People buried in St Sepulchre’s Cemetery, Oxford
There are about 3,500 grave spaces in St Sepulchre’s Cemetery, but unfortunately the register is lost. When in 1988 Canon Peter Bostock made a list of all the monumental inscriptions on the surviving gravestones, he reached a total of approaching 3,000 people in 1,730 graves (which is only about half the number of people likely to be buried here): see the plan of graves that he made. Some additional names are being gleaned from funeral descriptions in local newspapers and from parish registers.
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Graves not transcribed (or mistranscribed) in the official list made by Canon Bostock |
Full alphabetical list of completed biographies
A
Henry ADAMS (1825–1861), a saddler; his wife Mrs Ann MOSS née Clifford, formerly Mrs Adams (c.1824–1880); and his wife's second husband John MOSS (c.1803–1877), a school teacher
John ALDEN (1796–1857), butcher; his second wife Mrs Caroline ALDEN, née Cabbell (1803–1875); and his father-in-law Thomas Roffe CABBELL (c.1780–1856)
Henry ALDRED (1810–1883), a draper of Charlbury; his wife Mrs Sarah ALDRED, née Berry (1803–1885); and his wife's sister Miss Mary Ann BERRY (1802–1886)
John ALLAM senior (c.1784–1856), corn dealer; his second wife Mrs Mary Ann ALLAM née Saunders (c.1785–1855); his grandsons William James ALLAM (1840–1859) and Alfred Henry Allam (1850–1888); and his great-granddaughter Elizabeth Ann Marsh (1869–1886)
John ALLAM junior (1810–1860), farmer; his second wife Mrs Ann ALLAM, née Gumm (c.1819–1898); and their daughters Mrs Sarah Amelia MARSH, née ALLAM (1847–1873), Elizabeth ALLAM (1852–1859), and Mary Ann ALLAM (1855–1871)
William Thomas Howell ALLCHIN (1843–1883), Organist of St John’s College; his wife Mrs Sarah ALLCHIN, née Tame (1834–1917); and their daughter Miss Mabel Mary ALLCHIN (1874–1917)
Mrs Rachel ALLDER, née Bateman, a sawyer’s wife (1818–1855)
Moses Thomas ALLNUTT (1817–1907), butler of the President of St John's College; his wife Mrs Sarah ALLNUTT, née Plummer (1816–1876); their daughter Miss Sarah Jane Plummer ALLNUTT (1845–1918); their son William Henry ALLNUTT (1847–1903), library assistant at the Bodleian; and William's wife Mrs Fanny ALLNUTT, née Arnold (1845–1903)
Edward ARCHER (1842–1907), railway clerk, and his brother William Samuel ARCHER (1852–1917)
John ARCHER (1833–1891), farmer; his wife Mrs Sophia Anne ARCHER, née Sheard (1824–1898); and their daughter Mrs Mary Sophia Ada Sheard PARROTT, née Archer (1868–1924)
Mrs Sophia ARIES, née Howard (1811–1883), who was married to two milkmen, both many years her junior, and her son James ARIES (1858–1867)
Joseph (“Joe”) ARNETT (1811–1876), a printer at Oxford University Press; his wife Mrs Mary Eglantine ARNETT, née Wagstaff (1818–1904); their daughter Miss EMILY MARTHA ARNETT (1840/1–1921); Mrs Arnett’s mother Mrs Mary WAGSTAFF née Fletcher (c.1797–1854); and Mrs Arnett’s sister Miss Anne WAGSTAFF (1819–1912)
Mrs Maria Ann ARNETT, née Plumridge (1839–1909); her son Frank Plumridge ARNETT (1880–1883); and her daughter-in law Mrs Florence Rose ARNETT, née Shirley (1873–1939)
George ASH (1823–1876), landlord of the Blue Pig in Gloucester Green; his wife Mrs Mary Ann ASH, née Stevens (1822–1876); their third daughter Mary ASH (1850–1879); their eighth daughter Mrs Isabella HOWKINS, née Ash (1861–1886); and their granddaughter Ethel Maud HOWKINS (born and died 1884)
Samuel Saxon ASHOVER (1857–1870), schoolboy and chorister at St Paul’s
William Dukinfield ASTLEY (1826/7–1848), undergraduate at Jesus College
Mrs Charlotte Mackay ATWOOD, née Hodgskin (c.1809–1891); her sister Anna Elizabeth HODGSKIN (c.1807–1891); and her daughter Mrs Charlotte Maria TOYNBEE, née Atwood (1841–1931)
John Osier AXTELL (1813–1879), stonemason, and his wife Mrs Harriet AXTELL, née Bailey (1815–1860)
B
Baden Henry BADEN-POWELL (1841–1901), Judge of the Chief Court, Lahore
John BAKER (1826–1860), Chaplain of Christ Church and Master of the Cathedral School
Richard BAKER (c.1793–1863), a sawyer; his wife Mrs Sarah BAKER, née Allder (c.1797–1866); and their son Thomas BAKER (1833–1857), a chorister at St Paul's Church
Bulkeley BANDINEL (1781–1861), Bodley’s Librarian 1813–1860; his wife Mrs Mary BANDINEL, née Phillips (1792–1875); his sister Miss Harriet Anne BANDINEL (1778–1859); and his wife’s sister Miss Susannah PHILLIPS (c.1796–1858)
Frederick William BANNER (1856–1880), an undergraduate who died in the Radcliffe Infirmary
Andrew David BARGUSS (1869–1930), cab proprietor, and his wife Mrs Bertha Annie BARGUSS, née Haynes (1858–1928)
Jesse BARGUSS (1840–1924), cab proprietor; his first wife Mrs Eliza BARGUSS, née Haynes (1839–1887); and their son Henry Jesse BARGUSS (1873–1888)
Miss Elizabeth BARKER (c.1780–1861)
William George Charles BARNES (1866–1932) and his second wife Mrs Ann Emily BARNES, formerly Adams, née Farley (1866–1932), landlords of the Coach & Horses in Broad Street
Mrs Sarah BARRETT, née Hammick (c.1834–1876) and her son Frederick BARRETT (1868–1878), who drowned in the River Cherwell at the age of ten
Thomas BARTON (1790–1853), retired, and his wife Mrs Mary BARTON, née Bond (1788–1864)
Mrs Eliza BATEMAN, née Conway (1856–1905), grocer's wife, and her daughter Miss Laura BATEMAN (1894–1918)
John BATES (1821–1880), florist and landlord of the Horse & Jockey; his first wife Mrs Rebecca Priscilla BATES, née Beesley (1828–1861); and his father-in-law William BEESLEY (c.1799–1860)
Joseph BATES (c.1790–1868), who founded the Parks Nursery in the Banbury Road; his wife Mrs Mary Durance BATES, née Butcher (1791–1858); and their daughter Miss Emma BATES (1815–1873)
Joseph BATES junior (1817–1903), founder of the Blenheim Nurseries; his wife Mrs Kezia BATES née Asken (1814–1906); her father David ASKEN (c.1786–1872); and their daughter Mrs Louisa HUNT, née Bates (1849–1929)
Joseph BAYLIS (c.1792–1862), carpenter, and his second wife Mrs Mary BAYLIS, née Best (c.1799–1875)
Henry Casson Barnes BAZELY (1842–1883), friend of the poor, who paid for and preached at the Scotch Church in Nelson Street; and his wife Mrs Louisa BAZELY, née Boothby (1856–1918)
Mrs Mary Elizabeth BEAUMONT, née Sarjeant (1850–1894)
Sébastian Louis BÉCHAUX (1834–1870), Second Assistant at the Radcliffe Observatory
Sidney Vallis BECKLEY, cabinet maker of Jericho (1890–1933)
James BELCHER (1834–1895), cellarman; his wife Mrs Emma BELCHER, née Fleetwood (1838–1914); and their daughter Miss Rosa Eleanor BELCHER (1859–1941)
Mrs Eliza BELL, née Burton (1802–1885), widow of a compositor
Miss Jessie BELL (c.1831–1869) and Mrs Susanna WILCHER, née Hales (c.1811–1891)
Thomas Page BELL (1791–1865), printer; his first wife Mrs Mary Ann BELL, née Pulbrook (1793–1855); and their daughters Miss Sarah BELL (1820–1892) and Miss Louisa BELL (c.1831–1892)
Frank Arthur BELLAMY (1863–1936), astronomer, and his sister Miss Ada Maria BELLAMY (1857–1923)
