London Borough of Southwark Cemeteries Fees & Charges

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

London Borough of Southwark Cemeteries Fees & Charges London Borough of Southwark Cemeteries Fees & Charges Fees & Charges from the 1st April 2018 - 31st March 2019 020 7525 5600 Purchase of Exclusive Right of Burial Resident Non-Resident Lawn - Meadow - Glade Ledger Grave 25 Year Lease Period - Double Depth 2 Interments £ 2,120.00 £ 4,813.00 50 year Lease Period - Double Depth 2 Interments £ 2,600.00 £ 6,598.00 All new graves purchased prohibit kerb surrounds, garden areas or any items placed on the lawn immediately in front of the grave and only an approved memorial is permitted. Full Memorial Grave - Nunhead Cemetery Muslim Section Resident Non-Resident 25 Year Lease Period - Single Depth 1 Interment £ 2,239.00 £ 6,717.00 50 Year Lease Period - Single Depth 1 Interment) £ 3,358.00 £ 10,073.00 * A non resident fee will be applied to any grave purchaser whose address is outside of the London Borough of Southwark. All visitors and owners of Exclusive Rights Of Burial are subject to the cemetery rules and regulations. Public Burial Options Resident Non-Resident Child Under 1 Month No Charge N/A Child 1 Month to 15 years No Charge N/A Public Adult Grave N/A N/A Interment Fees Resident Non-Resident Child Under 1 Month No Charge No Charge Child 1 Month to 15 years No Charge No Charge Adult Traditional (Coffins/Caskets up to 6ft 6' in length and 26" in width including £ 1,425.00 £ 4,005.00 handles) Adult Standard (Coffins/Caskets Over 6ft 6' in length and up to 40" in width £ 2,311.00 £ 4,891.00 including handles) Statutory Services Contract - Section 46 Public Grave (No Memorial Contracted Agreement Only N/A Permitted) Restricted to Southwark Residents Only £650.00 Interment of Cremated Remains £ 236.00 £ 695.00 Resident & Non Resident interment fees will be charged based on the residential status of the deceased at the time of their demise and are not linked to the ownership of the Exclusive Right of Burial. Where a non -resident application is made for interment and the deceased person, whom previously resided in the London Borough of Southwark a dispensation of resident rate will be applied providing:- the deceased has not lived outside of the borough for 5 years or more and proof of residence in that period is provided. It is the responsibility of the Funeral Director/person conducting the funeral to provide correct outside measurements of the coffin, a minimum of 48hrs (Normal Business Hrs - Monday - Friday) prior to the funeral taking place. Grave excavation works will be conducted to accommodate the measurements provided by the funeral director, where the measurements provided are incorrect, the correct coffin measurements will be established by the operations personnel and the appropriate fees will be charged to the account of the funeral director. Coffins Exceeding 40"inches Traditional Interment Fee Standard Interment Fee Width Additional grave purchase charges Coffins/Caskets up to 6ft 6' in length Coffins/Caskets Over 6ft 6' in length and up may be applied for exceeding 40" and 26" in width including handles to 40" in width including handles width. Bereavement Services, Camberwell New Cemetery, Brenchley Gardens, London, SE23 3RD. [email protected] Office Opening Hours - Monday to Friday 9am - 4.30pm London Borough of Southwark Cemeteries Fees & Charges Additional Service Fees Resident Non-Resident Use of Chapel for Service (Per 30 mins) £ 112.00 £ 112.00 Use of Organ £ 30.00 £ 30.00 Saturday Burial Supplement (Direct to Grave Only up to 11:30am) £ 775.00 £ 775.00 Saturday Burial of Cremated Remains Supplement £ 340.00 £ 340.00 Scattering of Cremated Remains (Private Graves Only) £ 80.00 £ 80.00 Scattering of Cremated