Heritage Cabinets
This is a collection of memorabilia at St Giles’ church celebrating some of the lives of the more famous people buried in our graveyard.
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| ID | Person buried in the graveyard | Claim to fame | ||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | Albert Elliot 'Smiler' Marshall 1897 - 2005 |
Known to all as 'Smiler', he was a First World War Veteran and lived in Agates Lane from 1940 until he died in 2005 aged 108.
He had learned to ride at the age of six, won a riding competition aged eighty-five, and continued riding until his late nineties, and sometimes even brought his horse to church! Lying about his age, he had joined the Essex Yeomanry in 1915. Such was the pace of change in the First World War that whilst he started as a cavalryman, he ended it as a machine gunner. He was the last surviving British cavalryman; their job was to break through the enemy lines and to hold the position until the infantry arrived. He was the last survivor of the Battle of the Somme in 1916 and was a holder of the Légion d'honneur. On his and his wife's grave, it says "N. M. G. T. T.". This stands for Nearer My God To Thee, which was Smiler's favourite hymn. It was taught to him by his Sunday school teacher, who lost his life on the Titanic. Coincidentally, in St Giles' church is a plaque in memory of George Harry Hunt, who died on the Titanic. The plaque reads "To the glory of God and sacred to the memory of George Harry Hunt of this Parish. A passenger on the ill-fated R.M.S. Titanic which was lost April 15th 1912. Aged 34 years. 'Nearer my God to thee'". Smiler sang this hymn when, following a shell blast, he was trapped in the thick mud and couldn't move. He was found and rescued, but two friends with him were lost in the mud and never seen again.
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| 2 | Captain Henry Reynolds VC, MC 1883 - 1948 |
The only holder of a VC in the graveyard, which he was awarded "For most conspicuous bravery on the 20th September 1917." This medal is in the Royal Scots Regiment Museum, Edinburgh.
Capt Henry Reynolds was born at Whilton, Northamptonshire. He was serving in the 12th Battalion, The Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment) when he was awarded the Victoria Cross for Valour. The award was published in the London Gazette on the 8th November 1917, the citation reading: On 20 September 1917, near Frezenburg, Belgium, Captain Reynolds's company were suffering heavy casualties from enemy machine-guns and a pill-box. Captain Reynolds reorganised his men and then proceeded alone, rushing from shell-hole to shell-hole under heavy fire. When near the pill-box he threw a grenade which should have fallen inside, but the entrance was blocked, so crawling to the entrance he forced a phosphorous grenade in. This set the place on fire, killing three and the remainder surrendered with two machine-guns. Afterwards, although wounded, Captain Reynolds captured another objective, with 70 prisoners and two more machine-guns. He died at Carshalton, Surrey. His medal is in the Royal Scots Regiment Museum, Edinburgh.
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| 3 | Michel Jean Trembley 1936 - 2024 |
One of the 888,246 Paul Cummins ceramic poppies from the Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red installation at the Tower of London Centenary Display, 2014. It was purchased in memory of Second Lieutenant Sydney Clark East (Michel Trembley's grandfather).
The poppy was kindly donated by Sheila Wadsworth in memory of her husband, buried at St Giles', and his grandfather who, listed 'missing', has no known burial place.
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| 4 | Ernest William Blackman c.1886 - 1943 Thomas Alfred Bushell c.1897 - 1961 John Harrison Johnston c.1889 - 1964 Thomas George Lynes c.1898 - 1933 William John Martin c.1880 - 1950 William Rank c.1881 - 1936 Arthur Henry Stevens c.1894 - 1965 |
Seven of the disabled First World War soldiers who all lived in Purcells Close and worked for Ashtead Potters Limited 1923 - 1935.
Thomas Alfred Bushell's gravestone says "Who suffered in silence". More examples of their work can be seen at:
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| Right Hand Cabinet | ||||||||||||||||||||
| ID | Person buried in the graveyard | Claim to fame | ||||||||||||||||||
| 5 | John Scott 1851 - 1939 |
He was the Managing Director of Hampson & Scott Limited, based in Walsall. They described themselves as "Manufacturers of leather goods for sport and travel, fancy leather articles of all kinds, and proprietors of Scott's Safety Stirrup."