Montague Bertie BELLAMY (1830–1882), bookbinder, father of Frank above (and of Montague listed under Sarah Castell below); his wife Mrs Zilpah BELLAMY née Butwell (1828–1887); Their son Frederick BELLAMY (c.1853–1878); and their daughter Zilpah Marquitta BELLAMY (1855–1892)
Montague Edward James Butwell BELLAMY (1850–1908), bookbinder; his wife Mrs Mary BELLAMY, née Castell (1845–1894); and his sister-in-law Miss Sarah Maria CASTELL (1850–1877)
Henry BENNEY (1806–1901), a tailor; his wife Mrs Catherine BENNEY, née Dorrell (c.1810–1887); their children Henry BENNEY(1835–1854), [Abraham] Willoughby BENNEY (1839–1854), and Miss Sarah BENNEY (1841–1922); and Catherine’s mother Mrs Mary DORRELL (c.1782–1864)
Benjamin BENNETT (1847–1934), dyer & cleaner, and (probably) his wife Mrs Sarah Anne BENNETT née Ward (1850–1893)
George BENNETT (c.1821–1882), dyer & cleaner; his wife Mrs Eliza BENNETT, née Barnett (1819–1869); and their grandson Rae Durran BENNETT (1878–1904)
Walter George BENNETT (1848/9–1893), dyer, later clerk; his wife Mrs Penelope BENNETT, née Parker (1848–1927); and their son Alec William BENNETT (1879–1903)
John Ellis BEST (1849–1894), butler of Worcester College
John Thomas BEST (1857–1887), and his cousin Charles JOHNSON (1861/2–1870), who was drowned in the canal
Edmund BEVERS (1811–1880), surgeon dentist; his first wife Mrs Isabella BEVERS, née Coggan (c.1818–1851); their son Harcourt Arthur Bell BEVERS (1851–1891); Edith Winifred BEVERS, the only child of Harcourt Arthur Bevers (1889–1906); and Mrs Alice BEVERS, née Coggan, the second wife of Edmund Bevers (1820–1899)
Mrs Sarah BIDDLE senior, née Rose (c.1769–1859), banker’s widow; her son William BIDDLE (c.1799–1869), solicitor; and her son’s wife Mrs Sarah BIDDLE junior, née Buckland (c.1800–1867)
William BISHOP (1794–1866), boatman; his wife Mrs Mary Ann BISHOP, née Deck (1804–1858); their daughter Miss Elizabeth BISHOP (1833–1858), a housemaid; and their sons Alfred BISHOP (1847–1866) and John BISHOP (1851–1913), a printer
William BLACKWELL, saddler (c.1801–1883)
Frank James BLAKE (1871–1873) and his sister Florence Emily BLAKE (1872–1873); and their cousins Charles Maurice CLARKE (1880–1882) and his brother Lewis CLARKE (1888–1889), all infant children
John Charles BLAKE (1824–1919), wine merchant, and his son Charles BLAKE (1854–1931)
Mrs Laura BLAKE, née Lamb (1819–1919), wife of John Charles BLAKE above; her son John Arthur BLAKE (born and died 1853); and her daughter Miss Norah Mary BLAKE (1857–1874)
John BLEAY (1824–1855), printer; his wife Mrs Rachel BLEAY, née Meadows (c.1823–1901); and his sister-in-law Miss Jane MEADOWS (c.1834–1916)
John BLENCOWE (1801–1877), baker at Plantation Road; his wife Mrs Sarah BLENCOWE, née Morris (1806–1884); and their children Miss Charlotte Amelia BLENCOWE (1828–1911); Miss Clara Louisa BLENCOWE (1837–1917); Miss Eliza BLENCOWE (1843–1934); and Charles BLENCOWE (1846–1900)
John George BLENCOWE (1839–1892), baker at 20 Kingston Road, and his wife Mrs Emma BLENCOWE, née Young (1855–1938)
George BLEWETT (1843/4–1887), telegraph engineer; his wife Mrs Ellen Caroline ANDERSON, formerly Mrs BLEWETT, née Mastricht (1849–1922)
James BLISS (1788/9–1856); his third wife Mrs Elizabeth BLISS, née Foster (1818–1861); and his wife’s niece Miss Sarah BEECHEY (1837–1917)
Alfred Denny BLOTT (1817–1868), Station master of the Rewley Road station and later Deputy Treasurer of Christ Church
Charles William BOASE (1828–1895), historian and antiquary
William BOLTER (c.1794–1876), farmer, and his sister-in-law Mrs Sarah BOLTER, née Porter (1790–1881)
Thomas BOOTH (c.1786–1869), farmer, and his wife Mrs Jane BOOTH, née Scrivener (c.1790–1862)
Thomas Elderfield BOSSOM (1819–1893), a printer who later became porter of Exeter College, and his wife Mary Ann BOSSOM, née Owen (1820–1897)
William BOSSOM (1804–1880), boatbuilder and publican; his daughter Mrs Elizabeth CRAPPER, née Bossom (1848–1912); his son-in-law Henry John CRAPPER (1843–1909); and his baby granddaughter Edith Isabel CRAPPER (born and died 1880)
Henry BOSWELL (1835–1897), bryologist and owner of Boswell’s store, and his sister Miss Mary Ann BOSWELL (1846–1879)
George BOWERS (1824–1904), prison warder, then college servant; his wife Mrs Jane BOWERS, née Taylor (1833–1916); and their daughter Annie Beatrice BOWERS (1873–1884)
Joseph BOWMAN (c.1825–1896), bootmaker
Mrs Ann BOYCE, née East (c.1812–1887); her daughter Mrs Mary Ann KETHRO, formerly Mrs Parker, née Boyce (1847–1930); her daughter Mary Ann's first husband Colin PARKER (1846–1880), a grocer's porter; and her daughter Mary Ann's second husband Thomas James KETHRO (1840–1891), a stonemason
Charles BRACKSTONE (1822/3–1867), labourer and Methodist lay preacher, and his son Charles William BRACKSTONE (1865–1867)
John BRADFIELD (1789–1863), plumber & glazier, and his wife Mrs Sarah BRADFIELD, née Day (c.1793–1856)
Laura Mary BRAIN (1857–1864), a butcher’s daughter
Richard BREATHWITT (1831–1874), Clerk of Works at Keble College who fell to his death during its construction, and his wife Mrs Eliza BREATHWITT, née SMITH (1830–1880)
Mrs Sarah BREATHWITT, née Jones (1853–1929), and her parents John JONES and Charlotte JONES
Miss Meta Claudia BREVOORT (1825–1876), mountaineer
John BRIDGWATER (1798–1878), cabinet maker & appraiser, and his third wife Mrs Sarah BRIDGWATER, née Tyrrell (1810–1890)
William BRIDGWATER (1803–1879), furniture broker; his wife Mrs Ann BRIDGWATER, née Parsons (1801–1876); and their daughters Miss Elizabeth BRIDGWATER (1831–1863), Miss Mary Ann BRIDGWATER (1833–1914), and
Miss Emily BRIDGWATER (1845–1856)
Thomas Henry BRIDGES (1836–1849), son of the President of Corpus Christi College
Thomas Bardel BRINDLEY (1818–1876), newspaper editor turned commercial traveller; his common-law wife Elizabeth BRINDLEY, née Patchett (1832–1902); their son Harry Edgar BRINDLEY (1866–1870); and their daughter Ellen Leonora BRINDLEY (1869–1881)
John BRISCOE (1820–1908), Surgeon of the Radcliffe Infirmary
Richard BROAD (1836–1878), of the Bell Inn, Cornmarket
John BROCKLISS (c.1795–1872), corn dealer; his son Edward Lamley BROCKLISS (1816–1865), Manciple of Worcester College; and his son’s wife Mrs Eliza BROCKLISS, née Gulliver (1821–1898)
Alfred BROOKE (1857–1924), Chief Clerk to the Oxford Gas Company; his wife Mrs Agnes BROOKE, née Castle (1861–1934); their daughters Muriel Agnes BROOKE (1888–1893) and Mildred Margaret BROOKE (1892–1893)
George BROOKE (1824–1880), solicitor’s managing clerk; his wife Mrs Hannah BROOKE, née Hutton (1823/4–1903); and their daughter Miss Caroline BROOKE (1853–1929)
Harry Herbert BROWN (1851–1882), innkeeper, later hosier
James Edward BROWN (c.1823–1912), a piano tuner; his first wife Mrs Jane BROWN (c.1821–1878), who was killed in the Sittingbourne railway accident; and his second wife Mrs Agnes BROWN, formerly Mrs Pilbeam (1825–1899)