Remains (Nunhead Cemetery Woodlands Only) £ 71.00 £ 71.00 Cancellation within 48hrs of the funeral taking place £ 115.00 £ 115.00 Late Arrival/Service Over Run Fee £ 115.00 £ 115.00 Transfer of Exclusive Rights Of Burial Transfer of Exclusive Right of Burial £ 66.00 £ 66.00 Extension of Burial Rights Extension of Exclusive Rights of Burial (Per 10 Year Period) £ 365.00 £ 1,000.00 Exhumations Exhumation (No Hidden Costs) £ 5,478.00 £ 5,478.00 Exhumation of Cremated Remains £ 525.00 £ 525.00 Memorials Memorial Permit Fee Adult (25 Years) £ 275.00 £ 275.00 Memorial Permit Fee Child (15 Years - Pubic Grave) £ 95.00 £ 95.00 Child Memorial Tablet (15 Years - Public Grave) P.O.A P.O.A Added Inscription £ 95.00 £ 95.00 Memorial Permit (cleaning/repair/renovation/refix) £ 35.00 £ 35.00 Removal & Replacement of Memorial (Not Exceeding 7" x 3") £ 275.00 £ 275.00 Temporary Grave/Marker Wooden Cross £ 59.00 £ 59.00 Memorial Safety Works Fee (Charge Applied When Safety Works Are £ 115.00 £ 115.00 Completed, With A Failed Response From Grave Owner) Genealogy Search & Locate Service Nunhead Cemetery (By Agreement Only) £ 100.00 £ 100.00 Groundworks to Uncover Grave Nunhead Cemetery (Price on Inspection By Agreement Only) P.O.A P.O.A Search Fee (Per Name) £ 25.00 £ 25.00 Grounds Sundries Grave Top Up (Chargeable if 12months After Last Interment) £ 30.00 £ 30.00 Grave Re-Turf (Chargeable if 12months After Last Interment) £ 78.00 £ 78.00 Concreting of a Shallow Grave (Following Interment) £ 165.00 £ 165.00 Removal of Unauthorised Garden Area/Tree/Bush £ 66.00 £ 66.00 Removal of Garden Area/Tree/Bush in (Preparation for Burial) £ 66.00 £ 66.00 Preserving Memories - Remembrance (Floral Tribute Placed on the Grave on A P.O.A P.O.A Date of Your Choosing & A Photo of The Occasion Emailed to Commemorate) Office Address: Bereavement Services, Camberwell New Cemetery, Brenchley Gardens, London, SE23 3RD. Bereavement Services 0207 525 5600 [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • Magnificent 7 Seminars: 'Diversity in Cemeteries' 11.00-4.30 PM
    Magnificent 7 Seminars: ‘Diversity in Cemeteries’ 11.00-4.30 PM | Small Crematorium Chapel, West Norwood Cemetery 10.30 Registration, teas and coffees 11.00 Welcome and the Future of Magnificent 7 | Greg McErlean, Ruth Holmes , Nigel Thorne | The Royal Parks Panel 1: Challenges to Diversity in Cemeteries 11.15-11.30 Rules, glorious rules: Challenges in introducing Diversity at Highgate Cemetery | Ian Dungavell Friends groups are often founded to protect cemeteries. You can protect cemeteries by keeping people out, but also by welcoming them in. There is no consistent set of rules to govern appropriate behaviour in cemeteries, and notions of what is ‘respectful’ vary enormously. Having too many rules risks alienating visitors and creates problems for those who have to police them. Having no rules invites mayhem. 11.30-11.45 Diversifying Audiences in Abney Park Cemetery | Tom Simpson | Abney Park manager For those of the Magnificent Seven that no-longer operate as working cemeteries, increasing the diversity of park users and uses is crucial in preserving and protecting these unique sites. However, encouraging people to engage with spaces that are ‘full of dead people’ can be challenging. This presentation explores how Cemeteries can diversify audiences and the challenges faced when trying to attract new users to a cemetery. 11.45-12.00 Q&A: Challenges to diversity in cemeteries with Ian Dungavell and Tom Simpson. Chaired by Nigel Thorne Panel 2: Biodiversity in Cemeteries 12.00-12.15 The Green Reaper - bringing life to a Cemetery | Kenneth Greenway - Cemetery Park Manager The Friends of Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park have been involved in site management since the 1990's.
