Tuesday, 26 June 2012
Winged Heads, Skulls, Crossbones
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
All photographs taken at Holy Trinity Churchyard, Cookham Berkshire.
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Tuesday, 19 June 2012
Sir Stanley Spencer of Cookham
Gravestone of Sir Stanley Spencer CBE RA, Holy Trinity Churchyard, Cookham Berkshire.
"To The Memory Of
Stanley Spencer
Kt CBE RA
1891 - 1959
And his wife
Hilda
Buried in Cookham Cemetery 1950
Everyone that loveth is born of God and knoweth God. He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love - 1 John 4:7"
Sir Stanley Spencer was born at Fernlea, High Street, Cookham on 30th June 1891 to William, a music teacher and Anne Caroline Spencer nee Slack. On the that day a crow fell down the chimney and flapped about the living room until released. The family thought it a good omen and named Stanley after Stanley Spencer, a prominent balloonist of the era.
| Fernlea |
Much of Stanley's early education was at the village school run by his sisters, he eventually attended Maidenhead Technical School where his artistic training began, before enrolling at Slade School of Fine Art at University College, London. Here he won the Composition Prize for ‘The Nativity’, and oil on canvas painted in 1912
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| The Nativity - 1912 |
In 1915 Stanley volunteered to serve with the Royal Army Medical Corps where he served as a orderly at The Beaufort War Hospital. In 1916 he volunteered to serve with the Royal Army Medical Corps in Macedonia where he served with the 68th Field Ambulance Unit. He later requested to be transferred to the Berkshire Regiment. Stanley's experience of the horrors of war were to forever mark his attitude towards life and death, an influence that can be seen in many of his religious paintings.
Towards the end of the Great War Stanley was commissioned by the the War Artists Advisory Committee to paint visions of war from Macedonia. Stanley painted what is now referred to as 'Travoys Arriving with Wounded at a Dressing Station at Smol.' The painting is kept at the Imperial War Museum.
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| Travoys Arriving with Wounded at a Dressing Station at Smol |
In 1925 Stanley married Hilda Carline, who at that time was a student of Slade School of Fine Art. They had two daughters together, Shirin and Unity.
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| Hilda, Unity and Dolls - 1937 |
However Hilda and Stanley were to divorce in 1937 when the girls were 7 and 11 due to Stanley's obsession with another woman, Patricia Preece. A week after his divorce Stanley had married Patricia, but it was not to be a happy marriage. Patricia was a con artist and a lesbian, whose interest in Stanley only extended as far as his money. She somehow managed to persuade Stanley to sign over his house to her. Patricia continued to live with her lover Dorothy Hepworth and the marriage was never consummated, yet when her 'relationship' with Stanley fell apart she refused to grant him a divorce.
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| Hepworth, Preece, Spencer and guest at Stanley's wedding to Patricia Preece in 1937 |
Stanley was to forever regret his decision to leave Hilda and his daughters for Patricia. When Hilda's mental health began to fail, Stanley would visit her, but the damage to their relationship was already done. In 1950 Hilda died of cancer. Stanley continued to write love letters to Hilda long after her death. In 1945 Stanley had moved to Cliveden View House in Cookham Rise, a house built by his builder grandfather Julius Spencer and previously lived in by his sister Annie.
Stanley was to become a familiar sight in Cookham, pushing a battered black pram that contained his canvas and easel.
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| Sir Stanley Spencer with his pram in Cookham Lane - 1958 |
In 1959 Stanley was knighted, later that year on 14th December he died of cancer at The Canadian Red Cross Memorial Hospital in Taplow Buckinghamshire.
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| 1954 Portrait of Sir Stanley Spencer by Ida Kar © National Portrait Gallery, London |
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Tuesday, 12 June 2012
Dunkelsbuhler - Angels and Diamonds
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Angel monument to Kathleen Dunkles, Frances Dunkels and Ernest Dunkles.