Thomas Blakeman BROWN (1799–1870), University Marshal; his wife Mrs Sophia BROWN, née Townsend (1799–1865); and their daughters Miss Harriett BROWN, born Townsend (1822–1876) and
Miss Elizabeth BROWN (1829–1865)
James BROWN senior (c.1789–1857), tailor; and his second wife Mrs Caroline BROOKS, formerly Mrs Brown & Mrs Gillett, née Tyler (c.1801–1861)
James BROWN junior (1816–1889), jeweller; his wife Mrs Sarah BROWN, née Godfrey (1824–1906); and their daughters Miss Sarah Louisa BROWN (1854–1890), Mrs Florence BIRD, née Brown (1860–1938), and Miss Alice Emily BROWN (1856–1941)
Jonathan Samuel BROWNING (1799–1880), ironmonger and sometime Mayor of Oxford; his wife Mrs Anne BROWNING, née Hester (1824–1881); and their children Mary BROWNING (1841–1856), Frederick William BROWNING (1839–1859), Henry Thorp BROWNING (1833–1860), and Mrs Ann Hester HAZEL, née Browning (1827–1909); and their son-in-law Edward Wells HAZEL (1819–1896)
Walter BRUCE (1839–1899), a whitesmith, and his first wife Mrs Lydia Elizabeth BRUCE, née Smith (1838–1875)
William BRUCKER (1831–1888), builder; his wife Mrs Frances Sarah BRUCKER, née Ludlow, Pre-Raphaelite model (1829–1879); and their sons Arthur BRUCKER (born and died 1864) and Harry Edward BRUCKER (1868–1871)
Edward George BRUTON (1826–1899), architect, and his first wife Mrs Charlotte Sophia BRUTON, née Jacob (1824–1867)
William BURCHELL (c.1812–1871), a tailor; his wife Mrs Sarah BURCHELL, née Cambray (1814–1888); and their baby grandson William Thomas HERMAN (born and died 1871)
Thomas BURDETT (1788–1868), milkman, and his wife Mrs Mary BURDETT, née Saul (1789–1869)
James BURNBLUM (1814–1890), retired merchant; his wife Mrs Mary Ann BURNBLUM, née Hughes (1834–1919); and their daughter Miss Laura Georgina BURNBLUM (1859–1890)
Mrs Mary Ann Hannah BURROWS, née Smith (1820–1854)
Charles Montagu BURROWS (1853–1854), the infant son of Professor Montagu Burrows, and the family’s servant Miss Ellen STREEK (c.1826–1902)
John BUSBY (1828–1891), stonemason, and his first wife Mrs Sarah Susan BUSBY, née Long (c.1819–1886)
Miss Mary BUTLER (1819/20–1854), died in third Oxford cholera epidemic
Edwin George BUTLER (1838–1906), a tailor; his wife Mrs Kezia Kent BUTLER, née Kent, later Bunce (1840–1921); and their son George Richard BUTLER (1871–1874)
Richard BUTLER (1809–1869), a tailor; his wife Mrs Ann BUTLER, née Sanders (1806–1875); their son William Thomas BUTLER (1843–1955); their daughter Rosa BUTLER (1845–1853); and Mrs Butler's elder sister Miss Mary Ann Sanders (1804–1884)
Miss Margaret BYGATE (1787–1869), who ran a ladies’ seminary
C
Edward CAIRD (1835–1908), philosopher and Master of Balliol College, and his wife Frances Caroline CAIRD, née Wylie (1831–1916)
George Augustus CAMBRAY (1821–1889), clothes cleaner, and his wife Mrs Ann CAMBRAY, née Dalby (1823–1887)
George Richard CAMBRAY (1850/1–1905), cabinet maker; his wife Mrs Alice Fanny CAMBRAY, née Thomas (1850–1945); and their daughter Grace CAMBRAY (1881–1883)
William Douglas CAPEL (1871–1895), organ scholar of Keble College
Joseph Harry CARROW (1848–1868), unattached student at the University of Oxford who died twelve days after matriculation
John CARTER (c.1835–1866), servant, and his second wife Mrs Anna CARTER, formerly Mrs Hicks, née Attewell (1827–1901)
Thomas CARTER (c.1798–1863), compositor; his wife Mrs Eliza CARTER (c.1808–1898); their son Edwin CARTER (1835–1872); and their daughters Miss Elisabeth CARTER (1844–1922), Miss Mary Ann CARTER (1848–1903), and Miss Caroline CARTER (1851–1912)
Thomas CARTER (1835–1874), solicitor’s clerk and coal merchant; his wife Mrs Emma CARTER, née Butler (c.1838–1924); and their daughters Jessie CARTER (1867–1870) and and Mrs Margaret McLACHLAN, née CARTER (1865–1924)
Arthur CASEMORE (1845–1916), shoemaker; his wife Mrs Martha CASEMORE, née Jenner (1834–1904); and their son Arthur Richard CASEMORE (1871/2–1896)
Miss Anne CASTELL (1794–1870) and her sister Miss Maria CASTELL (1800–1877)
John CASTELL (1791–1873), college servant; his wife Mrs Hannah CASTELL, née Carpenter (1805–1859); and their son Henry Thomas Stamp CASTELL (1846–1896)
Miss Sarah Maria CASTELL (1850–1877); her sister Mrs Mary BELLAMY, née Castell (1845–1894); and her sister’s husband Montague Edward James Butwell BELLAMY (1850–1908), bookbinder
Frederick CASTLE (c.1810–1860), basket-maker; his wife Mrs Harriet Ann CASTLE, née Walden (1814–1886); and their daughter Miss Jane Elizabeth CASTLE (1839–1871)
Frederick Albert CASTLE (1862–1918), bricklayer; his wife Mrs Harriet CASTLE, née Merry (1867–1944); and their daughter Miss Louisa CASTLE (1898–1917)
Frederick William CASTLE (1837–1877), basket-maker, and his daughters Alice Mary CASTLE (1869–1879) and Kate Wiltshire CASTLE (1875–1876)
Joseph CASTLE (1812–1890), engineer at Oxford University Press; his wife Mrs Martha CASTLE, née Savoury (1819–1897); and their daughters Martha CASTLE (1842/3–1900) and Mary Ann CASTLE (1849–1854)
John Caldecott CAVELL (1813–1887), joint founder of Oxford’s leading department store and sometime Mayor of Oxford; his first wife Mrs Sarah CAVELL, née Elliston (c.1816–1856); and his second wife Mrs Harriet CAVELL, formerly Mrs Delf, née Elliston (c.1804–1886)
Mrs Emily Caldecott CAVELL, née Powell (c.1831–1884) and her son Frederick Percy CAVELL (1862–1882)
Thomas CHAMBERLAIN (1790–1865), Trinity college bedmaker; his wife Mrs Martha CHAMBERLAIN, née Salisbury (1798–1880); and their son Thomas CHAMBERLAIN (1790–1865)
John CHARLTON (1817–1861), a tailor; his wife Mrs Eliza CHARLTON, née Bourton (1819–1889); their sons Christopher Samuel CHARLTON (1847–1862) and Jack CHARLTON (1853–1865); and three children who died in infancy: Thomas Charlton (d. 1850), Ann Charlton (d.1852), and Ann Eliza Norgrove Charlton (d.1855)
John CHAUNDY (1834–1890), printseller of Broad Street and musical conductor; and his first wife Maria CHAUNDY, née Bossom (1835–1882)
Richard CHAUNDY (1802–1856), tobacconist; his nephew Charles CHAUNDY (1852–1915), printer; Charles's wife Mrs Emily Jane CHAUNDY, née Prior (1862–1947); and Charles & Emily's daughter Miss Winifred Emily Prior CHAUNDY (1897–1918)
John CHILD (1826–1892), Sergeant Major of the Oxfordshire Militia and landlord of the Grapes Inn, and his wife Mrs Charlotte CHILD, née Armond (1834–1903)
John CHILLINGWORTH (1777–1850), farmer of Marston and Summertown; his wife Mrs Mary CHILLINGWORTH, née Kirrey (1785–1859); their son John CHILLINGWORTH junior (1820–1896); and their son’s wife Mrs Maria Chillingworth, née Hills (1819–1900)
Alfred Millard William CHRISTOPHER (1820–1913) and his wife Mrs Maria Frances CHRISTOPHER, née Christopher (1816–1903); and their relation Miss Eliza SETON (1783–1859)
Miss Rose Potter CLARIBUTT (c.1813–1879), Matron of the Radcliffe Infirmary for nearly thirty years
Caroline CLARIDGE (1794–1860), a servant
Horace Evelyn CLAYTON (1853–1916), Vicar of St Mary Magdalen