    [Show full text]
  • South East London Green Chain Plus Area Framework in 2007, Substantial Progress Has Been Made in the Development of the Open Space Network in the Area
    All South East London Green London Chain Plus Green Area Framework Grid 6 Contents 1 Foreword and Introduction 2 All London Green Grid Vision and Methodology 3 ALGG Framework Plan 4 ALGG Area Frameworks 5 ALGG Governance 6 Area Strategy 8 Area Description 9 Strategic Context 10 Vision 12 Objectives 14 Opportunities 16 Project Identification 18 Project Update 20 Clusters 22 Projects Map 24 Rolling Projects List 28 Phase Two Early Delivery 30 Project Details 50 Forward Strategy 52 Gap Analysis 53 Recommendations 56 Appendices 56 Baseline Description 58 ALGG SPG Chapter 5 GGA06 Links 60 Group Membership Note: This area framework should be read in tandem with All London Green Grid SPG Chapter 5 for GGA06 which contains statements in respect of Area Description, Strategic Corridors, Links and Opportunities. The ALGG SPG document is guidance that is supplementary to London Plan policies. While it does not have the same formal development plan status as these policies, it has been formally adopted by the Mayor as supplementary guidance under his powers under the Greater London Authority Act 1999 (as amended). Adoption followed a period of public consultation, and a summary of the comments received and the responses of the Mayor to those comments is available on the Greater London Authority website. It will therefore be a material consideration in drawing up development plan documents and in taking planning decisions. The All London Green Grid SPG was developed in parallel with the area frameworks it can be found at the following link: http://www. london.gov.uk/publication/all-london-green-grid-spg .
    [Show full text]
  • LBR 2007 Front Matter V5.1
    1 London Bird Report No.72 for the year 2007 Accounts of birds recorded within a 20-mile radius of St Paul's Cathedral A London Natural History Society Publication Published April 2011 2 LONDON BIRD REPORT NO. 72 FOR 2007 3 London Bird Report for 2007 produced by the LBR Editorial Board Contents Introduction and Acknowledgements – Pete Lambert 5 Rarities Committee, Recorders and LBR Editors 7 Recording Arrangements 8 Map of the Area and Gazetteer of Sites 9 Review of the Year 2007 – Pete Lambert 16 Contributors to the Systematic List 22 Birds of the London Area 2007 30 Swans to Shelduck – Des McKenzie Dabbling Ducks – David Callahan Diving Ducks – Roy Beddard Gamebirds – Richard Arnold and Rebecca Harmsworth Divers to Shag – Ian Woodward Herons – Gareth Richards Raptors – Andrew Moon Rails – Richard Arnold and Rebecca Harmsworth Waders – Roy Woodward and Tim Harris Skuas to Gulls – Andrew Gardener Terns to Cuckoo – Surender Sharma Owls to Woodpeckers – Mark Pearson Larks to Waxwing – Sean Huggins Wren to Thrushes – Martin Shepherd Warblers – Alan Lewis Crests to Treecreeper – Jonathan Lethbridge Penduline Tit to Sparrows – Jan Hewlett Finches – Angela Linnell Buntings – Bob Watts Appendix I & II: Escapes & Hybrids – Martin Grounds Appendix III: Non-proven and Non-submitted Records First and Last Dates of Regular Migrants, 2007 170 Ringing Report for 2007 – Roger Taylor 171 Breeding Bird Survey in London, 2007 – Ian Woodward 181 Cannon Hill Common Update – Ron Kettle 183 The establishment of breeding Common Buzzards – Peter Oliver 199
    [Show full text]
  • Triendi3 of Lr{Ei3f 12Orwood Jlemefery
    }triendi3 of lr{ei3f 12orwood Jlemefery NEWSLEITER NO 4: DECEMBER 1990 THE MEETING OF LAMBETH COUNCIL, 17th October 1990 At a typically lively and noisy meeting of the Full Council in October, Councillor John Whelan, and Nicholas Reed, FOWNC Chairman, asked questions of two Committee Chairmen. Councillor Stewart Hunter, Chair of Lambeth's Public Works Corrmittee said his officers were doing a splendid job, and 'Went on to take a completely political stance, accusing his first questioner of wishing to turn. the Cemetery back into a private company (something he had never mentioned). Yet in view of Lambeth I S apparent eagerness to demolish so much in the Cemetery, simply in order to provide more burial space, and thus increase the revenues received by the Cemetery, one begins to wonder if things are so very different from when the old Cemetery Companies used to maximise their burial revenues. One would have expected such behaviour from capitalist Victorian businesses 100 years ago, but one hardly expects it nowadays from a left-wing Labour Council! Lambeth declared the Cemetery a Conservation Area in 1978, This makes it also a matter for the Planning Coomittee, since tedmically, any changes made to such an area should be notified to, and approved by, the Planning Committee. In her reply, Councillor Arma Tapsell, Chair of Lambeth's Planning COIlII1i.ttee, pointed out that many Lambeth Councillors may not be aware of the decisions taken many years ago to carry out "lawn conversion" in the Cemetery. And "in view of the criticisms raised by the Friends of the Cemetery," she is asking for a detailed report on all three cemeteries to be prepared by her officers, after consulting all parties.