"Kathleen Dunkles 15 August 1906
Frances Dunkles 16 December 1953
Ernest Dunkels 12 September 1956"
Ernest Dunkles was born Ernest Dunkelsbuhler in London, Middlesex in 1880 to German parents Anton and Minna Dunkelsbuhler. Anton was a famous diamond dealer who owned Anton Dunkelsbuhler & Company. Ernest became a barrister and assumed the surname Dunkles in 1895, perhaps he felt it would be easier for his clients and neighbours than Dunkelsbuhler.
In 1909 Ernest married Frances S Van Nostrand, who travelled to England from New York on the ship Germanic on 9th June 1897. On the Incoming Passengers List her occupation is listed simply as 'Lady'. The lived together in Woodhurst Maidenhead and in 1916 Ernest enlisted and served in The Great War. Frances passed away in the December of 1953, but not before giving Ernest four children. Ernest was to follow his wife three years later.
Kathleen Dunkles was born Fanny Dunklesbuhler in London, Middlesex in 1878. She was Ernest's elder sister. Sometime between 1891 and 1906 Fanny changed her name to Kathleen, possibly a middle name, and took to using it instead of Fanny. Ernest was to name his first daughter born in 1910, Kathleen after his sister.
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Julie from Taphophile Tragics and Sydney Eye asked a question relating to last week's Manlove post.
But there was another daughter , if I interrpert 'elder & beloved daughter' correctly. I wonder what happend to the younger daughter.
Joseph and Eleanor had three children during their marriage, two who survived them. Joseph Swailes Manlove born in October 1881 in Islington Middlesex and Dorothy Mary Manlove born on 27th December 1901 in Maidenhead.
Joseph became a bank cashier and married Alice Gertrude Maunder on 7th October 1909 in Marylebone London. Joseph died in 1937 Tonbridge Kent.
All that I can find out about Dorothy is that she didn't marry and died a spinster in 1988 in Maidenhead. It is possible that she rests in the same cemetery as her parents and elder sister. A challange for my next visit?
Wednesday, 6 June 2012
Windows Into The Past - Ceramic Gravestone Memorials
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| (c) Headstones and History |
Ceramic photograph memorials allow us a peek into the grave and a glimpse into the past.
Ceramic photographs started in 1854 when two french invented patented a method for fixing photographic images onto enamel or porcelain by firing in a kiln. At first these enamels were used for home viewing before paper photos replaced them. Soon after the custom of adding ceramic memorials to gravestones spread throughout southern and eastern Europe and into America.
Sadly due to weathering and sometimes vandalism, these wonderful windows into the past are disappearing. Laurel Mellien at Headstones and History has been taking photographs of these vanishing memorials, in the hopes of preserving what remains.
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| (c) Headstones and History |
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| Showing signs of damamge. (c) Headstones and History |
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| (c) Headstones and History |
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| (c) Headstones and History |
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| Even pets were memoralised (c) Headstones and History |
For more information on the history of ceramic and enamel photograph memorials please click here.
To more fantastic ceramic memorial photographs and further information on gravestone symbolism, visit Laurel Mellien's Facebook page Headstones and History.
All photographs copyright of Headstones and History and reproduced with permission.
** Originally posted on Herding Cats
Tuesday, 5 June 2012
Manlove
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Monument to Winifred Florence, Eleanor Amelia and Joseph Henry Manlove. All Saints Cemetery, Maidenhead Berkshire.
"In Loving Memory of
Winifred Florence, elder & beloved daughter of J.H and E.A Manlove
Born May 2nd 1884 - Died 28th Nov 1909
Thanks be to God which Giveth us the victory
Through our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor 15. 57
Also
Eleanor Amelia Manlove
Bleoved wife of J.H Manlove
Born Feb 26th 1861 - Died May 15th 1928
"With Christ which is far better"
And of
Joseph Henry Manlove
Born June 8th 1856 - Died Oct 26th 1938
At Rest"
Joseph Henry Manlove was born in Maidenhead Berkshire in 1856 to Richard George Manlove, a coach builder and his wife Hannah Manlove nee Marks.