Alfred Thomas CLEAVER (1835–1906), compositor, and his wife Mrs Mary Ann CLEAVER née Duffield (1834–1911)
William CLIFFIN (c.1789–1873), a labourer, and his daughter Miss Harriet CLIFFIN (1821–1873)
James CLIFTON (1820–1890), bedmaker at Trinity College, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth CLIFTON, née Baker (1819–1871)
James CLINCH (1795–1858), coachman, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth CLINCH, née Ward (1803–1851)
Thomas Tennant COAR (1786–1859); his wife Mrs Sarah Mary COAR, née Davis (1786–1872); and their youngest daughter Julia Elizabeth COAR (1828–1863)
Miss Martha COCK (1779–1867)
Thomas COLE (1849–1889), railway guard killed by a train at Wheatley station; his wife Emma Hall COLE, née Price (1849–1925); and his daughter Frances Winifred COLE (1887–1893)
Henry COLES (1847/8–1928), solicitor's clerk, and his wife Mrs Ellen COLES, née Knight (1850–1933)
Francis Edward COLLINS (1846–1850) and Frederick Augustus COLLINS (1848–1851), two little brothers
Thomas COMBE (1796–1872), printer and patron of the arts, and his wife Martha Howell Bennett COMBE, née Edwards (1806–1893)
Arthur COOK (1857–1888) and his wife Mrs Ann COOK, née Hadfield (1848–1923)
Thomas George COOKE (1825–1857), clerk; his wife Mrs Louisa Agnes COOKE, née Buckingham (1829–1897); and their son Thomas James COOKE (1851–1871)
Mrs Grace COOK, née Baker, laundress (c.1800–1871)
William George COOKE (c.1812–1867), cabinet maker & upholsterer; his wife Mrs Emily COOKE, née Cambray (1813–1869); their daughter Mrs Ellen Cambray PAYNE, née Cooke (1835–1883); and their grandson (Ellen's son) William Frank PAYNE (1862–1909)
Mrs Elisabeth Neville COOLIDGE, née Brevoort (1822–1875), wife of a Boston merchant
Robert COOMBS (1855–1909), a tailor, and his wife Mrs Emma COOMBS, formerly Mrs Webb, née Sampson (1839/40–1930)
Mary Ann COOPER (c.1821–1877)
Miss Sophia CORBETT (1829–1882), a servant
George COWDEROY (c.1826–1904), chief clerk at Oxford Post Office, and his wife Mrs Mary Ann COWDEROY, née Bell (1824–1891)
Mrs Susannah COWLEY née Hodgkins (1795–1877), and her son George COWLEY (1830–1852), a carpenter
Thomas COWLEY (1822–1901), a carpenter; his wife Mrs Ann COWLEY, née Marsh (1821–1903); and their daughters Kate Florence COWLEY (1858–1866), Miss Esther Susannah COWLEY (1861–1903) and Phoebe Judith COWLEY (1863–1866)
John COX (1800–1873), printer, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth COX, née Arnett (1797–1872)
John Francis CRIPPS junior (1830–1863), confectioner of Broad Street; his brother Charles CRIPPS (1839–1910); and his brother's wife Mrs Rebecca CRIPPS, née Wilsdon (1843–1926)
Mrs Mary CRIPPS, née Rowell (1799–1862), confectioner of Broad Street; her sister Miss Sarah Ann ROWELL (1796–1876); and her second son Frederick CRIPPS (1832–1857)
Richard CROSS (1812–1893), grocer; his wife Mrs Ruth CROSS, née Parrott (1817–1891); and their children Thomas CROSS (1842–1922), Miss Ruth Ann CROSS (1844–1915), Miss Sarah Ann CROSS (1854–1890), Miss Priscilla CROSS (1848–1935), Jane CROSS (1860–1863), and Lydia CROSS (1862–1863)
Miss Caroline CURRALL (1854–1880), servant
D
Mrs Sophia DARLING née Lawrence, widowed dressmaker (c.1791–1866)
Alfred DAVENPORT (1849–1932), and his wife Mrs Sophie Charlotte DAVENPORT, née Maturin (1849–1922)
Francis Henry DAVENPORT (1846–1915), farmer and later Board of Agriculture Inspector; and his sister Miss Susannah Maria DAVENPORT (1843–1917)
John Marriott DAVENPORT (1846–1915), Clerk of the Peace for the County of Oxford; his wife Mrs Sophia Anne DAVENPORT, née Walker; and their son Arthur DAVENPORT (1855–1886)
Samuel DAVIS (1799–1863), printer, and his wife Mrs Frances DAVIS, née Bond (c.1789–1880)
William DAVIS (c.1797–1864), timber merchant, and his wife Mrs Catharine DAVIS (c.1800–1852)
Miss Mary Ann DAWES (c.1799–1856)
Stanhope DAWSON (1817–1859), a druggist; and his youngest daughter Dorinda Georgiana DAWSON (1850–1860)
John DAY (1809/10–1868), rope maker; his wife Mrs Mary Anne DAY, née King (1808–1883); and their daughter Miss Mary Anne DAY (1842–1877)
Henry Delacour de BRISAY (1831–1916), Diocesan Inspector of Schools for the Deanery of Oxford; his wife Mrs Jane Amelia de BRISAY, née Marrett (1828/9–1904); and their daughter Miss Jane Marguerite de BRISAY (1858–1923)
Ellis Léon de la MARE, a baby (1903–1904)
William Alfred DELAMOTTE (1775–1863), landscape artist; and his wife Mrs Mary Anne DELAMOTTE, née Gage (1784–1868)
Thomas DENNIS (1828–1875), militia staff sergeant
Mrs Anne Bamford DIBBIN, née Ormiston (1810–1851)
Albert Venn DICEY (1835–1922), jurist and his wife Elinor Mary DICEY, née Bonham-Carter (1837–1923)
Alfred Thomas DICKESON (1853–1886), watchmaker & jeweller
John William DICKESON (1818–1903); his second wife Mrs Harriett Mary DICKESON, née Slade (1842/3–1892); and their daughter Miss Lily DICKESON (1872–1897)
John Thomas DOBNEY (c.1785–1866), first Superintendent Registrar of Births, Marriages, & Deaths for Oxford, and his second wife Mrs Mary DOBNEY née Arnett (1806–1861)
Mrs Mary Matilda DODD, née Dicks (1802–1876), widow of the Manciple of Wadham, and her daughters Miss Mary Anne DODD (1837–1909) and Miss Annie Goodenough DODD (1841–1911)
Miss Sarah DODD (c.1850–1930), sister of Mrs Mary Ann Sweatman, below
Thomas DODSON (1789–1869), ostler; his wife Mrs Ann DODSON, née Prior (1814–1891); and their grandson William Thomas ROYLE (1873–1883)
Thomas DOODY (c.1815–1890), an old soldier
George DORRILL (1821–1885), college servant; his wife Mrs Julia DORRILL, née Carter (c.1827–1911); their daughter Miss Emily Carter Wareham DORRILL (1858–1939); and their son Sidney Owen DORRILL (1865–1870)
George DREW (1865–1949), bricklayer, and his wife Mrs Edith (Minnie) DREW, née Wadey (1861/2–1928)
John DRING (1805–1884), mercer; his wife Mrs Elizabeth DRING, née Moore (1806–1895); and their daughter Miss Sarah Elizabeth Mary Ann DRING (1831–1911)
George DRINKWATER (1808–1873), landlord of The George in Cornmarket; his wife Mrs Eliza DRINKWATER, née Sanderson (1814/15–1893); and their daughter Miss Mary Ann DRINKWATER (1845/6–1910)
Harry George Walter DRINKWATER (1841–1895), architect; his wife Mrs Rose DRINKWATER, née Carr (1854–1926)’ their daughter Grace DRINKWATER (1879–1960); and their son George Carr DRINKWATER (1880–1941)
William DRY (1794–1871), tailor; his wife Mrs Ann DRY née Sirman (1793–1868); their son Edward DRY (1834–1897); and their daughter Ann Lydia DRY (1825/6–1898)
Joseph DUBBER (1831/2–1890), college servant; his wife Mrs Anne DUBBER, née Norton (1826/7–1906); their infant children Frank DUBBER (1860–1862) and Alice DUBBER (b. & d. 1862); and their son Harry DUBBER (1866–1903)
Crews DUDLEY (1846–1893), solicitor, and his sister Miss Elizabeth Jane Crews DUDLEY (1842–1905)
John Crews DUDLEY (1809–1874), solicitor and sometime Mayor of Oxford; his first wife Mrs Elizabeth DUDLEY, née Stevens (1808–1850); and his second wife Mrs Selina Ives DUDLEY, née Powell (1827–1864)
