Become a Member
Community

Photo archive allows virtual tour of Leeds cemetery

August 9, 2012 10:20

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

1 min read

Relatives of people buried at the Leeds Hill Top cemeteries can now visit their graves online as the result of a photographic archive.

As the name implies, the cemetery — containing the burial grounds of a number of synagogues past and present — has a high location, above a labyrinth of mining tunnels and shafts.

In 2006, six graves and headstones in the Beth Hamidrash Hagadol part of the cemetery collapsed 30 feet into a suspected mineshaft, forcing Leeds Jewish Orthodox Cemeteries to close the site for repairs. The burial grounds reopened in June 2007 with assurances about their safety. However, following further subsidence, the site was deemed unsafe a year later and is now closed to the public.

Prior to the closure, the headstones were digitally photographed by Malcolm Sender and Lee White. An active Jewish Genealogical Society of Great Britain member, Alan Tobias, subsequently suggested that these be made available online through the society’s JCR-UK project.