Tottenham Park Cemetery is a small (2.4 hectares) burial ground in Edmonton, in the London Borough of Enfield. It was opened in 1912 by the Tottenham Park Cemetery Company, and originally used as a paupers' cemetery. Currently, it appears to be owned by Tottenham Park Chapel Ltd, formerly named Badgehurst (Holdings) Ltd. (who also manage Woodgrange Cemetery, Manor Park, London), and used primarily for Muslim burials. The "Friends of Tottenham Park Cemetery" was established in the early 1990s, and is a registered charity.
The cemetery contains a small brick Gothic chapel, which is derelict and in a state of considerable disrepair. Architecturally, it is of a similar style to the chapels at the South London Crematorium, Streatham Cemetery and Surbiton Cemetery, all of which were designed by John Bannen.
According to a report in the London Evening News of 2 November 1968:
On the night of Halloween 1968 a graveyard desecration by persons unknown occurred at Tottenham Park Cemetery in London. These persons arranged flowers taken from graves in circular patterns with arrows of blooms pointing to a new grave, which was uncovered. A coffin was opened and the body inside "disturbed". But their most macabre act was driving an iron stake in form a cross though the lid and into the breast of the corpse.
Though the identities and motivations of those responsible were never ascertained, general consensus at the time linked the desecration to events surrounding the Highgate Vampire case.
Coordinates: 51°37′18″N 0°03′03″W / 51.6216°N 0.0509°W