George Dennis DUDLEY (c.1788–1863), plumber & glazier, and uncle of John Crews Dudley above; his wife Mrs Ann DUDLEY, née Hemmings (c.1778–1862); his adopted daughter Miss Susan[nah] WELLER (c.1825–1859); and his niece Miss Eliza DUDLEY (c.1800–1875)
George Dennis Darville DUDLEY (1850–1888), solicitor, and son of John Crews Dudley above; his wife Mrs Ann DUDLEY, née Cowper (1853–1915); and their children Violet Alice DUDLEY (died aged four months in 1886) and Harry DUDLEY (died aged two days in 1887)
William Bottomley DUGGAN (1844–1904), Vicar of St Paul’s Church for 33 years
William DUKE (1833–1903), Common Room man at Exeter College, and his wife Mrs Mary Ann DUKE, née Brown (1830–1876)
Mrs Harriett DUNBAR née Bannister (c.1812–1868), a gardener’s wife
David Vavasor DURELL (1798–1865), Chairman of the Oxford Canal Company, and his wife Mrs Maria DURELL, née Le Breton (1807–1886)
Miss Elizabeth Charlotte DURELL (1831–1918) and Miss Emily Vavasor DURELL (1835–1863), daughters of David Vavasor Durell above
Miss Anne Mary Vavasor DURELL (1793–1873), and her sisters Miss Jane Vavasor DURELL (1794–1871), Miss Mary Vavasor DURELL (1795–1872), and Miss Margaret Vavasor DURELL (1808–1880)
Thomas DYER (1808–1856), grocer; his wife Mrs Anne DYER, née Hedges (1814–1858); and their sons Thomas Hedges DYER (1839–1859) and Andrew James DYER (1856–1858)
E
Miss Elizabeth EAGLESTONE (1860–1882), a kitchenmaid from Lower Heyford who died in the Radcliffe Infirmary
Miss Elizabeth EAST (1798–1878), servant, and her relation William EAST (c.1834–1908)
Daniel EASTON (c.1826–1854), Henry CORY (c.1832–1854), Elizabeth Ann CHAMBERLAIN (1829–1854), Mary Susan CHAMBERLAIN (1833–1854), and Caroline CHAMBERLAIN (1835–1854), five young people all drowned together on the Isis
William EDEN (c.1806–1889), printer at Jackson's Oxford Journal, and his wife Mrs Mary EDEN, née Ward (c.1805–1870)
John EDWARDS (1777–1858), ironmonger, and his daughters Miss Margaret Howell Bennett EDWARDS (1811–1887) and Mrs Sarah Susan HEWETT, née Edwards (1815–1869)
Mrs Rhoda EDWARDS, née Munt (1790–1853), wife of a victim of the 1832 Oxford cholera outbreak
David ELDERFIELD (1810–1871), maltster; his wife Mrs Mary ELDERFIELD, née Nichols (1809–1871); their sons Charles ELDERFIELD (1845–1869), bricklayer and George ELDERFIELD (1840–1912), carpenter; and George's wife Mrs Ann ELDERFIELD, née Barnes (1837–1914)
Edwin Litchfield ELLIOTT (1825–1896), a prosperous Cornmarket boot-maker; his wife Mrs Matilda ELLIOTT, née Bailey (1822–1903); their son Joseph ELLIOTT (1854/5–1901); and their daughter Miss Sarah Matilda ELLIOTT (1864/5–1939)
Richard ELLIS (1832/3–1900); his wife Mrs Ann ELLIS, née Leak (1831–1918), and their twin sons George ELLIS (born and died 1869) and Richard ELLIS (1869–1870)
Robinson ELLIS (1834–1913), classical scholar and Vice-President of Trinity College, Oxford
Miss Beatrix ELRINGTON (1862/3–1929), daughter of a General who worked for the Korean Mission
William Shepherd EMBURY (1825–1868), printer and Methodist preacher; his wife Mrs Kate Adelaide EMBURY, née Parr (1830–1899); and their son John William EMBURY (1856–1946)
William John EVANS (1807–1887), shoemaker; his wife Mrs Susannah Elizabeth EVANS, née Holloway (1821–1902); and their three infant children Jane EVANS (1850–1851), Thomas George EVANS (1852–1854), and Joseph George EVANS (born and died 1862)
Henry EYLES (1813–1876), wood carver; his wife Mrs Mary Ann EYLES, née Harwood (1816–1862); their son Henry William EYLES (1839–1860); their infant children Eleanor Jane EYLES (b. & d.1850); Ada Augusta EYLES (1851–1854); Alfred Frederick EYLES and Alice Maude EYLES (1857–1858), twins; and Amy Gertrude EYLES (b. & d. 1859); and their grandsons Hubert PRICE (1885–1887) and Philip John PRICE (1892–1893)
F
Mrs Rose May FACER (c.1893–1936)
Augustus Walter FANE (1866–1873) , a child
John FARMER (1835–1901), musician, and and his wife Mary Elizabeth FARMER, née Stahel (1840–1914)
George FARRANT (1813–1892), Senior Common Room Man at New College, and his wife Mrs Sarah FARRANT, née Matthews (c.1816–1885)
Charles FAULKNER (c.1815–1882), butcher; his wife Mrs Maria FAULKNER, née Bolter (1816–1892); and their son Aubrey FAULKNER (1839–1878)
Frederick FAULKNER (1807–1880), a George Street broker; his second wife Mrs Ann FAULKNER, née Leeson (1820/1–1860); and their children Lauretta, Emily, Julia, and Charles FAULKNER
James Josiah FAULKNER (1798–1857), grocer; his wife Mrs Eleanor FAULKNER, née Green (1823–1903); and their daughters Miss Eleanor Maria FAULKNER (1851–1919) and Miss Mary Tabitha FAULKNER (1852–1904)
Joseph FAULKNER (1812/13–1903), Manciple (Steward) of Christ Church; his wife Mrs Ann FAULKNER, née Horn (1813–1894); and their daughters Miss Ann FAULKNER (1841–1934) and Miss Emily FAULKNER (1851–1933)
Joseph John FAULKNER (c.1780–1859), former servant, and his wife Mrs Maria FAULKNER, née Bolter (c.1804–1879)
George FEAD LAMERT (1828–1870), retired army captain and a married Fellow Commoner of Worcester College
George FERRIS (1802–1876), servant at Balliol College; his wife Mrs Sarah FERRIS, née Puffett (1802–1881); their son Edwin FERRIS (1841–1865); and their daughter Mrs Eliza Elliott HARRIS, née Ferris (1836/7–1925)
Mrs Elizabeth FIGG, née Farey (1809–1858), first wife of the coachman John Figg, and Mrs Sarah FIGG, née Gardiner (1835–1878), his second wife
Mrs Louisa FILSELL, née Bates (1825–1892), who ran the Park Nursery, Banbury Road, and her daughters Miss Louisa Jane FILSELL (1861–1877) and Miss Lizzie Annie FILSELL (1862–1939)
William FITCHEW (1818–1866), carpenter; his wife Mrs Elizabeth FITCHEW, née Nunney/Taylor (1814–1861); and their son Thomas Shillito FITCHEW (1847–1853)
Miss Eliza Mary FLEETWOOD (1835–1911), and her daughter Miss Lavinia Georgina TAUNTON [FLEETWOOD] (1858–1926)
Griffin FLETCHER (c.1792–1853), driver of the Oxford to Cambridge coach until the 1840s, and his wife Mrs Ann FLETCHER, née Andrews (1801–1872)
William FLETCHER (1831–1872), brewer, and his wife Sarah Grace FLETCHER, née Hadley (1826–1871)
Mrs Maria FORD, née Geyton (1820–1901) and her daughter Miss Emma Maria FORD, pupil teacher at St Paul’s School (1844–1860)
Charles FOSTER (1779–1853), linen draper; his wife Mrs Sarah FOSTER, née Bartlett (1788/9–1863); and their daughters Miss Eleanor Rebecca FOSTER (1820–1884) and Miss Ann FOSTER (1823–1905)
Mrs Sarah FOSTER, née Hall (c.1779–1862); her granddaughter Mrs Mary (Katherine) BARRETT, née Beechey (c.1821–1900); and her grandson-in-law Robert Augustine BARRETT (c.1821–1894)
Elizabeth FOWLER (c.1809–1863), a Londoner who died in the Radcliffe Infirmary
John Charles Richard FREEBORN (1853–1934), Broad Street doctor, and his wife Mrs Emily Sarah FREEBORN, née Lawton (1837–1929)
Mrs Sarah FREEMAN, née Waite (1822/3–1863), a carpenter’s wife
Henry Phibbs FRY (1807–1874), clergyman who served in Tasmania
