Lay cemetery, car park and now landscaped garden
Please bear with us...
College Green is the area to the south and west of the Cathedral, comprising to the west the former Great Court and to the south, the subject of this page, the former lay cemetery. In its original form the cemetery occupied the area all the way to the precinct's southern perimeter. It was separated from the Great Court by a wall that, until it was removed in 1768, ran from King Edward's Gate to the south-west corner of the cathedral. To the east, the other side of a wall that until 1858 ran from near St. Michael's Gate to the south transept, lay the monk's cemetery.
Burials were being conducted in the lay cemetery pretty much from the time of the abbey's consecration, and the area was possibly also the location of Anglo-Saxon burials back to the time Osric established the first Minster in the area. Evidence, in the form of burials without coffins, suggests the humbler people of Gloucester were buried farthest from the Cathedral.
Building on the peripheries of the lay cemetery had begun by 1616, and by 1649 houses lined the southern precinct wall and the eastern cemetery wall. A 1780 map shows the "Burying Ground" had been reduced in size to the area just south of the Cathedral, between porch and transept and extending not quite as far as the stone circle feature in today's landscaped gardens. By 1788 most gravestones had been laid flat or removed, and the cemetery was closed in 1857.
Four properties line the south side today, all of which incorporate the abbey wall at the rear of the property (a fifth, No. 5, was demolished 1891 as part of the widening of College Street):
Another four properties line the east side, built against the west side of the former cemetery wall:
As part of the Project Pilgrim program, the car park the lay cemetery had become in the age of the internal combustion engine was transformed into the landscaped garden it is today. Tombstones laid into the grass area to the immediate south of the Cathedral are the only obvious reminders of what lies beneath. But if, as you walk the diagonal path between St. Michael's Gate and the south porch, you can tear your eyes from the Cathedral and look down at the flagstones, you might notice a small cluster of inscribed stones about half way along.
Historic Gloucester: An Illustrated Guide to the City and its Buildings
© 2020–2024 All images copyright Shadowed Eyes unless otherwise credited