Joseph, now an Iron Foundary Manager, married Eleanor Amelia Wright in Hackney in 1880 and their second child Winifred Florence was born in the May of 1884. Winifred was to die in the November of 1909 aged 25 years.
Eleanor Amelia was the daughter of John Wright a London Greengrocer and his wife Mary Ann born in London in 1861.
For more Taphophile Tragics posts, please click here.
Tuesday, 29 May 2012
Le Blanc Smith - Sinking of The Tanjong Penang
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Monument to Gladys Le Blanc Smith, All Saint's Cemetery, Maidenhead, Berkshire.
"In Ever Loving Memory of
Gladys
The Dearly Beloved And Most Devoted Wife Of
Fredrick Stuart Le Blanc Smith
Born January 8th 1884 - Died August 2nd 1913."
Gladys Le Blanc Smith was born Gladys Haig on 8th January 1884 at Bray Court, Windsor Road, Maidenhead, Berkshire to John Haig, a Distiller from Scotland and Jane Mary Ann Davis.
In 1910 Gladys married Frederick Stuart Le Blanc Smith, a member of The London Stock Exchange at All Saint's Church, Boyne Hill, Maidenhead. The 1911 Census shows them living at Cairns, King's Grove, Maidenhead. Soon their marriage was blessed by the birth of their daughter Beatrice (Betty), but tragically death was to take Gladys away from her young daughter in the August of 1913.
The outbreak of world War II saw Beatrice joining the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service, where she served in the Far East on the 'Evacuation Ships'. Beatrice was on the SS Kuala on 12th February 1942 when it came under enemy aircraft attack, killing many of the nurses, women and children aboard. When the SS Kuala evenutually sank off of Pom Pong Island, Beatrice was one of the few survivors. However fate was not kind to her.
Fellow Nurse Margot Turner recounts -
"During the night of 16-17th February, all women, children and wounded were taken off the island in rowing boats and placed on board the ‘Tanjong Penang’, a small cargo boat which was very crowed.
On the morning of the 17th February 1942. She was hit by gunfire at 9.30 p.m. on that day and sank in about 5 minutes.
I was lying next to Sister Beatrice le Blanc Smith and there were people dead and dying all round us. Beatrice got a nasty wound in the buttock… My first thought was for the women and children in the hold; but a VAD (Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse) struggling up from there to the deck, her dress covered in blood, said that the hold had had the full force of one of the shells and was absolutely smashed. In any case I realised that there was nothing I could do as the ship was already at a steep angle and obviously just about to turn over. Beatrice and I just stepped into the sea and were very lucky not to be sucked down when the ship suddenly turned over and sank.
The cries and screams of the wounded, the helpless and the dying, were quite terrible."
Before the ship sunk the officers had managed to throw a few small rafts overboard and Le Blanc Smith and Turner got hold of two and tied them together. Both Beatrice and Margot had managed to save sixteen people from the sea, including six chidren, two of whom were under a year in age. Sadly Sister Beatrice was not to make it, sucumming to her wounds on 18th February 1942
Beatrice is commemorated on the Singapore Memorial Collum 114.
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| Singapore Memorial |
For more Taphophile Tragic posts, please click here.
** Originally posted on Herding Cats
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Grinstead - Death of an Empire
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Angel monument to Charles Grinsted, Daisy Grinsted and Agnes Sarah Grinsted. All Saint's Cemetery, Maidenhead Berkshire.
"In Ever Loving Memory of -
Charles Grinsted who passed away December 12th 1928 aged 65 years
Also Daisy, his daughter who died October 6th 1908 aged 12 years
Also his beloved wife Agnes Sarah, died Oct 7th 1935 aged 71 years."
Charles Grinsted was born in 1863 in Mile End, Old Town, London to Thomas Place Grinsted and his wife Emma Shakel. Some time between 1881 and 1891 Charles married Agnes Sarah Bushell and followed in his father's fishmonger footsteps by opening a fishmongers shop at 2 King Street Maidenhead. Eventually branching out into 4, 6 and 8 King Street.