    [Show full text]
  • 12179 Greenchainnature Reserve- 16 5 14 PROOF
    Visit 12 nature reserves along the Green Chain Walk Take a walk on the wild side The Wider Landscape This guide introduces you to Now it’s over to you. Whatever the Sensitive sites such as these cannot time of year you will find survive in isolation. The wider landscape some of the very best nature and something to delight you. Use the wildlife sites on the Green Chain. of the Green Chain - some 2,500 hectares checklist to tick off the sites you of open space in south east London (the have visited and anything that Each one has something special about it. All have been selected size of 3,400 football pitches!), provides inspired you on your visit! an important role in their survival. As because they are easy to get to by train or bus. As well as maps well as acting as a buffer to urban for each site we have also provided information that will make Crossness page 6 - 7 encroachment and the increasing your visit more interesting. demand for more housing, the Green Lesnes Abbey Woods page 8 - 9 Chain supports the mobility of wildlife so that alternative sources of food can be Take a walk found within the wider landscape. Oxleas Woods page 10 -11 Working together Maryon Wilson Park page 12 - 13 In the future our open spaces will need to be more resilient to threats such as on the wildside Sutcliffe Park page 14 - 15 climate change, floods, droughts and sea level rises. The vision of a connected and Grove Park page 16 - 17 robust living landscape can only be achieved by organisations working together.
    [Show full text]
  • Nunhead, Honor Oak and Peckham Rye
    Nunhead, Honor Oak and Peckham Rye 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 26th June 2018 Current status Document last updated Friday, 27th July 2018 This document and information herein are copyrighted to Saturday Walkers’ Club. If you are interested in printing or displaying any of this material, Saturday Walkers’ Club grants permission to use, copy, and distribute this document delivered from this World Wide Web server with the following conditions: • The document will not be edited or abridged, and the material will be produced exactly as it appears. Modification of the material or use of it for any other purpose is a violation of our copyright and other proprietary rights. • Reproduction of this document is for free distribution and will not be sold. • This permission is granted for a one-time distribution. • All copies, links, or pages of the documents must carry the following copyright notice and this permission notice: Saturday Walkers’ Club, Copyright © 2018, used with permission. All rights reserved. www.walkingclub.org.uk This walk has been checked as noted above, however the publisher cannot accept responsibility for any problems encountered by readers. Nunhead, Honor Oak and Peckham Rye Start: Nunhead Station Finish: Peckham Rye Station Length: 8.0 km/5.0 mi Ascent: 170m Time: 2 hours Transport: Nunhead Station is served by Thameslink services to Sevenoaks and by Southeastern services from Victoria on the Dartford via Bexleyheath line. Peckham Rye Station is served by the East London (Overground) Line, Thameslink and Sutton & Mole Valley services; trains go to Dartford, London Bridge, Victoria, Highbury & Islington, Blackfriars, Sevenoaks, West Croydon, Beckenham Junction and Clapham Junction.