G
John GALPIN (1824–1891), surveyor who founded the ill-fated Oxford Building & Investments Company, and sometime Mayor of Oxford; and his wife Mrs Catherine GALPIN, née Green (c.1822–1881)
Mrs Harriet GAMMON, née Tanner (1793–1871); her son Henry Moses GAMMON (1826–1871); and her sister Miss Elizabeth TANNER (1798–1859). Also their housekeeper Miss Martha KING (1825–1882) and her sister Miss Susan KING (1838–1882)
John GARBUTT (c.1824–1895), porter at Christ Church
Edwin GARDINER (1828–1869) and his wife Mrs Sarah GARDINER, née Panter (c.1830–1872)
James GARDINER (1798–1882); his second wife Mrs Jane GARDINER, née Goodall (c.1806–1860); and his third wife Mrs Elizabeth GARDINER née Phipp (1817–1864)
Henry Thomas GARDNER (1834–1855), nurseryman
John GARLICK senior (c.1815–1851), porter of Jesus College; his second wife Mrs Charlotte GARLICK, née Cooke (c.1819–1899); and their sons John GARLICK junior (1840–1878) and George GARLICK (1850–1856)
William GARRETT (c.1829–1890), a soldier who became a college servant, and his wife Mrs Sarah Ann GARRETT, née Nott (1829–1934), who lived to be 105
Courtenay Lower GEDYE (born and died 1870), baby son of an undergraduate
John GEE (c.1805–1887), carpenter, and his wife Mrs Mary GEE, née Varney (1811–1891)
John GEE (1842–1898), founder of Gee’s Nursery on the Banbury Road (and no relation of the above) and his wife Mrs Elizabeth GEE, née Payne (1841–1887)
Mrs Jane Taws GEEKIE (c.1825–1877) and her son George GEEKIE (c.1861–1877)
Mary Eliza GEORGE (born and died 1853), infant daughter of a tailor
Henry Tresawna GERRANS (1858–1921), Fellow of Worcester College, and his wife Mrs Anna Elizabeth GERRANS, née English (1858–1946)
Miss Mary Elizabeth GIBSON, known as Bessie (1845–1882), who committed suicide at her Park Town home
Richard GILES (1811/12–1874), tailor & beer retailer; his wife Mrs Ann GILES, née Hosier (1811/12–1883); their son Thomas William GILES (1839–1921), upholsterer's salesman; and Thomas's wife Mrs Sarah GILES, née Saxton (1846–1943)
William GILLAM (1819–1873), a carpenter who died of typhoid; his wife Mrs Margaret GILLAM, née Cannon (1825–1915); their son Arthur Robert GILLAM (1871–1872); and their daughter Miss Clara GILLAM (1862–1939)
William Hender GILLBEE (1831–1851), undergraduate of Exeter College who drowned on the Thames near the Isis Tavern
George GILLMAN (1842–1898), shoemaker, and his wife Mrs Alice Mary Agnes GILLMAN, née WAVELL (1857–1882)
Edgar GLANVILLE (c.1809–1867), solicitor’s clerk; his wife Mrs Mary Ann GLANVILLE, née Brown (1809–1869); and their son Frederick Lewis GLANVILLE (1854–1885)
Benjamin Joseph GLAZEBROOK (1858–1879), unattached student who died after drinking prussic acid
John GODFREY (1799–1872), surgeon; his wife Mrs Elizabeth Williamson GODFREY, née Saunders (1805–1874); and their son James Alfred GODFREY (1835–1869)
John GODFREY (1812–1861), upholsterer; his second wife Mrs Mary Ann GODFREY, née Burley (1818–1867); and their son William Henry GODFREY, electrotype printer (1851–1890)
William Sheldon GOUNDREY (1827–1871), landlord of the Crown & Thistle in Market Street; his wife Mrs Caroline GOUNDREY, née Golding (1825–1893); and their daughter Elizabeth Sarah (Bessie) GOUNDREY (1854–1901)
Mrs Frances GRACIE née White (1849–1882), wife of a tailor, and her baby sons Eden White GRACIE (born and died 1878) and Alexander GRACIE (born and died 1881)
George GRANT (c.1831–1858), unidentified
James GRAY (1790–1870), merchant and father of the Vicar of Ss Philip & James’s Church, and his daughter Miss Maria GRAY (1836–1865)
Mrs Mary GRAY (c.1785–1850), copperplate printer
Mrs Sarah GRAY (1831/2–1859), who died after giving birth
Mrs Sarah GRAY (c.1800–1871) and her grandson Frederick William GRAY (1849–1869)
Anne GREEN (born and died 1852) and her brother Miles William GREEN (born and died 1861), children of a college servant
Miss Elizabeth GREEN (1833–1857) and her sisters Miss Emily GREEN (1841–1917) and Miss Mary Round GREEN (1850–1898)
Henry GREEN (1808–1861), printer, and his wife Mrs Sarah GREEN, née Round (1807/8–1898)
Thomas Hill GREEN (1836–1882), philosopher, and his wife Mrs Charlotte Byron GREEN, née Symonds (1842–1929)
Simeon GREEN (1845–1868), faggot-maker; his brother Benjamin GREEN (1848–1897), wood dealer and cab-driver; and Benjamin’s wife Mrs Marian Field GREEN, née Grantham (1849–1898)
Mrs Caroline GREGORY, née Cooper (c.1814–1874) of Cutteslowe Farm; her daughter Mrs Mary Elizabeth Caroline GREGORY, née Gregory (1844–1901), and her son-in-law the Revd Thomas Henry GREGORY (1842–1904)
Miss Joanna Julia GRESWELL (1838–1906), Greek and Hebrew scholar, and her sister Miss Helen Margaret GRESWELL (1840–1913)
Thomas Snell GRIERSON (1831–1875), tailor’s commercial traveller; his second wife Mrs Amelia GRIERSON, née Hickman (1839–1877); and their daughter Ethel GRIERSON (1873–1877)
Barnard GRIFFIN (c.1795–1865), a tailor; his second wife Mrs Mary GRIFFIN, née Lapworth (1806–1892); and their daughter Miss Eliza Griffin (1839–1892)
Joseph GRIFFIN (1810–1880), college servant; his wife Mrs Martha GRIFFIN, née Wheeler (c.1808–1892); and his sister Miss Sophia GRIFFIN (1799–1868)
Joseph William GRIFFIN (1845–1877), college servant; his brother Frank Henry GRIFFIN (1847–1877), solicitor’s general clerk; and their sister Mrs Mary Ann BISHOP, née Griffin (1849–1921)
John GRIFFITHS (1806–1885), Warden of Wadham College, Oxford and Keeper of the University Archives; his sister Sophia GRIFFITHS (1809–1871); and his housekeeper Miss Mary Ann GOODING (1815–1910)
Thomas GRIMSLEY (c.1800–1875), sculptor who made the terracotta gravestones in this cemetery; his wife Mrs Rebecca GRIMSLEY, née Stockford (1796–1879); and their grandson Frederick Thomas Henry George GRIMSLEY (1874–1938)
H
Alfred HACKMAN (1811–1874), Sub-Librarian at the Bodleian, Precentor of Christ Church, Vicar of St Paul’s Church
Miss Ellen Mary HAINES (1834–1914); her sister Miss Caroline Susan HAINES (1836–1907); and their niece Miss Ellen Pillinger HAINES (1860–1935), sisters and daughter of John Haines junior below
John HAINES senior (1796–1865), Keeper of the Radcliffe Library and Assistant Clerk of the Magistrates; his wife Mrs Susannah HAINES, née Harris (1797–1872); and their three sons George HAINES (1826–1849), Henry HAINES (1823–1872), and Frederick Cooper HAINES (1832–1903)
John HAINES junior (1821/2–1881), University Bedel and Librarian; his wife Mrs Ellen HAINES, née Pillinger (1825–1863), and their sons John George HAINES (1854–1863), Frederick Cooper HAINES (1857–1870), and William Henry HAINES (1855–1901)
Mrs Ivy Una Brenda Daisy HALE, née Mortimer (1892–1926)
Joseph HALE (1819–1881), Jericho baker; his wife Mrs Eliza HALE, née Hadley (1825–1866); their daughter Mrs Fanny Mary YOUNG, née Hale (1853–1931); their son Henry HALE (1856–1875); and their daughter Rose HALE (1861–1870)
Six HALE infants, children of the Jericho baker
