Bourne Hall Museum mounted a display on Horton Cemetery and they have very kindly let us use their text.
Horton Cemetery photographed on 28 February 1971 by LR James. We have been able to make out of the names on four of the headstones for details please go to the end of this article. Image courtesy of Surrey Libraries and is held in the Epsom & Ewell Local And Family History Centre Collection
When it was formed in 1888, the London County Council took over responsibility for thousands of the mentally ill. Their families could no longer look after them, or had never done so. Many of these people were elderly, and some had been living in workhouses. The LCC needed new buildings to house them, and in 1896 its Asylum Committee bought some land at Horton. It was a large area of land, capable of supporting five or six mental hospitals - the largest concentration of them in the country.
By 1898 it was clear that the Asylums Committee meant business. The hospital at the manor was almost finished, and plans were under way for another at Horton. The Epsom Council was most alarmed at this. The asylums were growing much faster than they had expected - soon there would be up to ten thousand people, a second town almost the size of Epsom itself. Some of them would be discharged after a short stay, but the hospital regime was set up to look after people rather than cure them. Many - perhaps most - would remain at Horton until they died. And then?
It was not so long ago - 1871, in fact - that the council had opened its own cemetery in Ashley road. This replaced the parish graveyard at St. Martin's church, where generations of the dead had been laid, ever since the days when Epsom was a Saxon village. Now it was a thriving Surrey town with a growing population, and room was running out. Conditions at St. Martin's had never reached the squalid state of London's overcrowded churchyards, but it had been touch and go, and the land at Ashley Road was purchased just in time. Besides, the councillors were rather proud of their new cemetery. It had a porter's lodge beside wrought iron gates, and the architect had given it two fine chapels, one for the Church of England and one for dissenters. In thirty years the cedar and pine trees had grown to shade the curving walks, and already there were citizens of Epsom resting under dignified monuments of white marble and rose granite.
In short, Epsom did not want the peace and dignity of its cemetery to be spoilt by an influx of pauper lunatics. For the winter of 1898, the councillors allowed a few burials on the uphill side, away from the gates, charging the usual fee of £1 per burial which was made for people who came from outside the town. But the Asylums Committee were told, firmly but politely, that they would need a cemetery of their own. And in the following spring Mr. Clifford Brown, the Asylums Engineer, came down to find a site.
Extract from the 1933 Ordnance Survey Map.
He was looking for a small plot of land, away from the hospitals themselves, but easy to get to. The corner of Hook Road and Horton Lane seemed to fit the bill; it was already owned by the LCC, and stood at some distance from the existing asylums at the Manor and Horton, as well as the proposed site of Long Grove. There was only one problem - unlike the Ashley Road cemetery, which was on a chalk slope, this site rested on the sticky clay soil of Horton. Water bubbled up in holes almost as soon as they were dug. The Borough Surveyor and the Medical Officer insisted that drains should be laid below the level of the graves to clear the water. It could run off into a holding pond on the other side of Horton Lane.
Throughout 1899, Brown was kept busy planning the new cemetery. It would hold 900 graves in rows on either side of a central path. Like the hospital grounds, it was to be marked off from the road by an iron fence, behind which there would be a raised bank planted with a privet hedge. Works cost £869, rather less than half what was originally budgeted, and the cost included £252 for a chapel provided by Messrs. William Harbrow. This was what used to be called a tin tabernacle: it had a wooden framework fitted with corrugated iron sheets to keep off the rain, and lined on the inside with felt and match boarding. Pointed windows and a little turret gave it an ecclesiastical character, but it was still a marked contrast with the detailed Gothic stonework of the Ashley Road chapels.
The Horton Cemetery Chapel also known as the Tin Tabernacle. Unfortunately this detail from a larger image only shows the roof over a thick hedge. Image courtesy of Jeremy Harte, Curator, Bourne Hall Museum (Opens in a new window)
On 31st July the cemetery received its first burial - Annie James, who had been at the Manor. Her shroud cost 8d, the gravediggers were paid 10/6d, and James Ockenden the undertaker received £1/12/6d. The Asylums Committee were anxious to keep down costs. They did not put up memorials, although they had no objections to these if they were provided by relatives. Sarah Hubbard was admitted to the Manor in August 1901, and died a month later; her brother put up a headstone shortly afterwards. Others were to follow, perhaps thirty or forty over the next five decades. This was a tiny proportion of those buried there, but most families were too poor to afford a memorial, or had lost touch altogether with their relatives at Horton.