    [Show full text]
  • Southwark Liberal Democrat Group
    Ward, Lucy From: Mayers, Mishka on behalf of reviews Sent: Tuesday, 05 April, 2016 10:44 AM To: Ward, Lucy Subject: FW: Lib Dem group submission for LB Southwark draft wards consultation Attachments: Detail of proposed changes to draft wards LBS.pdf; Draft comments LBS review.pdf; New wards 1 to 7.pdf; OPTION 1 Nunhead and Queens Rd.pdf; OPTION 2 Nunhead n and nunhead s.pdf; Supporting Notes.pdf Follow Up Flag: Follow up Flag Status: Flagged From: Roger Giess Sent: 04 April 2016 01:15 To: reviews <[email protected]> Subject: Lib Dem group submission for LB Southwark draft wards consultation Dear Sirs, Please find attached the response from the Southwark Council Lib Dem group to the consultation on the draft warding arrangements for the London Borough of Southwark. The submission includes an explanation of the amendments to the draft we would make together with our calculations of new projected electorates. We would be pleased to provide further details of the calculations if that would assist. We also include some sketched maps to illustrate the changes we are proposing. These show the ward as we intend tinted yellow with those areas we propose removing edged red and those new areas to be brought in edged green. I would be grateful if you would acknowledge receipt. Kind regards Roger Giess on Behalf of Southwark Borough Council Liberal Democrat group. 1 Southwark Council Lib Dem Group comments on draft ward boundary review Ward Comments 1 Camberwell Green We support this ward except for a small amendment. We would move the border with St Giles to the west to run along D'Eynsford Rd and Camberwell Green to Camberwell Church St.
    [Show full text]
  • PECKHAM SOCIETY NEWS INDEX of LETTERS (To Issue 158 2019)
    PECKHAM SOCIETY NEWS INDEX OF LETTERS (without addresses, phone numbers or emails included ) (to Issue 158 2019) Season/ Title/Author/Subject all entered in Alphabetical Order Year Month Issue Page INDEX TO LETTERS IN PECKHAM SOCIETY BULLETINS, NEWSLETTERS, AND PECKHAM SOCIETY NEWS Notes: Complete up to and including number 158, Autumn 2019 PLEASE READ THESE NOTES FIRST THEY WILL HELP YOU SEARCH MORE EFFECTIVELY 1) Only people’s names appear in the first column (and in the case of married women, I have cross referenced their maiden names). I have deleted all email addresses, phone numbers and addresses of all letter writers for reasons of privacy. 2) If Jane Smith (née Jones) writes a letter which include subjects such as the Surrey Canal, Rye Lane, and Waverley School, it will be entered under Smith, Jane (where it will include her contact details, where given), and also under her maiden name, and then under Surrey Canal, Rye Lane and Waverley School, with her name as author in the second column. Should I have inadvertently missed any such cross-references, please let the Editor know who will pass the information on to this Indexer! However, if someone writes a letter saying “I support the idea of Peckham Rye Railway Station being opened out”, I have not included it under Peckham Rye Railway Station because it’s not telling us anything other than the idea has been supported. 3) Where there is more than one letter written about the same subject this Indexer will list the authors in alphabetical order under the given subject.
    [Show full text]
  • Geology and London's Victorian Cemeteries
    Geology and London’s Victorian Cemeteries Dr. David Cook Aldersbrook Geological Society 1 Contents Part 1: Introduction Page 3 Part 2: Victorian Cemeteries Page 5 Part 3: The Rocks Page 7 A quick guide to the geology of the stones used in cemeteries Part 4: The Cemeteries Page 12 Abney Park Brompton City of London East Finchley Hampstead Highgate Islington and St. Pancras Kensal Green Nunhead Tower Hamlets West Norwood Part 5: Appendix – Page 29 Notes on other cemeteries (Ladywell and Brockley, Plumstead and Charlton) Further Information (websites, publications, friends groups) Postscript 2 Geology and London’s Victorian Cemeteries Part 1: Introduction London is a huge modern city - with congested roads, crowded shopping areas and bleak industrial estates. However, it is also a city well-served by open spaces. There are numerous small parks which provide relief retreat from city life, while areas such as Richmond Park and Riverside, Hyde Park, Hampstead Heath, Epping Forest and Wimbledon Common are real recreational treasures. Although not so obviously popular, many of our cemeteries and churchyards provide a much overlooked such amenity. Many of those established in Victorian times were designed to be used as places of recreation by the public as well as places of burial. Many are still in use and remain beautiful and interesting places for quiet walks. Some, on ceasing active use for burials, have been developed as wildlife sanctuaries and community parks. As is the case with parklands, there are some especially splendid cemeteries in the capital which stand out from the rest. I would personally recommend the City of London, Islington and St.