Their fifth child and fourth daughter Daisy was born at 2 King Street in 1897, sadly she was to die at the age of 12 in 1908.
Charles continued to build his mini empire to become a bookmaker and licensed game dealer until his death in the December of 1928. Agnes remained at 4 King Street along with her daughter Lily, Lily's husband Freddie Cook and their daughter Norah (who was born on the kitchen table of number 4 King Street on 9th July 1911) until her death in October 1935. Lily, Freddie and Norah carried on the family business, adding butchery to their skills, until the 1950s when Windsor and Maidenhead Council compulsorily purchased the King Street shops and demolished them to make way for the New Market development. Norah moved to The Crescent, Maidenhead.
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| King Street Maidenhead c1950 |
Sadly Norah Cook passed away on 14th March 2011, just months shy of her 100th birthday. The last remaining grandchild of Charles and Agnes Grinsted, bringing an end to the empire.
Norah's Obituary can be found here - The Maidenhead Advertiser: Obituary: Fun-loving Maidonian, 99, was last granddaughter in dynasty.
For more Taphophile Tragics please click here.
Tuesday, 15 May 2012
Weather Worn and Forgotten
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| ? Aged 71 Years |
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| Mary ? |
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Two weather worn and eroded gravestones found at St James the Less, Stubbings, Burchetts Green and St Luke's Churchyard, Maidenhead, Berkshire.
The only information that can be gleaned from these stones is, 'Aged 71 Years' and 'Mary'.
An all too common sight in Britain's churchyards and cemeteries. The poorer classes were not able to afford the marble and granite markers of their rich counterparts. Having to make do with softer local stone or Limestone. Sadly decades and even centuries of wind and rain has stripped them of their identities and thrown them into worn obscurity.
The only information that can be gleaned from these stones is, 'Aged 71 Years' and 'Mary'.
An all too common sight in Britain's churchyards and cemeteries. The poorer classes were not able to afford the marble and granite markers of their rich counterparts. Having to make do with softer local stone or Limestone. Sadly decades and even centuries of wind and rain has stripped them of their identities and thrown them into worn obscurity.
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
The Nash Children
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Monument to James, Florence Catherine, Albert George and Alfred Henry Nash, St Michael's Churchyard, Bray, Berkshire.
"Sacred To The Memory of
James Nash died Feb.y 9th 1878 aged 3 years
Florence Catherine Nash died Feb.y 3rd 1881 aged 11 months
Albert George Nash died Jan.y 18th 1882 aged 5 years
'Of such is the kingdom of heaven'
Alfred Henry Nash died June 1st 1887 aged 3 years"
James, Florence, Albert and Alfred were all the children of James and Martha Catherine Nash, nee Lewis.
James Nash snr was born in Maidenhead Berkshire in 1853, he later became a house painter before he married Martha Catherine Lewis in 1874. The couple soon moved to King Street in Maidenhead and started their family with the arrival of James in 1875 and followed by Albert George in 1876, Frederick William in 1879, Florence Catherine in 1880 and Alfred Henry in 1884, Frank Edward in 1886 and Bessie Louise in 1889. Tragically three were to die in the space of nine years.
In 1891 their mother Martha Catherine Nash passed away, yet she seems to have been buried elsewhere and not with her beloved children.
Poor James had lost three of his children and his wife within 17 years of their marriage. How must this have affected James and his remaining children, the youngest Bessie being a mere three years old at the time?
James continued to live and work in King Street with his surviving children until his death at the relatively young age of 51 in 1904. Did so much grief in such a short time prove too much for James? We shall never know.
For more Taphophile Tragic posts, please stop by Taphophile Tragics Blog.
Tuesday, 1 May 2012
Alfred Beague Gundry - Drowned
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Monument of Alfred Beague Gundry, St Michael's Churchyard, Bray, Berkshire

"Sacred to the memory of Alfred Beague Gundry. Youngest son of Walter Eustace Gundry ESQre late of Bridport Dorset who was drowned by the upsetting of a boat on the Thames at Bray Weir on the 18th April 1862 aged 26 years
~ Sincerely beloved and deeply lamented. What I do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know here after.
