
The
upkeep and well-being of the cemetery and closed churchyard in Pateley
Bridge are overseen by local volunteers who are members of the Friends
Group, which was established in Spring 2004. Harrogate Borough Council
has the responsibility to keep the cemetery and churchyard safe
and tidy and has the overall responsibility for maintenance and management of both. The Group works in association with them and is insured for small working parties, gardening, sweeping leaves, and planting. Many of the memorials have, unfortunately, had to be lowered
for health and safety reasons but recently over 20 headstones and the listed octagonal memorial have been reinstated, thanks to Pateley Bridge Town Council, Harrogate Borough Council Bereavement Services, and the Parochial Church Council working in partnership through the agency of the Friends Group.
The Group is affiliated
to the National Federation of Cemetery Friends. Membership of the
Group is open to anyone with an interest in the cemetery and churchyard.
Further information is available from the Chairman: Mr John Hone, Grassfield Close, Pateley Bridge, HG3 5JR (Tel. 01423 711471), the Nidderdale Museum and Nidderdale AONB.
The Cemetery
Our
cemetery is an important record of the social history of our area.
It could be said to contain the biography of our community, and
thus makes a special contribution to the heritage of Pateley Bridge.
To reach the cemetery follow the Outer Heritage Trail by walking
up the high street, following the road round to the right. Turn
left following the Panorama Walk sign. Follow the path uphill and
turn into the cemetery at Bishopdale House. There are 950 memorials
in a gently sloping location, with magnificent views over the village,
towards Greenhow and up Nidderdale.
The Closed Churchyard
The
closed churchyard of St Mary’s can be reached through a gate at
the top of the cemetery, where you can then rejoin the Outer Heritage
Trail.
"All you that come our graves to see
As you are now, so once were we,
As we are now, so must you be.
We in our youth were snatched away
Therefore repent make no delay"
In memory of Mercey (d.1795, age 3), John (d.1796, age 21), & Ann (d.1797, age 18) Colling
There are 231
memorials in the churchyard, some dating back to the seventeenth
century. Two are listed, including one to Mr Purse, an
octagonal shaft on an octagonal plinth (2m approx. to SE of chancel) and one to Thomas Green (approx. 2m to W
of tower), with an interesting skull and crossbones design.
A local
mason, William Paley, and some of his family are buried here, as
is a former local schoolmaster, William Swires. The Harker family
is recognised in a magnificent memorial near the kissing gate into
Old Church Lane. All the headstones have some historical interest;
many are decorated and there is a range of skilfully carved lettering. The oldest are dated 1684 and 1697 and the oldest grave occupant, Mary Myers, was apparently aged 120 years (SW, near gate to cemetery). There are more than 20 yews, some centuries old, several holly and beech trees, and laurels. Snowdrop and other planting began in 2004, and 10 bird boxes were installed in Spring 2006 by Nidderdale AONB volunteers.
The Outer Heritage Trail
follows the path around the old church and goes through a kissing
gate on the right. Cross a field, keeping the old barn on the right,
and look back for views towards the cemetery and churchyard and
across and up Nidderdale.
The Church of St. Mary
the Virgin, Pateley Bridge
There
was first mention of a parochial chapel here in 1320, although it
is possible there was one earlier. The original building suggests
a simple almost square form with small two-light windows except
for the east window, which has four lights divided by a transom.
Part of the church was reconstructed in the seventeenth century,
and the tower was added in 1691.
In 1724 a faculty was
granted for a gallery; in fact, there were three galleries and the
square blocks of stone standing above the floor level most probably
carried pillars to support them.
The church began to fall
into decay at the start of the nineteenth century and it was closed
in 1826 when it became too small for the congregation, too expensive
to repair and too inconvenient to reach. A fifteenth century bell
from the old church now rests in St. Cuthbert’s, Pateley Bridge.
Little is known of the interior fittings but an early oak Bible
box is housed in the Nidderdale Museum.
A memorial stone inside
the church records that, in memory of William Harker of Harefield,
his elder daughter Gertrude Elizabeth Illingworth in 1906 had the
whole ruin repaired and pointed.
Before the existence
of the present cemetery with its chapel (now closed) a portion of
the nave of St Mary’s was roofed over for the use of burial services.
This was known as a chapel within the church, but was demolished
in the 1880s. The Friends Group arranges for the tower to be opened to the public for the Heritage Weekend in September. An information leaflet is available.
As Muriel Swires states
in her book: “The atmosphere surrounding this little plot is calm
and peaceful – so let it ever be”.
Further information in:
Muriel Swires, The Church of St. Mary Pateley Bridge (undated; copies
available in St. Cuthbert’s Church, Pateley Bridge, £1.00). |