    [Show full text]
  • Conservation and Foraging Ecology of Bumble Bees In
    Conservation and Foraging Ecology of Bumble Bees in Urban Environments Roselle E. Chapman A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, University of London. Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, Regent’s Park, London & University College London. April 2004 1 UMI Number: U602843 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U602843 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 ABSTRACT The decline of British bumble bees has been attributed to the loss of their habitat through the intensification of agricultural practices. In the quest for information of use to bumble bee conservation the potential of our flower-rich cities has been overlooked. The overall aim of this study was to determine the status and foraging requirements of bumble bees in the urban environment provided by the city of London, U.K. My principal findings are as follows. Six common species and three rare species were identified. The greatest diversity of Bombus species was found in the east of London. Garden and wasteland habitats attracted the greatest abundance of workers and diversity of Bombus species.
    [Show full text]
  • Mayor's Biodiversity Strategy
    Connecting with London’s nature The Mayor’s Biodiversity Strategy July 2002 copyright Greater London Authority July 2002 Published by Greater London Authority City Hall The Queen’s Walk London SE1 2AA www.london.gov.uk enquiries 020 7983 4100 minicom 020 7983 4458 ISBN 1 85261 385 8 Cover photograph credit PA Photos This publication is printed on Evolution Satin The Mayor’s Biodiversity Strategy Mayor of London iii contents foreword vi 1 introduction 1 2 London’s biodiversity: the context 7 London’s wildlife habitats 7 Woodland 8 Grassland 9 The River Thames and its tributaries 10 The canals 11 Ponds and lakes 11 Heathland 12 Farmland 12 Parks and squares 13 Cemeteries and churchyards 13 Gardens and allotments 14 Community gardens, city farms and ecology centres 14 Railway land, linesides and roadsides 14 Wasteland 15 The built environment 15 Protected sites 16 London’s rare species 19 The existing programme of work for biodiversity 20 The Mayor’s vision for London 22 Objectives for biodiversity 23 References 24 3 linkages with other strategies and crosscutting themes 27 Health 27 Sustainable development 28 Equality of opportunities 29 Access to natural green space 30 Threats to perceived safety and physical barriers to access 31 Paid and voluntary employment 31 Consultation 31 Black and ethnic minority people 31 Faith groups 32 Disabled people 32 Older people 32 Young people and children 32 State of the environment 32 The London Plan 33 Transport 33 iv Mayor of London The Mayor’s Biodiversity Strategy Economic development 34 Waste management
    [Show full text]
  • Download Complete Issue
    EDITORIAL The AUTUMNAL MEETING of our Society will be held at Blackpool on Wednesday, 16th October, at 4.30 p.m., in the Wesleyan Lecture Hall, Adelaide Street. A paper on" Early Nonconformist Churches in Lancashire" is expected from the Rev. J. H. Colligan, Presbyterian minister of Lancaster, and opportunity for discussion will be afforded. " Our Society has sustained a grievous loss by the death of the Rev. Bryan Dale, M.A., of Bradtord, which took place on 30th July. Mr. Dale was a Cornishman, having been born at Cury, near Helstone, on 22nd February, 1832. Inhisyouth he was a member of the Wesleyan Association, now merged in the United Methodist Church, but having adopted Congregational principles he entered the Western College, then seated at Plymouth, at the age of 18. His first pastorate was at Coggeshall, Essex, the church founded by Dr. John Owen ; where he was ordained in 1855, and ministered about seven years. During that time he contributed materially to the success of the local bicentenary commemoration of the ejected ministers, and wrote The A mwls of Coggeshall, which is of permanent value. In 1863 he removed to Sion Chapel, Halifax, where he exercised a fruitful ministry for over 23 years, during which time two new Congregational churches were established in the town. Retiring from pastoral work in 1886 he became secretary of the Yorkshire Congregational Union, in which capacity he served the churches to the end of his life. His life of The Good Lord Wharton takes rank as a standard biography ; and by his untiring efforts the perversion of that nobleman's '' Bible Charity" was in large measure -though not altogether-rectified.
    [Show full text]