I am the resurrection and the life (rest illegible) ~"
Alfred Beague Gundry was indeed the youngest son of Walter Eustace Gundry and Susan Jarvis, born in 1836 in Bridport Dorset. He came from an rather upper class family his father being an accountant and his elder brothers employed as Bank of England Clerks, they all lived in the affluent Pembroke Square in Kensington, London.
On the 1861 Census a year before his tragic and untimely death Alfred is listed as an accountant boarding at 14 Everett Street in Finsbury, London.
Quite what was Alfred doing mucking about in a boat on the river Thames on that fateful day in April? In the Victorian era, mucking about on the river pleasure boating or 'punting' was very much in vogue. Anybody who was anybody was to be seen bobbing about on the river. Pleasure punts in use in England were first built around 1860 and reached the peak of their popularity in the 1910s.
However punting was not an easy pastime.
"Punting is not as easy as it looks. As in rowing, you soon learn to get along and handle the craft, bit it takes long practice before you can do this with dignity and without getting water up your sleeve." ~ Jerome K Jerome. Three Men in a Boat (1889).
Alfred may have simply been inexperienced and got into difficulties, which the weir only added to. Rather surprisingly at the time, not everyone who partook in the activity of punting on the river was able to swim.

Bray Weir taken in 1883 by Henry W Taunt
So sad that a day of pleasure and mucking about in boats should end so tragically and cut short the life of a young man.
For more Taphophile Tragic posts, please stop by Taphophile Tragics Blog.
Tuesday, 24 April 2012
Silver - Believeth
Lych gate at St James the Less, Burchetts Green, Maidenhead
Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.
Monument of Augusta Silver, Annette Silver and Mary Ann Silver, St James the Less Churchyard, Burchetts Green, Maidenhead.

"In memory of Augusta Silver Born June 15th 1842 Died April 3rd 1860 Also of Annette Silver Born May 24th 1850 Died 13th April 1861
Also of Mary wife of Richard Silver and mother of the above Born March 1st 1818 Died July 15th 1881
~ Who so ever liveth and believeth in me shall never die - St John XI 26 ~"
Augusta Silver was born in 1842 and Annette Silver in 1860 to Richard and Ann Silver nee Kuy.
Richard Silver was born in 1818 in Burghfield Berkshire. On 16th March 1838 in Cookham Berkshire, he married Mary Kuy. They are listed on the 1851 Census living in "Tittle Row" with their children Joseph Love, Augusta (spelt Agusta), Agnes and 11 month old Annette. At that time Richard was a carpenter employing five men. Mary was a dress maker.
In 1849 the foundation stone to St James the Less church in Burchetts Green Maidenhead was laid. The architect Richard Cromwell Carpenter employed Richard Silver and his team to build the church that still stands there to this day. The small round window in the west wall
was given to the Church by Richard Silver.
Sadly in both 1860 and 1861 the family was beset by double tragedy when 18 year old Augusta passed away follwed closely by his 11 year old sister Annette. Maybe this is why Richard threw himself in to politics and the running of his beloved town, Maidenhead.
Richard was elected to Maidenhead Town Council in 1870, becoming Alderman from 1890 and Mayor of Maidenhead in 1872-73 and again in 1877-78. He passed awat at his home The Walnuts, Tittle Row on 17th December 1910. In his obituary his was described as;
"A keen antiquarian. His late residence, Etruria stands on the site of an old Roman villa, where Mr Silver unearthed some valuable pottery & specimens of which are to be seen at the British Museum and at the Maidenhead Museum."
After the death of his wife Mary in 1881 Richard married Jane Stuchbery in Cookham in 1883.
Richard and Jane are listed on the 1901 Census as living at Etruria along with their servants, Elizabeth Gibson and Jane Sealey, my husband's great grandmother.

West wall of st James the Less Church in Burchetts Green Maidenhead, showing the small round window given by Richard Silver
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