Mrs Annie HALL, née Broadhurst (1846–1875)
Daniel George HALL (1839–1899), brewer in Observatory Street and Churchwarden of St Giles’s Church
Edward Pickard HALL (1808–1886), Printer at the Clarendon Press; his wife Mrs Annie HALL, née Ralph (1814–1892); and their daughters Alys HALL (1853–1883) and Mary Ellen Pickard HALL (1840–1914)
Mrs Elizabeth HALL (c.1801–1859); her son Thomas HALL (1836–1863); her grandsons Arthur Spencer Hall (1868–1880) and Hubert Lionel HALL (1879–1897)
Richard HALL (1801–1869), a farrier, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth HALL, née Strange (1803–1863)
Mrs Sarah Jane HALL, née Alden (1829–1882), a carpenter’s wife, and her children Emma Jane HALL (1853–1866) and Henry John HALL (1856–1864)
Alfred William HALLETT (1842/3–1878), ironmonger's assistant
Henry Whiting HAMLYN (c.1806–1872), Birmingham corn factor, and his daughter Mrs Rebecca Sophia WARLAND (formerly Mrs Holland), née Hamlyn (1831–1922)
Alfred Ogle HANSARD (1817–1851), Lieutenant in the Royal Navy
Mrs Sarah HARDS, née Jarvis (1802–1857) and her daughter Miss Mary Ann Jarvis HARDS (1827–1906)
Mrs Cecilia Jane HARPER, née Frost (1816–1861), wife of the next, and their daughter Minnie Helen Maud HARPER (1851–1861)
Henry Smith HARPER (c.1820–1887), librarian at the Bodleian and university bedel
William HARPER (c.1828–1878), blacksmith turned stonemason, and his wife Mrs Jane HARPER (c.1827–1885), linen draper
Mrs Anne HARRIS, née Whitehead (1856–1891)
Mrs Hannah HARRIS, née Alcock (c.1796–1857) and her daughter Mrs Mary GRIFFITHS, née Harris (c.1821–1878)
George Thomas Boreman HARRIS, a baker (1840–1887)
Samuel HARRIS (1827–1894), Manciple of Worcester College, and his wife Mrs Caroline Susannah HARRIS, née Horser (1824–1899)
William Waters HARRISON (1827–1891), the last of the Yeoman Bedels
Henry Auber HARVEY (1824–1910), Vicar of St Mary Magdalen Church, and his wife Mrs Blanche Barbara HARVEY, née Ellice (1835/6–1919)
Charles HASTINGS (1838–1888), saddler for the Oxfordshire Yeomanry, who was given a big military funeral; his wife Mary Ann HASTINGS, née Acott (c.1837–1889), their son James Charles HASTINGS (1874–1876); and their twin daughters Edith Mary HASTINGS (1867–1878) and and Florence Anne HASTINGS (1867–1881)
Thomas Henry HASTINGS (1831–1884), upholsterer; his wife Mrs Ann Elizabeth HASTINGS, née Badcock (1827/8–1873); and his younger brother Edwin HASTINGS (1836–1882), grocer
George HAWKINS (1844–1908), compositor at OUP; his wife Mrs Emily HAWKINS, née Dunn (1840–1895); and their daughter Mabel HAWKINS (1873/4–1887)
Charles Moore HAYNES (1847/8–1907), house painter, and his wife Mrs Matilda HAYNES, née Kirtland, later Kirtland Stroud (c.1849–1917)
Miss Carolina HAYNES (1808–1892), lodging-house keeper
Edward HAYNES (1821–1871), painter & glazier, and his wife Mrs Mary Ann HAYNES, née Goodden (1823–1862)
Mrs Mary HAZEL, née Eaton (1780–1875), clergyman's widow, and her daughter Miss Sarah Anne HAZEL (1817–1894)
Mrs Eliza HEMMINGS, née Freeman (1858–1894), killed by her husband, James John Thorley Hemmings, son of the next
James Thorley HEMMINGS (1842–1929) and his wife Sarah Ann HEMMINGS, née Ball (1840–1925), landlords of the George & Dragon pub in George Street
Thomas HEMMINS (c.1822–1890), hairdresser, later college servant; his wife Mrs Sarah Emma HEMMINS, née Allnutt (1824–1884); and their son Charles Allnutt HEMMINS (1861–1882)
William HERMAN (1837/8–1908), cabinet maker of Broad Street, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth HERMAN, née Burchell (1838–1909)
Reginald Arthur Clayton HESLOP (1874–1890), the 15-year-old son of a fraudulent clergyman, who drowned in Black Jack’s Hole on the Thames near Gostow when caught up in weed while swimming
George Parsons HESTER (1798–1876), Town Clerk of Oxford responsible for the building of New Osney; his wife Mary HESTER, née Hazel (1805–1880); and their children Francis HESTER (1837–1850); Annie HESTER (1840–1854); Charles HESTER (1838–1857); and Jane HESTER (1833–1861)
Henry HESTER (1860–1912), tinplate man, then house-painter; his wife Mrs Mary Ann HESTER, née Brain (1857–1946); and their daughter Mrs Rachel Mary PIMM, née Hester (1885–1934)
Mrs Susannah HESTER, née Torry (1772–1863), mother of George Parsons Hester above and wife of John Hester; Sophia HESTER (1776–1860), sister of John Hester; and Miss Mary HESTER (c.1835–1889), daughter of George Parsons Hester
Edward HEWLETT (1849–1929), grocer, later cycle agent; his wife Mrs Charlotte Hannah HEWLETT, née Dickeson (1851–1890); their daughter Miss Gertrude Ellen HEWLETT (1879–1939); and their baby granddaughter Joyce HARRIS (born and died 1913)
Thomas HEWLETT (c.1814–1862), Common Room man of Exeter College; his wife Mrs Mary Ann HEWLETT, née Puzey (1811/12–1866); their daughter Miss Mary Elizabeth HEWLETT (1846–1896); Mrs Hewlett’s mother Mrs Elizabeth (Beth) PUZEY (1780–1864); and John HEWLETT (unknown)
Charles HICKMAN (1800–1873), cabinet maker; his wife Mrs Martha HICKMAN, née Simmonds (1797/8–1873); and their son Charles Edwin HICKMAN (1836–1870)
John William HIGGINS (1855–1930), landlord of Jericho House (now the Jericho Tavern); his wife Mrs Emily HIGGINS, née Sides (1852–1909); their five sons Hugh Alfred HIGGINS (1885–1887), George Duncan Albert HIGGINS (1884–1897), Percival HIGGINS (d.1879), William John HIGGINS (1877–1879), and Thomas Henry Sides HIGGINS (1876–1945); and Emily’s brother Thomas SIDES (1840–1880)
Joseph HIGGINS the Younger (1826/7–1877), landlord of Jericho House (now the Jericho Tavern) and his wife Mrs Eliza HIGGINS, née Thornton (1822/3–1893)
Mrs Sophia HIGGINS, née Randell (1808–1873); her daughter Miss Jane HIGGINS (1837–1858); and her niece Miss Elizabeth TUBB (1817–1858)
Arthur Hibble HIGGS (1850–1915), one of the best-known private tutors in Oxford
John HILL (c.1822–1897), upholsterer's porter; his wife Mrs Johanna HILL, née Brennan (c.1826–1909); and their daughter Miss Marion Josephine HILL (1863–1937)
Robert HILLS (1821–1882), co-founder of photography firm Hills & Saunders, and his first wife Mrs Ann HILLS, née Lindsey (1815–1852), and their children Mary HILLS (1845–1848) and Robert HILLS junior (1849/50–1851); and also his second wife Mrs Ann HILLS, née Bell (1832–1908) and their sons Henry James HILLS (1857–1899) and Sydney Robert Alfred HILLS (1884–1891); and Sydney’s wife Mrs Charlotte Augusta HILLS, née Donagan (1857–1932)
Miss Catharine Mary Anne HISCOCK (c.1831–1878)
Francis HISTED (1856–1897), printer, and his daughter Sarah Lottie HISTED (1885–1890)
William Richard HOBBS (1812–1882), accountant, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth HOBBS, née Berry (1809/10–1896)
Mrs Ann HOLLIDAY, née Sellar (1795–1880), the widow of a matriculated hairdresser, and her son Thomas Henry HOLLIDAY (1833–1893), sub-librarian at the city library
