Old Protestant Cemetery, George Town

Old Protestant Cemetery

Grave of Capt. Francis Light
Details
Established 1786
Location George Town, Penang
Country Malaysia
Type Protestant cemetery

The Old Protestant Cemetery, also known as Northam Road Cemetery, is a disused Christian cemetery in George Town, Penang, Malaysia. After more than a century of neglect, it is now listed as a Class 1 Heritage Site and is maintained by the Penang Heritage Trust.

The cemetery lies in a grove of frangipani trees[1] along Northam Road (now Jalan Sultan Ahmad Shah) near the historic core of George Town, only metres away from the beachfront and a short walk from the Eastern & Oriental Hotel.

Established in 1786, the cemetery is of significant historic interest: it is older than many better-known burial grounds such as Père Lachaise in Paris, Powązki in Warsaw, the Zentralfriedhof in Vienna, and Highgate Cemetery in London. It is also 35 years older than the Old Protestant Cemetery in Macau. In 2012, conservation works were undertaken to protect and preserve the site, although there was some concern about how the restoration was done.[2]

History and description

Northam Road Cemetery was the first cemetery to be consecrated after Captain Francis Light founded the Prince of Wales Island Settlement in 1786. The first recorded burial was of Lt. William Murray of the Bengal Artillery in 1787; the grave marker is no longer extant.[3][4] The earliest surviving grave marker is that of one H.D.D. Cunningham from 1789 (the exact location of his/her grave within the grounds is unknown, though the plaque survives on a wall of the cemetery). The last person to be buried at the cemetery was Cornelia Josephine Van Someren in 1892. After that, the cemetery was closed and subsequent Christian burials have been carried out in the Western Road Cemetery.

The cemetery also contains 12 Chinese graves, refugees of the Taiping Rebellion, as well as the graves of some of Penang's early German merchants and their relatives. There are at least two Armenian graves. Of around 500 graves, over 25% are not identifiable due to weathering and damage, the latter due in part to vandals and drug addicts who often hide out at the relatively secluded cemetery. The tablets of many tombs have fallen off; some, which could not be matched to their tombs, are mounted on the south wall.

A remarkable portion of the graves are of people who died before reaching 50 years of age; many of the men and women buried are in their twenties and thirties. Several graves belong to infants - a poignant reminder of the harsh conditions the early settlers encountered in Penang.

Behind this cemetery, accessible through a small door in the wall, is the adjacent Roman Catholic Cemetery.

Restoration and conservation efforts

Despite its extremely rich historical value (George Town's founder Francis Light, among other notables, is buried there), the cemetery is seldom mentioned in tourist brochures and is consequently less often visited than other sites in Penang. The relative lack of attention, as well as the area's somewhat obscure location, contributed to its dilapidated appearance.[5]

The first known clean-up of the cemetery was in 1894 by British authorities, who restored Light's grave on the centennial of his death. The cemetery had been closed to new burials two years earlier.

No further restoration works took place at the cemetery until 1993, when the Penang Heritage Trust, aided by funds from French plantation company SOCFIN, repaired and cleaned the boundary walls and tombstones. Faded inscriptions were also re-inked, and a large signboard in Malay and English with a site plan of important tombs was put up. The cemetery was reopened in time for Francis Light's bicentennial. Another restoration exercise was organised in 2007.[6]

In 2012, the cemetery underwent a major conservation effort, a joint project by the Penang Municipal Council, the Penang Heritage Trust, and George Town World Heritage Inc, involving a complete overhaul of the site.[7][8] The first phase ended on 17 July 2012 and saw the removal of weeds, mosses and fungi on the headstones. The second phase entailed repairs to the tomb structures, and the removal of 80 trees encroaching on the old graves, and installing such amenities as a walkway, seats and rest areas for visitors.

Experts however expressed concern that the existing damage to the tombs may have been further aggravated by landscaping workers going about their rounds without supervision.[9] At least one excavator was photographed driving dangerously close to the tombs, and several tombstones have been cracked, shattered, or chipped. Heritage enthusiasts voiced outrage at the reckless methods and utter disregard shown by these contract workers.[10]

Restoration works were completed by the end of 2012. Many of the frangipani trees have been trimmed or cleared, and the cemetery is now more readily visible to passers-by.

In most cases the tombstones have been thoroughly cleaned. Two centuries' worth of grime and mould have been removed, revealing white plaster tombs and even gleaming marble stones. Temporary grave markers, consisting of letters and serial numbers, have been put up by the authorities at all recognisable gravesites, presumably for future identification based on historical records.

Notable interments

The cemetery is the final resting place of many of early Penang's most influential residents, including its founder and four Governors. A partial list is as follows:

An extensive record of known burials at the cemetery can be found at Find a Grave.[11]

References

External links

Coordinates: 5°25′21″N 100°20′00″E / 5.42255°N 100.333231°E / 5.42255; 100.333231

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