The building of the Epsom Cluster of mental hospitals went on apace - the Epileptic Colony (afterwards St. Ebba's) in 1902, Long Grove in 1907 and West Park at last in 1924. The Manor continued to manage the cemetery, supported financially by the other hospitals. They were quite conscientious about its upkeep; double rows of poplar trees were planted in 1901, and two years later the cemetery was enlarged. When the chapel became dirty or untidy, the Asylums Engineer was told to sort it out. But things were still being done on the cheap. Several funerals were in the hands of Simpsons of Walworth, who sent down their hearse in charge of a shabby and unwashed driver. In 1906 he turned up with his two small children riding on the hearse. It was all rather lax, and not what one expected for a funeral.
Then there were problems with the drainage. More than a thousand grave spaces were available, each one ticketed with a metal marker, but more room was needed and by the 1920s up to three burials were being made in each grave. The coffins were wood, of course, and wood floats; if the grave filled with water, there could be distressing scenes. Alfred Hillier, who turned in his job as farm labourer in 1925 and applied for cemetery keeper (58/6d for a 47 hour week) had a tough time ahead of him.
If the Asylums Committee economised on graves, they were positively lavish when it came to places of worship. Each of the hospitals had a commanding chapel, large enough to accommodate most of the patients each Sunday. Church attendance was to be a soothing and orderly part of their routine, with the music of the hymns bringing back memories of a time before they were hospitalised. But funerals were held at the tin tabernacle, and were much smaller affairs. The chaplain or the free church minister would walk over - it was agreed that on wet days he could be driven, at the asylum's expense - and would conduct a brief service. The coffin would already be waiting in the chapel, having been wheeled down the lane on a small bier. Normally each individual received their own funeral service, but sometimes they were buried in batches.
Before this, the dead would have been resting in the mortuary chapel which was attached to each hospital. These had begun as annexes to the post-mortem rooms. It was part of a nurse's job to go round the wards in the morning and see if any patients had died during the night; then they could be removed with minimal fuss from their neighbours on either side. But later these buildings were fitted up as chapels of rest, with their own lying-in coffins. People who had no friends outside the hospital could be passed on for dissection - one shilling per body was the going rate in 1903 - although at the request of their community, the bodies of Jewish patients were not sold.
The First World War saw an upheaval in the life of the Epsom Cluster. Horton Hospital was closed, and its 2,100 patients were transferred to other institutions. In 1915 Horton reopened as a war hospital, treating wounded soldiers who had been brought back from the horrors of the Front. The hospital was run by Lieutenant-Colonel Lord - Dr. Lord, as he had been when he was in charge of the asylum. One of his many duties was the burial of soldiers who had died of their wounds. Epsom Council were approached, as they had been in 1898, but this time the response was much more sympathetic and a small area at Ashley Road was designated as the Horton War Cemetery. This was maintained to a very high standard by the Imperial War Graves Commission: each soldier was marked by their own white headstone. Two memorials were put up for men who had died before the cemetery was established, and who were buried at Hook Road.
During World War II, Horton was once again made into a war hospital. In addition, the other hospitals catered for a number of soldiers, mostly foreign nationals, whose mental health had suffered under the stress of war. Those who died at Epsom were buried at the Hook Road cemetery, their graves marked by wooden crosses. There were other patients like George Saunders, an ambulance driver who worked through the Blitz until he was injured and had to be hospitalised; he was buried in 1942 with a small headstone.
The 1950s transformed the Epsom Cluster of hospitals. They were no longer supposed to be isolated, self-sufficient communities; now it was hoped that patients would stay for shorter periods, and that there would be fewer of them. Numbers fell from the thousands to the hundreds, and in 1955 the Hook Road cemetery was closed. The grounds continued to be maintained as a garden of rest, although the tin chapel disappeared. In its place was a small paved area, where the few headstones were set under a weeping willow tree, after being removed from their proper graves. The rest of the cemetery was maintained as a lawn under the trees.
It continued in good order until the 1970s, but meanwhile national attitudes to the great mental hospitals were undergoing a change. They were no longer seen as the answer to mental health problems, and a regional working party recommended that the Horton property should be sold to defray the expenses of care. The authorities had already lost interest in the cemetery and the remaining headstones were being vandalised. In 1983 the Regional Health Authority sold the land to Michael Heighes of Marque Securities in Kingswood. Mr. Heighes had no interest in maintaining the land as a cemetery; he was a property developer. Proposals to use it as a market garden or a car park came to nothing. The condition of the grounds grew worse with time. In 1996, when redevelopment of the hospital cluster was imminent, the first attempts were made to bring Hook Road cemetery back into the public memory.
Text courtesy of Jeremy Harte Curator Bourne Hall Museum (Opens in a new window)
The Horton Memorial
A former Epsom councillor has spoken of his disgust with the continuing neglect of Horton Hospital Cemetery.
