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| A detail of the headstone of corporal J.W. Gay |
Ever since encountering a Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) headstone in St. John the Baptist’s churchyard in Dronfield back in February 2019, where I was interested in the design of the regimental crest of the Royal Leicestershire Regiment – albeit a replica of the original made by a CNC milling machine - I have made a point of visiting churchyards and cemeteries to find these, when on my travels.
On my day out to Batley and Birstall, when I had planned to look at the historic architecture on Station Road and in the Market Place Conservation Area and St. Peter’s church in Birstall, my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge included buildings and structures in Batley Cemetery and I therefore prepared a short list of headstones with regimental crests that I had not seen before.
Before entering the cemetery, I firstly photographed the Grade II listed gatepiers and boundary wall, which are built in massive sandstone, along with the gates and railings, and also the Grade II listed cemetery lodge (1866) - where the same sandstone is used for the walling and dressings.
The architect responsible was Walter Hanstock, whose work I had seen in the warehouses/showrooms on Station Road, the Zion Methodist Chapel, the town hall and Batley baths in Market Place Conservation Area and at the Sunday School on Blakeridge Lane.
The sandstone used for the gatepiers and the lodge – for the walling and dressings – is uniformly light brown in colour and is very probably Thornhill Rock, which Hanstock seems to have favoured and was widely quarried near Morley and easily transported by rail to Batley.
The Cross of Sacrifice is made out of a uniformly coloured and medium grained sandstone, which I didn’t look at closely; however, Bolton Woods stone from the Pennine Lower Coal Measures Formation to the north of Bradford has often been used for war memorials in the north of England.
Walking up to the cemetery chapels, the area between these and the entrance is the oldest part of the cemetery and there is a mixture of traditional slabs made out of sandstone that is very likely to be from the Elland Flags, with larger obelisks and other large more ornate memorials being made of massive sandstone and a variety of granites.
Quite unusually, Historic England describe the Anglican and Nonconformist chapels (1865), also by Walter Hanstock, as being decorated with carved details that include grotesques, beasts, birds, figure heads, flora and foliage, but I did not get near enough to see these.
Continuing up the hillside to an elevation of approximately 110 m, on which the newer parts of the cemetery are set, I stopped to take in the view of Blakeridge Mills and the Church of St. Thomas (1868) in the distance – another building designed by Walter Hanstock.
I then set about trying to locate the CWGC headstones, using a cemetery plan that I had downloaded, with the first of these being Private A.A. Smithson of the Cameron Highlanders, which looks like it is made with Stancliffe Darley Dale gritstone.
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| A detail of the headstone of Private A.A. Smithson |
The next headstone, made with Portland stone, was that of Private B. Stenchion of the Parachute Regiment in the Army Air Corps, which wasn’t included in my list but I had not seen the regimental crest depicting a parachute before.
The headstone of Bombardier T. Brannan of the 145th (Berkshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment is also made of Portland stone and the regimental crest interestingly depicts the Uffington White Horse – a prehistoric hill figure cut into the chalk downs in Berkshire – although in reverse.
Private W. Bromley of the New Zealand Otago Regiment has a headstone made of Portland stone, which has weathered to an extent that fragments of shells can clearly be seen and looks original, but the worksheet states that the stone used is Woodkirk Blue.
In Moorgate Cemetery in Rotherham, I came across several CWGC headstones that I originally thought were probably made with Stancliffe Darley Dale stone, but subsequently learned from their worksheets that these were in fact Woodkirk Blue stone. Returning to the cemetery at a later date, I had another look at these and it was evident that this sandstone is finer grained and weathers differently – an observation also confirmed when visiting other churchyards at Royston and Wadsley and Burngreave Cemetery.
Private Bromley’s worksheet also includes the headstone of Private C. Bruce of the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) but, from my photograph of the regimental crest, the stone looks more like a medium grained gritstone from the Millstone Grit Group than a Coal Measures sandstone.















