He was a founder member, life member, and at one time President of the Walsall Chamber of Commerce. In 1885, he was given the first of at least six patents for safety stirrups. He retired in 1916 and moved to Ashtead, living in Woodfield Lane.
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| 6 | Sarah Janet Cotes née Duncan 1861 - 1922 |
Sara Jeannette Duncan was a journalist, novelist and playwright. Her childhood nickname was Redney. Some Canadians view her as their equivalent of Jane Austen. In 2014, she was named a "National Historic Person" on the advice of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada.
Born Sarah Janet Duncan on 22 December 1861, she was 12½ when, just 3 miles from her home, Alexander Graham Bell conceived the fundamental idea of the telephone. Outside the house where she was born, 96 West Street, Brantford, Canada West (now Ontario), are two plaques in her honour. In 1890, she published her first book, 'A Social Departure', based on dispatches produced during her trip around the world. Whilst in Calcutta, she met a civil servant, Everard Charles Cotes, who was working as an entomologist in the Indian Museum. He proposed to her at the Taj Mahal, and they were married in 1890. Though they both travelled extensively and separately. With Everard, she moved to London and then to Barnett Wood Lodge [otherwise Malden Lodge], Barnett Wood Lane. The dates are unclear, but it seems they bought the house in 1921 from Sir Courtenay Walter Bennett, but the house needed a lot of work, and they didn't move in until 1922. Marian Fowler places Barnett Wood Lodge near Green Lane, but it was probably further down the road towards Leatherhead. Duncan was taken ill whilst gardening at her home in June 1922 and sadly died on 22 July 1922, aged 60, of chronic lung disease. Her gravestone says, "This leaf has blown far".
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| 7 | Sir Thomas Little Heath 1861 - 1940 |
A Civil servant and authority on ancient mathematics. He rose to become the joint Head of the Treasury and then, before his retirement, the Comptroller General of the National Debt Office. But during his evenings, he wrote scholarly books about Greek Mathematics and Greek Astronomy. The article about him in the 'Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society' described him as "one of the most learned and industrious scholars of our time".
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| 8 | Edward Alexander Coles MacCurdy 1871 - 1957 |
Translated Leonardo da Vinci's diaries out of their original medieval Italian mirror writing. In recognition of this, he was made a member of the exclusive Athenaeum Club.
On the front page of the Daily Express, Friday, 29 September 1950, was a short article entitled 'A Family Feud'. 'Mr Edward Alexander Coles MacCurdy, of Ashtead, Surrey, has a standing dispute with his family. He always signs himself MacCurdy. But his four daughters and two sons sign McCurdy. Says Mr MacCurdy: "I do not like these slovenly scriveners' contractions."'
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| 9 | Sylvia Winifred Annette MacCurdy 1876 - 1976 |
Wrote her autobiography in her early 1930s, entitled "Sylvia: A Victorian Childhood". It is the story of a typical, if you were well off, family life in the late Victorian and Edwardian era.
Note her name on the book is Sylvia McCurdy, see Edward Alexander Coles MacCurdy for an explanation!
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| 10 | (John) Beverley Goodway 1943 - 2012 |
A photographer used by many publishers for their book covers
As Beverley Goodway, he worked for The Sun from 1968 until 2003.
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| 11 | Sir Robert Henry Davis 1871 - 1965 |
Was the Managing Director of Siebe Gorman & Co. Ltd and inventor of the Davis Submersible Decompression Chamber (DSDC) and the Davis Submerged Escape Apparatus (DSEA), which was an early form of Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus (SCUBA).
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| 12 | Stella Vivian Cunliffe MBE 1917 - 2012 |
Stella Cunliffe was head girl at Parsons Mead School* and one of their first pupils to attend university and the first to get a science degree, reading statistics at the London School of Economics. Before the end of World War 2, she volunteered for the Guides International Service, travelling across Europe and was one of the first civilians into Belsen. After the war, she worked at the Home Office and became the first woman Director of Statistics and then the first woman President of the Royal Statistical Society.
