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Connecting Cemeteries and Monuments to the classroom

More than famous men and women: Sites for student investigation and analysis. Connecting Cemeteries and Monuments to the classroom . Why investigate cemeteries?. As time passes our old cemeteries become . less a landscape for mourning and remembrance by loved ones.

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Connecting Cemeteries and Monuments to the classroom

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  1. More than famous men and women: Sites for student investigation and analysis. Connecting Cemeteries and Monuments to the classroom

  2. Why investigate cemeteries? As time passes our old cemeteries become • less a landscape for mourning and remembrance by loved ones • more a source of curiosity, • more a quiet or contemplative environment, • and more an invaluable source of evidence of the way past generations lived and often died. When combined with paper and electronic sources, the historic cemetery opens up to students a direct and accessible link to a significant proportion of the past population, the ordinary as well as the elite, allowing unique opportunities to investigate many different aspects of their lives and their deaths.

  3. Investigations into data from cemetery memorials can uncover tragic events Electronic archives allow classroom access to searchable original and secondary sources. • Secondary sources: • Te Ara • Dictionary of New Zealand Biography • Google maps • Heritage trails • City Council archives • Primary sources: • Images from Timeframes website • Newspaper stories from     Papers past website ( as below)

  4. Cemetery information can be applied to various scales of historical research Jewish Portion Dunedin Southern Cemetery • Student investigations can centre on • an individual or family, • a particular suburb, • a specific migrant group, • a specific town or district, • a city or region or • even the nation as a whole. Mark & Sarah Cohen Plot 88 Septimus Myers Plot 110 8 7 3 Maurice Joel, Plot 144 1 6 2 2 8 3 The Theomins Plot 124 7 1 6 4 BendixHallenstein & Willi Fells Plot 140 Jewish section Map reproduced from Ockwell, N. (Ed.). (1985). Southern Cemetery Dunedin. Vol 5. Jewish and Chinese Portion. Prepared for the New Zealand Society of Genealogists. 4

  5. At the Anderson’s Bay CemeteryFinding first settlers from the first ships to the colony 1848 -1852 Student work cards – Cut out fold in half and give one to each group Block 105 Plot 63 (Anderson) Block 4 Plot 31 (Patrick) An example of the student cards. Teachers print onto light card, cut out, and fold along each card along the dotted line. Put in a box and take to the cemetery. Student groups “dig” for a grave, locate using a cemetery map, record details and investigate using local resources. Fold Fold 11 12

  6. Cemeteries offer opportunities for demographic studies of historical groups At the cemetery:In depth investigation SouthernCemetery Memorial information offers opportunities for student inquiry into wider social and living conditions during the later 19th and early 20th centuries. Area 1: Student recording sheet – page 2 Block 6P Plot 27 - 28 One of the most obvious inquiries is to have students gather mortality data (names, ages, and date of deaths) from the epitaph information. Details from the epitaph such as an accident, a person’s occupation, or war involvement ______________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Data plotted into age bands by decade and time by decade reveals information about life expectancy in New Zealand colonial society and allows for interesting follow-up investigations .

  7. Mortality information plotted for Block 2P Anglican Section Southern Cemetery Dunedin 3. 1. 2.

  8. Cemeteries offer opportunities for demographic studies of historical groups • Occasionally students will encounter headstones such as these pictured. • Cause of death is usually not recorded on headstones unless that death was accidental. Erected to the Memory ofWilliam Sutherland Died 6thApril 1871 Aged 6 years and 8 monthsDavidina Sutherland Died 6thApril 1871 Aged 5 years 6 monthsJohn Sutherland Died 6thApril 1871 Aged 3 years 4 monthsHenrietta Margaret Sutherland Died 21stApril 1871 Aged 1 year John Sutherland Died 15th July 1905 Aged 76 years Ann wife of aboveDied 30th Oct 1911 Aged 76 years • Encourage students to investigate…. • Water supply and links to typhoid • Effluent and garbage disposal • Methods of cooking and food storage • Establishment of medical services • Child care and immunisation

  9. Timeline illustrating conditions & changesthat impacted on high mortality rates in colonial New Zealand Decade = 1850’s Dunedin

  10. Cemeteries transmit symbolic and literal statements about past cultures, identity and place and these can be investigated Headstones in the Chinese section of Dunedin’s Southern Cemetery tell of many Chinese sojourner gold seekers who came to Otago and who endured incredible hardship and cultural and physical isolation. Most of these headstones now provide the only record that exists today of men from PoonYue province in Southern China who were never able to return to their families and homelands. When combined with Genealogy Society transcripts and translations the data from these headstones tell a unique demographic story. The story can be rounded out with original resources and secondary resources many of which are available online.

  11. Cemeteries transmit symbolic and literal statements about past cultures, identity and place • The disaster recorded here opens our eyes today to the realities and the hazards involved in the social and working conditions at the time. • Imagine the difficulties experienced by the remaining dependents of the Molloy family that involved the loss of not one but three incomes.

