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Bolton Street Cemetery

Bolton Street Memorial Park
Thorndon Cemetery 1.jpg
View of the cemetery in Bolton Street Memorial Park, with central city high-rises in the background
Map showing the location of Bolton Street Memorial Park
Map showing the location of Bolton Street Memorial Park
Location within Wellington
Location Wellington
Nearest city Wellington, New Zealand
Coordinates 41°16′44″S 174°46′23″E / 41.27889°S 174.77306°E / -41.27889; 174.77306Coordinates: 41°16′44″S 174°46′23″E / 41.27889°S 174.77306°E / -41.27889; 174.77306
Area 18 acres (7.3 ha) including area acquired for motorway through the park
Established 1840 as a cemetery and later converted to park
Governing body New Parks and Recreation Department of the Wellington City Council

Bolton Street Memorial Park, formerly known as Bolton Street Cemetery, is the oldest cemetery in Wellington, New Zealand. Dating back to 1840, many notable people are buried here. Situated in the suburb of Thorndon, the Wellington City Council's memorial trail number five covers the Bolton Street Memorial Park and visits notable graves, points of interest, lookouts and buildings.

The park's history could probably be the history of those buried there; old pioneers are buried in the Victorian-type cemetery. Established as a cemetery in 1840 on the outskirts of the new town of Wellington, separate burial areas were designated for Anglicans, Jews and Roman Catholics. Many notable people of the town were buried there, including William Wakefield, Wellington's founder. It was closed for burials in 1892, except for the new burials of kins; this was due to inadequate space as the city grew.

In 1960, the City Council's urban plan established a need for a motorway, a part of which would be routed through the cemetery. Seven years later, the City Council passed an act to build a motorway through the park. As a result, the cemetery was closed as a burial ground from March 1967 through 1971. The historic cemetery, bisected by the Wellington Urban Motorway, caused extensive controversy at the time. The new motorway opened in 1978, and in the same year, the Wellington City Council Parks renamed the cemetery as the Bolton Street Memorial Park. Though the Friends of Bolton Street protested against the shifting of the graves, they did not stop construction of the road but ensured that the cemetery got a heritage status and the park got a reserve nomenclature. In spite of protests, about 3,700 graves were exhumed and relocated, most of whom were re-interred in a large vault beneath the park's lawn. The relocated parts of the cemetery with head stones are linked through a foot bridge over the road. Of the 8,500 people reported buried in the park, only 1334 headstones (made of marble or local stones) were traced and 35 are made in wood.

Historian Margaret Alington was commissioned to write a history of the cemetery. Her book, Unquiet Earth: a History of the Bolton Street Cemetery, was published in 1978.


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