Alan Carlson, who for years was one of the town's most popular Labour councillors was speaking at a special remembrance service at the Horton memorial monument, for which he campaigned when Mayor of Epsom and Ewell in 2001.
The generosity of the public concerned at the neglect of the privately owned Hook Road graveyard enabled Mr Carlson to arrange for an engraved granite memorial to be placed just outside the iron-railed cemetery.
Since its erection and its dedication in 2002 the monument has attracted a 'Steady stream of floral tributes.
Mr Carlson said: "It, is hardly ever without flowers or wreaths, surely a testament to how much this cemetery means to local people?
"However the conditions within the grounds remain a shocking insult to those laid to rest within and are an indictment of a system that allows such public land to get into the hands of property speculators who wish to create land banks against the prospect of future development opportuni-ties, with no regard to the sensitivity of the site."
Up to as many as 9,000 patients, war casualty soldiers and children lie buried within the old Horton Hospital site, but since the 1980s when the North West Thames Regional Authority sold it off it has been owned by Marque Securities a development company in Kingswood.
Director Michael Heighes bought the land for commercial purposes and future investment. But his bids to develop the site have met with refusal from Epsom and Ewell Council.
For his part Mr Heighes is still hoping to get permission one day to concrete over the graves and use the site for leisure development "suitable to that area".
At one time he asked if he would need special permission to turn the land into a pet cemetery.
Mr Heighes offered the council "a useful chunk" of the cemetery ground where they could have put the memorial, but in return wanted the go-ahead for developing the rest of the site, which the council refused.
At the remembrance service on November 10," wreaths and flowers were laid. A two-minute silence was observed and then 12 white doves were released to fly over the cemetery.
"This brought a sense of awe and wonder to the event, but the state of this derelict, untended former cemetery remains an insult to all of us who care. Some of us have not forgotten." added Mr Carlson. When asked if he would be tidying up the cemetery or selling it on to someone who-would, Michael Heights declined to comment.
An alphabetical list of burials is available on the following page: Horton Cemetery Burials.
The Surrey History Centre (Opens in a new window) also holds the Long Grove Hospital Post Mortem Examination Book, 1964-1969 (part of Collection ref: 6275.)
Other hospital records are widely dispersed - use this link to find out where Hospital Records Database (Opens in a new window)
Out of the few remaining gravestones shown in the photograph of Horton Cemetery at the top of this page, only four can just about be made out and read:
TO THE MEMORY OF
JANE GILCHRIST
WHO DIED AT EWELL
ON THE 4TH JANUARY 1918
AGED 25
INTERNED AT EPSOM ?
R.I.P
Jane Gilchrist was born in 1893- no more information has been found about her as there are two possible birth entries to choose from, Holborn London or West Derby Lancashire. Gilchrist could also have been her married name. Jane's death registration entry is Mar Q 1918 Epsom 2a 66
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
WILLIAM MUNK
DIED OCT ? 1905
AGED 25
SOUL SHALL ?
?
William Munk was born in1880 - no more information has been found about him as there are two possible birth entries to choose from, Lambeth or Biggleswade. William's death registration entry is Dec Q 1905 Epsom 2a 18
IN
LOVING MEMORY
OF
FANNY HODGSON
DIED OCT 20TH 1923
AGED 71 YEARS
R.I.P
Fanny Hodgson was born in 1852 - no more information has been found about her, as there are too many birth entries to choose from.
Hodgson could have also been her married name. Fanny's death registration entry is Dec 1923 Epsom 2a 42.
???
ANN BURROWS HOWKINS
DIED ? 16TH 1912
AGED 44
INTO THY HANDS
?
Annie Burrows Howkins was the daughter of Richard and Sarah Howkins who were married in the December quarter of 1861 in the registration district of Blaby Leicestershire. Annie was born in the June quarter of 1868 in the registration district of Rugby. Annie appears in the 1891 census aged 25, single and working as a cook in Camden Hill Road Kensington. Also working there, I believe, was her sister Elizabeth aged 28, also single and working as a housemaid. In the 1901 census both girls were still single and working together as maids in Longridge Road Kensington. In both censuses their surname was mis transcribed as Hawkins. Annie's death registration entry is Dec 1912 Epsom 2a 71.
One man, Private P. McMahon died in the Horton War Hospital and was buried within the Horton Estate Cemetery. He is, however commemorated within the CWGC plot in Ashley Road , with a special memorial. See picture. Why Private P. McMahon was the only soldier to be buried in the Horton Estate cemetery is a mystery.