  12. Cemeteries offer insights into values and beliefs of historical groups through symbolism

  13. Cemeteries offer insights into values and beliefs of historical groups through epitaphs and epithets Fate For of such is the kingdom of heaven. The Resurrection A few short years of evil past,We reach this happy shore,Where death divided friends at last,Shall meet to part no more.Oh may we stand before the lamb,When Earth and seas are fled,And hear the judge pronounce our nameWith blessings on our heads. Mitchell Grave Northern Cemetery Dunedin The Day of Judge-ment Mortality of man Mourn not for me my comrades dearI am not dead but sleeping hereMy end you know, my grave you seePrepare yourself to follow me. Northern Cemetery Dunedin “The Spirit and the Bride say ‘come’. Rev 22:17 Passages from the bible are also common With Jesus

  14. Tally sheets show changing popularity of religious symbolism and epithets over time at Allanton Cemetery: Dunedin.

  15. Cemeteries offer insights into values and beliefs of other ethnic groups • Jewish section • Chinese section • Orthodox Christians

  16. Cemeteries offer insights into changing values • and beliefs of historical groups Changes in monument styles may be used to infer meaning with respect to social and political structures. Changes in memorials can be attributed to changing beliefs about memorialisation and a move towards a more egalitarian society that was apparent in New Zealand from the 1920s onwards. 1900s 1890s 1880s 1870s … 1990s 1940s … 1920s 1930s

  17. Record the numbers of headstones in various shape categories and the dates by decade when first erected

  18. Student investigations can be carried out on WW1 & 2 commemorations on cemetery memorials. Coll Boyd McDonald (Cadet) killed when the training ship S.S. Aparima was torpedoed in the English Channel in 1917. Ian Grant Killed on H.M.S Achilles during the battle with Graf Spee at the River Plate in 1939. Trooper John Wood. Killed in action at Damascus 1917. Imperial Camel Corps. Preston Logan Killed in action at Gallipoli, May 1915. Auckland Mounted Rifles.

  19. Encourage students to explore the names on their school plaques, archways, and connect to local memorials and cemeteries Lieutenant Preston Logan Auckland Mounted Rifles, N.Z.E.F. Died on the hospital ship Soudan and buried at sea, 22nd May 1915 aged 22. Commemorated on the Lone Pine memorial, Gallipoli Turkey.

  20. Thomas DrydenBlock 151 Plot 1 8 9 Preston LoganBlock 141A Plot 11 OBHS Archway and trail at Northern Cemetery 7 Sydney DukeBlock 161 Plot 15 7 8 6 6 Francis DavisBlock 179 Plot 11 4 6 5 5 John GilksBlock 198 Plot 36 3 1 2 3 Thomas NesbittBlock 191A Plot 87 1 John Stewart ReidBlock 73 Plot 38 2 4 Arthur Earle CollieBlock 80 Plot 16 Gilbert WorsfoldThropBlock 181 Plot 6 Map of Dunedin’s Northern Cemetery sourced from: http://www.dunedin.govt.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0003/25464/cemplot_northernphoto.pdf

  21. Analysis of insignia on headstones returned servicemen’s cemeteries

  22. Students can identify the type of stones used and record when they were first erected. Limestone/ Sandstone Wood Slate Marble Granite Concrete with marble or granite plaques Metal

  23. Battleship curves show changing popularity of stone types over time at Allanton Cemetery: Dunedin. Natural stone with bronze plaque

  24. Deed, Stephen. (Nov 2004). Unearthly landscapes: The development of the cemetery in nineteenth century New Zealand. A thesis submitted for a Master of Arts Degree, University of Otago. Edgar, Philip G. (Dec 1995). Ideological choice in the gravestones of Dunedin's Southern Cemetery. A thesis submitted for a Master of Arts Degree, University of Otago. Keister, Douglas. (2004) Stories in Stone: A field guide to cemetery symbolism and iconography. Utah. Gibbs Smith. MacLean, Chris and Philips, Jock. (1990). The sorrow and the pride: New Zealand war memorials. Wellington. Historical Branch, Department of Internal Affairs. Government Printing Office. Mytum, Harold. (2000). Analysing historic graveyards.Practical Handbook in Archaeology 15. York: Council for British Archaeology. Reprinted in 2008. Sagazio, C. (Ed)(1992) Cemeteries: Our Heritage. National Trust of Australia (Victoria). Sagazio, C. (Ed) (2003) Conserving our Cemeteries. National Trust of Australia (Victoria). References:

  25. Acknowledgement: The Historic Cemeteries Conservation Trust of New Zealand commissioned education resources for the use by teachers in New Zealand’s cemeteries. Teaching units and supporting resources are now available for download from the Historic Cemeteries Conservation Trust (HCCTNZ) website at http://www.cemeteries.org.nz/

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