Penguin General Cemetery

Penguin General Cemetery

Penguin General Cemetery's interpretive signage
Details
Established 1885
Location Penguin, Tasmania
Country Australia
Coordinates 41°06′26″S 146°03′52″E / 41.10709°S 146.06442°E / -41.10709; 146.06442Coordinates: 41°06′26″S 146°03′52″E / 41.10709°S 146.06442°E / -41.10709; 146.06442
Find a Grave Penguin General Cemetery at Find a Grave

Penguin General Cemetery was gazetted a public cemetery in 1897; it overlooks the township of Penguin and the Bass Strait in Tasmania, Australia. It is situated on Main Street, a kilometre west of the town’s Post Office, on land originally owned by Reverend W.H. Walton of the Primitive Methodist Church.[1]

History

Baby John Lancaster was Penguin’s first death, in 1865, four years after European settlement.[2] The first recorded burial was that of Eliza Ann Hales. She was buried in the cemetery on 23 January 1869. Her grave is marked with a headstone. The most complete and up-to-date burial records as well as a detailed plot burial map are available on Council's website.[3][4][5]

A community meeting on 28 January 1885 established the Penguin Cemetery Trust.[6] Twelve years and many burials later, the site was gazetted as a public cemetery, known then as the Penguin Public Cemetery. The first meeting of the Trust committee was held on 6 January 1886; the last recorded meeting on 24 June 1943.

Meeting minutes indicate that in its earlier days the cemetery was portioned off according to religious denomination, however this is not evident today. Minutes also indicate additional lands were purchased as demand grew. In 1957 the cemetery opened its new section, essentially delineating the old from the new. The cemetery closed in 1977 when the nearby Penguin/Ulverstone Lawn Cemetery opened on South Road. A few burials still take place in the Penguin Cemetery.[1]

Heritage-listing

Penguin's colourful heritage

Penguin General Cemetery was heritage-listed in 2007 under Tasmania’s Historic Cultural Heritage Act 1995, for its evolutionary pattern of Penguin life, its research potential, community significance, and associations with Tasmanian history.[7][8][9] At rest here are Bounty immigrants of the 1850s, returned soldiers from the Boer, First and Second World Wars, many of the town’s most notable former residents, as well as former convicts (pictured).

Penguin History Group

Updated Penguin General Cemetery plot burial information

The Penguin History Group has played a role in the cemetery’s recent history.[10] Checking the cemetery map with the records and headstones began in 1994. This information was compiled by the Penguin History Group and published in 2003 in the Penguin Cemetery Old and New Sections.[1] In 2002 members of the Penguin History Group, with materials donated by Central Coast Council, installed the onsite map and its shelter. A Bi-Centenary grant in 2004 of $3,500 enabled erection of entry gateposts and plot marker plaques.

Recent Research

Penguin’s 1915 mystery ‘John Doe’

2006 saw renewed interest in the cemetery, sparked essentially by the chance discovery of a 1915 ‘John Doe’ burial in the records.[11] Buried at the back edge of the cemetery, side-by-side with six other pioneers buried by the state, the discovery generated community interest, which resulted in researching the seven burials and erecting individual gravestones for each.[12][13]

Research suggests the mystery person may have been Jeremiah or Michael Clifford, an Irishman in his 40s.[14] The most comprehensive account of the circumstance of his death comes from the statewide newspaper: The Mercury, under the heading “A bush tragedy – Dead Body Of Man Found – Gunshot Wound To The Head – Supposed Case Of Suicide”.[15] The case for his presumed identity rests on the Police Gazette records.[16][17] The remains are still unidentified.

Much is already published on Penguin’s heritage-listed cemetery.[18][19]This has generated investment in showcasing it as a tourist magnet, including a dedicated small internal garden in memory of the tens of unnamed babies buried in the old section.[20][21][22][23]

Such has been the response to the cemetery's ongoing and widespread publicity that the Tasmanian Association for Hospice & Palliative Care (TAH&PC) funded the inaugural Penguin Twilight Celebration of the Dead - music among the tombstones.[24][25][26]

This unusual, even unique, event held on Wednesday 7 January 2015 at 7pm in the cemetery was well supported by the broader Penguin community. It marked the centenary of the cemetery's unknown burial. The one-hour musical extravaganza, involving pipers, vocalists, choir, violinist, flautist and guitarist had the crowd of 120-150 people meandering around six of the more significant tombstones. The celebration culminated in the magnificent and moving butterfly release in the commemorative garden dedicated to the tens of unnamed babies in the cemetery.[27][28][29][30]

