Governor’s residence; 2: The Crescent; 3: Government Farm; 4: Hospital; 5: Town Hall; 6: Barracks; 7: Storehouse by the quay. Drawing: Robert Philpott, based on 1792 map, TNA, C700 NSW4 1792.

Figure 2

Fig 3. View of Parramatta High Street with Governor’s House on the rise in the distance, convict huts in garden plots either side of the street. Drawing: Collins 1798.

Figure 3

Fig 4. Map of all memorials at Parramatta. Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 4

Fig 5. Bar chart: number of monuments erected by decade. Drawing: author.

Figure 5

Fig 6. Distribution of memorials erected in the 1790s: 1791–4 red; 1795–9 blue. Rectangle (tomb), lozenge (ledger), circle (headstone). Boundary is of later burial ground, uncertain at this stage but memorials probably indicate its extent. Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 6

Fig 7. 1790s memorials: (a) Dodds ledger (left) and Daveny headstone flat (right); (b) Buckrel chest tomb; (c) Harthen headstone. Photographs: author.

Figure 7

Fig 8. Distribution of memorials erected in the 1800s. Rectangle (tomb), lozenge (ledger), circle (headstone). Red symbols this decade, grey symbols already-existing memorials. Boundary is of later burial ground, uncertain at this stage but memorials probably indicate its extent. Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 8

Fig 9. Bar chart of percentage of monument types by decade. Headstones (grey), ledgers (yellow), tombs (blue), pedestal monuments (red). Drawing: author.

Figure 9

Fig 10. 1800s memorials to: (a) Archer; (b) Farrel; (c) O Bryan. Photographs: author.

Figure 10

Fig 11. Distribution of memorials erected in the 1810s. Rectangle (tomb), lozenge (ledger), circle (headstone). Red symbols this decade, grey symbols already-existing memorials. The burial ground boundary was firmly established this decade; the paths and western entrance may have appeared at this stage. Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 11

Fig 12. Map from 1814 with extended street pattern on both sides of the river, with streets round three sides of the ‘Burying Ground’ (bottom left). Image: Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.

Figure 12

Fig 13. 1810s memorials to: (a) Ward; (b) McDougall; (c) Lowe; (d) Wilkinson. Photographs: author.

Figure 13

Fig 14. Map of Parramatta 1822 by G C Stewart. Drawing: Robert Philpott, simplified from a version published by J Campbell in 1926 redrawn in Kass et al1996.

Figure 14

Fig 15. Distribution of memorials erected in the 1820s. Rectangle (tomb), lozenge (ledger), circle (headstone). Red symbols this decade, grey symbols already-existing memorials. Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 15

Fig 16. 1820s memorials to: (a) D’Arcy Wentworth; (b) ‘Cann Sculpt’ on the top of William White’s tomb; (c) William White. Photographs: author.

Figure 16

Fig 17. Distribution of memorials erected in the 1830s. Rectangle (tomb), lozenge (ledger), circle (headstone), star (pediment). Red symbols this decade, grey symbols already-existing memorials. Drawing: Robert Philpott.

Figure 17

Fig 18. 1830s memorials to: (a) Thorn; (b) Herbert; (c) Harris. Photographs: author.

Figure 18

Fig 19. 1870s view of St Johns from the north, with the parsonage on the skyline to the south; Sydney Living Museums record no. 37945. Image: Caroline Simpson Library & Research Collection.

Figure 19

Fig 20. Elevated view of St Johns from the east. Photograph: author.