A public Launch at The Merchants House on Wednesday 22nd June 2005 produced a committee and members from a wide range of backgrounds whose aim is to conserve the Glasgow Necropolis. Their interests include : family history research, cemetery history, architecture and sculpture, architectural conservation, natural history and ecology, tourism and hospitality and economic development.
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The committee and members, along with GCC, decide priorities and the schedule of activities, which are divided into short, medium and long-term actions. The short-term activities include Tours and Publicity aimed towards conservation and promotion of the Necropolis as a cultural resource for both the people of Glasgow and for the many national and international visitors.
The Necropolis has suffered over the years from under-investment, natural decay and vandalism. We need to encourage investment and tourism, publicise its importance to the history and culture of Glasgow, and provide interpretive materials which help Glaswegians and visitors, international influence alike to understand the history and its architecture.
It embodies Glasgow at the height of its power as the Second City of the British Empire. The engineers, artists, iron founders, inventors, ship builders, locomotive makers, scientists, poets, factory owners, business people of Victorian Glasgow are buried here. Their monuments were designed by famous architects and sculptors of the time such as Alexander ‘Greek’ Thomson and Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Necropolis was the first ornamental, garden cemetery in Scotland with a landscape inspired by the famous Père Lachaise in Paris. It is included in Historic Scotland’s Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes. The Necropolis is also home to many thousands of ordinary Glaswegians, who are buried in unmarked graves.
The Friends have links to the Merchants’ House, the Trades House, the Glasgow Natural History Society, Glasgow and West of Scotland Family History Society, Glasgow University, Strathclyde University, various schools and the local community and have the full support of Glasgow City Council, which owns the Necropolis.
Alexander Stoddart
Annette Mullen – Chairperson
Colin Campbell – Deputy Chairperson
Colin Campbell – Membership Secretary
Sarah Morrison – Treasurer
Irene Gow – Secretary
Ruth Johnston – Project & Design Consultant
Brian Johnston – Architectural Consultant
Gary Nisbet – Cemetery Historian & Sculpture Consultant
Scott Kerr – Website & Social Media Manager
Annette Mullen – Tour Controller
Richard Weddle – Glasgow Natural History Representative
Morag Fyfe – Historical & Genealogical Researcher & Burial Records Project Manager
Ashley Jamieson – Associate in the USA
John Pelan – The Scottish Civic Trust
Gwyneth Stokes – National Society of Cemetery Friends
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