Photographic images of all headstones are available online at the Australian Cemeteries Index. Most recently, the Penguin community organized an onsite fundraiser to preserve the cemetery's history. The fundraiser was a Long Table dinner within the cemetery grounds, another truly unique experience, and once again bringing the cemetery alive.[31][32][33][34] Attended by 36 guests the monies raised go towards commissioning an art-piece in the commemorative garden for the 80 or so unnamed babies buried in the grounds.[35][36]

Penguin's leadership in novel uses for old cemeteries is being emulated across Australia.[37]

References

Just one of the colourful markers to Penguin and its heritage cemetery
  1. 1 2 3 Penguin Cemetery, Old and New Sections. State Library of Tasmania: Penguin History Group Inc. 2011. p. 1.
  2. Barker, Arthur (1956). Penguin's Pioneering Days. State Library of Tasmania: Penguin Advocate. p. 3.
  3. "Central Coast Council burial records". Central Coast Council. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  4. Lamont, Damita. "Cemetery details online". The Advocate. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  5. Rheinberger, Joel. "Documenting Penguin General Cemetery". ABC Radio Hobart. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  6. Minutes of the Penguin Cemetery Trust. State Library of Tasmania, Archives. 1886.
  7. "Tasmanian Heritage Register" (PDF). Heritage Tasmania. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  8. Hartley, Ross (June 2012). "Best practice in assessing historic and heritage cemetery gravestones for deterioration". Australian Family Tree Connections: 30–33.
  9. "Council to fork out for heritage fight". The Advocate. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  10. Hartley, Ross (October 2008). "Penguin honours it paupers with headstones". Australian Family Tree Connections: 24–27.
  11. Hartley, Ross (November 2010). "Tasmania's 1915 'John Doe' recently identified as possibly Jeremiah or Michael Clifford". Irish Roots (3): 12–13.
  12. White, Kye. "Hey, Monty! You can leave your hat on for this charity". The Advocate. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
  13. Keesing, Ann (2014). Pauper Row Cemetery Hill Penguin. Penguin: Ann Keesing. p. 3.
  14. "Who is the Irishman buried in Tasmania after 1915 death". The Kerryman. 30 May 2012.
  15. "A bush tragedy". The Mercury. 7 January 1915.
  16. Police Gazette of Tasmania. January 1915. p. 16.
  17. Police Gazette of Tasmania. February 1915. p. 32.
  18. Hartley, Ross (2012). Penguin General Cemetery: Compendium of published research papers. State Library of Tasmania. pp. 1–35.
  19. "Adopt a grave" (PDF). The Central Coast Voice. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  20. Bird, Isabel. "Cemetery has tourist potential". The Examiner. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  21. "Looking for ancestors in the Penguin General Cemetery". ABC National Radio. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  22. Hartley, Ross. "Cemetery makeover". The Advocate. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  23. "Naked ambition: Penguin cemetery to be tourism hotspot". ABC National Radio. Retrieved 4 September 2014.
  24. "Penguin's celebration of the dead". ABC National Radio. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  25. "Penguin's twilight celebration of the dead" (PDF). Central Coast Tourism News & Events Newsletter. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  26. Lamont, Damita. "Music pays tribute to cemetery's unknown". The Advocate. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  27. Wilson, Stuart. "Music-among-the-tombstones-pictures-photos". The Advocate. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  28. Woods, Emily. "Penguin-cemetery-event-celebrates-life-with-music". The Advocate. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  29. Eaves, Rick. "Penguin's Twilight Celebration of the Dead breaks new cultural ground in a heritage-listed cemetery". ABC Northern Tasmania. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  30. "Penguin General Cemetery". Southern Cross News Tasmania. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  31. Lamont, Damita. "Long table dinner to help preserve history". The Advocate. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  32. Ruddick, Baz. "Penguin cemetery hosting a fundraising dinner". The Advocate. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  33. "Living outside the rectangle - Developing novel ideas for using our community cemeteries" (PDF). Tasmanian Hospice & Palliative care Forum. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
  34. Vowles, Gill (27 June 2015). "Dead serious". Tas Weekend. p. 7.
  35. "Dining among the tombstones at Penguin" (PDF). The Central Coast Voice. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  36. "Deathly dinner". Southern Cross News Tasmania. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  37. "Afternoons in the Garden Chapel a series of intimate performances at Karrakatta Cemetery". Western Australian Government. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
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