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Monday, 6 July 2015

St Pancras Churchyard

St Pancras Churchyard, London
Visited May 2011

The church of St Pancras is believed to be one of the earliest Christian sites in London. The current church dates from the mid-19th century, but some of the graves in the churchyard are older. The churchyard is to the north of St Pancras station, and still a large, quiet green space. The graves were tidied up earlier this century.

There are a number of graves of interest - the mausoleum of Sir John Soane was the inspiration for the red telephone boxes! 

In the 1860s a large number of graves were excavated due to the building of St Pancras station. Many of the gravestones were piled around a tree in the churchyard, and one of the workers at the time was Thomas Hardy. The tree, still surrounded by gravestones, is now known as the Hardy Tree. Many graves were lost in this clearance, and in a subsequent clearance in the 1870s when part of the churchyard became a park. The Memorial to Lost Graves was erected in 1877 to commemorate these.


The Hardy Tree


the tomb of John Soane (he of the museum in Lincoln's Inn Square)

The Burdett Coutts Memorial to Lost Graves

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