The
probabilities are that simultaneous with the erection of the first
church, the ground immediately adjoining had been set apart as a place
of sepulture. Undoubted evidence could be furnished that for long it
formed the only public place of interment in the parish, and so largely
had its capacity been taxed, that in 1783 it was found to be “ in such a
crowded state as to cause serious danger to the church walls.” Prior to
this any parishioner was entitled to secure burial space within the
church, on payment of a small fee, but an Act of Session was then passed
that “in future none excepting an heritor or his family, and the
minister of the parish shall be buried within the church.” Since then
three separate extensions of the burial-ground have taken place, the
last one being of such a substantial character, that there is now ample
space available for the requirements of the parish for many years to
come. Up to the present time it may safely be computed that upwards of
15,000 persons have found their last resting place in this hallowed
spot.
In
the beginning of the present century, owing to each student of medicine
being required before qualifying as a doctor to furnish a body for
dissecting purposes, various expedients were fallen upon to meet the
demand. The usual one followed, however, was that of exhuming and
stealing newly interred bodies out of the country churchyards. The
persons engaged in the nefarious trade went by the name of
“Resurrectionists,” and such a feeling of terror and alarm did they
instil in the minds of the common orders throughout the country, that in
the end it became imperative, not only for the Legislature to pass
strong measures of repression, but for each parish, independently, to
take steps for guarding the graves of their newly buried dead. So
expeditiously, and at the sametime so secretly were the thefts
committed, however, that in spite of all the vigilance of watchers,
bodies were repeatedly lifted and carried off. On a dark and wintry
night in the year 1813, three medical students from Aberdeen visited the
churchyard of Banchory-Devenick for the fixed purpose of removing a
body, which had that day been interred. The relations of the deceased,
however, were on the outlook, and secured the three, after a stiff
tussle. They were carried to Stonehaven, and committed to prison on the
double charge of attempting to steal a dead body, and for an assault
upon the watchers. At the trial, which afterwards took place before the
sheriff, their guilt was clearly established, and they were ordered to
pay a fine of £20.
This amount having been recovered, the procurator-fiscal handed over a
considerable proportion of the fine for behoof of the poor of the
parish.
For
the comfort and protection of watchers a small building was erected on
the south side of the churchyard, where it still stands, being now used
as a tool-house by the sexton. As many poor people could not afford to
pay the expense of “watching,” the late Mr. George Barclay, builder,
Cults, designed, and got cast two massive iron chests or
safes—coffin-shaped—each weighing about nineteen hundredweight, for
placing around the coffin when lowered into the grave. The iron safe was
lowered by block-and-tackle, and being correctly set, the grave was
filled up. Six weeks later, when it was considered that decomposition
had made such progress as to preclude the chance of a visit from the
“body-snatchers,” the grave was again opened and the safe removed. These
safes of Mr. Barclay’s were likewise used in many of the neighbouring
churchyards, but by the passing of the Act of Parliament, ordering all
unclaimed bodies to be delivered up for purposes of dissection, their
further use was happily unnecessary. One still lies in the churchyard
and forms a source of considerable attraction to visitors. Till within
comparatively recent years it was usual, on the morning of an interment,
for a lighted candle to be placed near the dead body, and left to burn
itself out. Another custom was to stop all clocks in the house at the
moment a death occurred, and not to set them in motion again till the
corpse had been removed from the house. In some instances there was
placed on the breast of the deceased person a platter containing a small
quantity of salt and earth, unmixed, the earth as emblematical of the
corruptible body, and the salt as symbolical of the immortal spirit.
These customs, however, together with the treating of the funeral party
to refreshments, are now rarely observed, and the funeral rites usually
followed are of the simplest possible character,
Of
instances of longevity which have occurred in the district, the
following are perhaps the most remarkable :—
1759.
27th March. Died, William Cushnie, from an attack of the measles, aged
about 100 years.
1761.
Feb. Died, George Forbes, a farmer in the adjoining parish of Maryculter,
aged 106 years.
1764.
30th April. Died last week at Wardhead of Countesswells, in the 98th
year of his age, Robert Williamson, who was married 74 years previously,
to Isobel Wagrel, who is now left a widow in the 100th year of her age,
and in so good a state of health that she has for these last two weeks
attended the weekly market in Aberdeen, selling her butter, poultry, and
eggs.
1771.
1st April. Died, George Keith, who resided on the south side of the
parish, in the100oth year of his age. He followed his ordinary business
till within twenty days of his death, and continued sensible to the
last. Thirty-eight of his children and grand-children, and fifteen of
his great-grand-children, followed his remains to the grave.
1823.
In this year there died at Greenhead, in the neighbouring parish, the
widow of a farmer, aged 102. She is interred in the churchyard of
Maryculter.
Some
of the inscriptions on the present tombstones are given in the Appendix.
The
old churchyard of Nigg, from its proximity to Aberdeen, and secluded
situation near the bay of Nigg, was frequently visited by
body-snatchers. On 22nd December 1808, the remains of Mrs. Spark, an
aged woman who had died in Aberdeen, were ferried across the Dee, and
decently interred in the churchyard. Next morning it was discovered that
during the night the body had been taken up, and carried off. The grave
was left in a most gruesome fashion—broken pieces of the lid of the
coffin, tatters of grave linen, and marks of blood, being left scattered
about the grave. It was afterwards discovered that the perpetrators of
the outrage were medical students belonging to Aberdeen. They had
evidently been disturbed in their transporting of the body, and, to
avoid detection, had hid it in the sand on the north side of the bay of
Nigg. A storm subsequently arose and washed it out to the bay, where it
was discovered and again interred. |