* Parsons Mead School is now a housing estate consisting of Mulberry Way, Elliston Way (named after Jessie Elliston, who moved her school to the site in 1904), Dawson Court and Cunliffe Court (named after Stella, their most famous student).
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| 13 | Lieutenant Commander Rupert T. Gould RN 1890 - 1948 |
He is most famous for restoring John Harrison's 'Longitude clocks'. They are now the main attraction in the National Maritime Museum's Time and Longitude gallery.
The clock story is celebrated in Dova Sobel's 1998 best-seller "Longitude", which was made into the TV mini-series "Longitude". These follow the parallel stories of the 18th-century clockmaker John Harrison building the marine chronometers and the 20th-century Rupert Gould horologist restoring the three clocks and a watch between June 1920 and February 1933 at his home at 41, Woodfield Lane. The site is now occupied by the Library and Moat Court.
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| 14 | N/A | A full-size copy of a bronze World War 1 memorial plaque.
According to the Imperial War Museum these were colloquially known as a "Death Plaque", "Dead Man's Penny", or "Widow's Penny". One was given to the next of kin of the person killed in the war. A memorial plaque would have had the name of the deceased engraved in the blank space above the lion's head.
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| 15 | John Payne Jennings 1843 - 1926 |
John Payne-Jennings was a professional photographer who first rose to fame in the 1860s and 1870s with his albumen photographs stuck by hand into books such as Views in Oxfordshire, Furness Abbey and Its Neighbourhood, and The English Lakes.
These works of the English and also Irish countryside were then used in the late 1870s to illustrate the anthologies of many poets, including John Milton, Thomas Moore, William Wordsworth, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Henry Longfellow, and Lord Byron. The Works of Alfred Tennyson, Poet Laureate, published in 1878, was 737 pages long with eight Photographic Illustrations by Payne Jennings, plus a photograph of Tennyson, and four Drawings by the artist Helen Haywood. John's father, William John Jennings, also buried at St Giles' graveyard, came to Ashtead c.1880. It was around the time of his father's death, in 1886, that John Payne Jennings came to Ashtead from London. Even then, he was considered the greatest landscape photographer of all time, but his financial success was about to begin. He was approached by the Great Eastern Railway Company to produce photographs both for tourist guides, e.g. Sun Pictures of the Norfolk Broads - One Hundred Photographs from Nature of the Rivers and Broads of Norfolk and Suffolk, but also as prints for both Great Eastern Railway carriages and the waiting room in Liverpool Street Station. Great Eastern Railway was keen to encourage tourism, as its trains were for most people the only means of getting there. The Sun Pictures of the Norfolk Broads book was printed at least four times between 1891 and 1897. Similar books were also published: Summer Holidays in North East England and Photo Pictures in East Anglia. The photographs in the earliest of these books were printed using the collotype printing process, the later books using the halftone method, but the prints for the carriages, of which 110,000 were needed in one year, would have needed a more traditional darkroom. Was this set up in the Greville Works? Or did he still use W A Mansell & Co in London as he had done since the mid 1870s?
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| 16 | James William Thomas Cadett 1852 - 1949 |
James Cadett and his brother-in-law, Walter Neall, formed Cadett and Neall in August 1892. Their sales of Photographic dry plates increased rapidly, and by 1898, they had the largest sales in the UK, and the three biggest factories in Ashtead: Greville Works, Victoria Works, and Crampshaw Works. Greville Works is now four flats on Greville Close; Victoria Works was later used as the factory for Ashtead Potters Limited. It was finally demolished, and Lime Tree Court was built in its place; Crampshaw Works was demolished, and Clarendon Mews was built in its place.
In June 1903, Cadett & Neall were taken over by Kodak. By 1908, everything Cadett & Neall was closed down and moved to Kodak's premises in Wealdstone, Harrow.
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