Moses HOLLIDAY (1805–1878), Manciple of Corpus & University Verger; his second wife Mrs Caroline HOLLIDAY, née Ivory (1813–1898); and his children Charles Harvey HOLLIDAY (1835–1864), Elizabeth HOLLIDAY (1837–1899), Jane HOLLIDAY (1840–1928), and Harriet Mary HOLLIDAY (1849–1929)
Charles HOLLOWAY (c.1816–1878), accountant, and his bookbinder son George HOLLOWAY (1842–1875)
George Mansell HOLLOWAY (1868–1889) and his aunt Mrs Hannah DRAPER, née Holloway (c.1836–1889)
William John HOLLWAY (1796–1855), carpenter, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth HOLLWAY, née Lipscomb (1791–1863)
Joseph HOPKINS (1805–1868), china & glass merchant, and his wife Mrs Catherine HOPKINS, née Harris (1798–1875)
William Henry HORN (1830–1919), college cook & manciple; his first wife Mrs Esther HORN, née Bailey (1837–1888); and his second wife Mrs Amy Baynes HORN, née Marshall (1864–1929)
Mrs Hannah HORSER, née Suffield (c.1799–1871); her son Cottrell William HORSER (1826–1893); and her son’s wife Mrs Annie HORSER, née Jacob (1829–1908)
Frederick HOSIER (1844–1896), college servant; his wife Mrs Lydia HOSIER, née Harris (1843–1903); and their eldest daughter Miss Florence Lilly HOSIER (1870–1947)
William HOSIER (1814–1892), Mayor's Sergeant; his wife Mrs Elizabeth Walklett HOSIER, née Bliss (1819–1888); and their son Charles HOSIER (1845–1865)
William Edward HOWELL (1822–1877). a valet, and his wife Mrs Sophia HOWELL, née Allnutt (1820–1906)
Miss Harriet HOWKINS (1838–1879); and Mrs Sarah Sanyard HOLLWAY, née Teagle (1805–1883) and her son John Richard HOLLWAY (1830–1883), a carpenter
Mrs Harriet Margaret HOWKINS, née Hearn (1856–1892), tailoress and wife of an ink-maker, and her baby son Horace Albert HOWKINS (1892–3)
Mrs Jane HOWSE, née Browning (c.1821–1857), first wife of the college servant William Howse, and her daughter Elizabeth HOWSE (1852/3–1864); and Mrs Hannah HOWSE, née Farmer, (1830–1867), his second wife, and her daughter Sarah Hannah HOWSE (1861–1867)
Benjamin Stockford HUGGINS (1799–1879), a tobacco-pipe-maker of Observatory Street; his wife Sarah HUGGINS, née Hewlett (1825–1905); and their son Percy Stockford Godfrey HUGGINS (1864–1913)
Mrs Mary Ann HUGGINS, née Appletree (1808–1882), coachbuilder's widow
George James HUGHES (1848–1908), cabinet maker; his wife Mrs Emma HUGHES, née Coltman (1843/4–1921); and their two infant children
John HUGHES (1806–1867), printer at Oxford University Press; his wife Mrs Ann HUGHES, née Maltby (1814–1872); and their daughter-in-law Mrs Emma Catherine HUGHES, née Tanner (1850–1876)
Marian Rebecca HUGHES (1817–1912), Mother Superior of the Convent of the Holy and Undivided Trinity in Woodstock Road, and many other Anglican nuns, including Julia Ellen BROWN (1836–1909), Sarah HILL (1838–1910), and Amelia Anne COLE (1841–1867)
Mrs Mary HULLYER (c.1813–1882); her daughter Mrs Phebe Ann FROST, née Hullyer (1845–1894); and her son-in-law John FROST (1848/9–1914), publican at the Gloucester Arms and later farmer
Charles Cowens HUNT (1853–1876)
Mrs Sarah HUNT (c.1798–1868) and her son Alfred Henry HUNT (c.1832–1860)
Philip HURCOMB (1810–1873), printer & publican; his wife Mrs Jane HURCOMB, née Sanders (1814–1893); his daughters Miss Jane Sanders HURCOMB (1837–1860), Mrs Eliza MARTIN née Hurcomb (1840–1871), and Miss Anna HURCOMB (1842–1883); and his son-in-law George Thomas MARTIN (1821–1873)
William HURCOMB (1850–1939), bookseller; his wife Mrs Sarah Ann HURCOMB, née Castle (1855–1911); and their daughters Miss Alice HURCOMB (1886–1911) and Dora HURCOMB (1888–1889)
Alexander Samuel HURFORD (1820–1886), solicitor; his wife Mrs Maria HURFORD, née Jacob (c.1830–1858); and their baby daughter Adeline Maria HURFORD (born and died 1856)
William Richard HURST (1829–1887), schoolmaster, and his brother Herbert HURST (1833–1913), antiquarian
John HUTT (1832–1882), an ostler, and his wife Mrs Charlotte Ann HUTT, née Tuck (c.1832–1871)
Miss Mary HUTTON (1819–1900), boarding-house keeper, and her sister Miss Margaret HUTTON (1823–1897)
I, J
Herbert JACKSON (1851–1921), “The British Workman”
William JACKSON (1812–1879), a cooper, and his wife Mrs Sarah JACKSON, née Higgins (1814–1912)
Mrs Sarah JAMES, née Thorney (c.1792–1871), widow of the Yeoman Bedel of Law, and her sons Thomas Charles JAMES (1833–1861) and and Philip Henry JAMES (1835–1858)
Mrs Ann Sarah JEPHSON, née Armroid (1796–1878); her third daughter Miss Mary JEPHSON (1823–1892); her fifth daughter Miss Sarah or Norah JEPHSON (1832–1899); and her seventh daughter Miss Prudence Armroid JEPHSON (1839–1897)
Mrs Emma JEPHSON, née Pigot (1810–1879), daughter-in-law of Mrs Ann Sarah Jephson above
Mrs Emma JESSOP née Jelfs (1823–1854), first wife of Richard Jessop
Their daughter Mrs Betsey Emma HALE, née Jessop (1850–1942)
and their son-in-law William Joseph HALE (1846–1928)
John JESSOP (1852–1886), butcher, and his baby daughters Nellie Emma JESSOP (1876–1877) and Ellen Rose JESSOP (1880–1881)
Mrs Lavinia Elizabeth Margaret Mary JESSOP née Soanes (1864–1923) and her son Reginald Joseph JESSOP (1891–1913)
Richard JESSOP senior (1824–1881), butcher of Walton Street, and his second wife wife Mrs Emma JESSOP, née Revill (1836–1927)
Richard JESSOP junior (1858–1909) and his maternal grandmother Mrs Anne REVILLE, née Whittaker (1800–1893)
Henry JOHNSON (1858–1911), Keeper of St Sepulchre’s Cemetery; his wife Mrs Elizabeth JOHNSON, née Jones (c.1858–1929); and their son Ernest Henry JOHNSON (1888–1940)
James JOHNSON (1798–1872), builder & timber merchant, and his wife Mrs Jane JOHNSON née Deeley (1822–1863)
John JOHNSON (1844–1913), college servant/butler; his wife Mrs Ann JOHNSON, née Dearing (1842–1922); and their son Edward John JOHNSON (1875–1880)
Manuel John JOHNSON (1805–1859), the Radcliffe Observer, and his wife Mrs Caroline JOHNSON, née Ogle (1822–1881)
Henry JOLLIFFE (c.1827–1876), house painter; his wife Mrs Anne JOLLIFFE, née Speller (1831–1911), their infant son Albert JOLLIFFE (1864–1867); and their daughter Miss Margaret Anne JOLLIFFE (1857–1932)
Henry Andrew JOLLIFFE (1850–1877), compositor; his wife Mrs Henrietta JOLLIFFE, née Brown (1854–1917); and his younger brother Arthur Ernest JOLLIFFE (1871–1944), Fellow of Corpus Christi College
Mrs Martha JONES, née Alden (1839–1874)
Benjamin JOWETT (1817–1893), Master of Balliol College, Oxford and Regius Professor of Greek
K
Augustine Margetts KEARSEY (1865–1946), furniture dealer of Jericho; his wife Mrs Eliza KEARSEY, née Russell (1868–1950); and their children Augustine St Clare KEARSEY (1892–1913) and Ethel Eliza KEARSEY (1900–1914)
Elfreda Agatha KEKEWICH (1855–1929), daughter of an army colonel
Edward Reynolds KELLY (1810–1882); his wife Mrs Elizabeth KELLY, née Wardman (c.1816–1875); and their children Elizabeth Mary KELLY (1844–1871), Edward Wardman KELLY (1846–1875), and John George KELLY (1855–1883)
Mrs Emily Martha KEMPSTER, née Kethro (1872–1937)
Henry Cornelius KEMPSTER (1827–1910). a tailor; his wife Mrs Hannah Rebecca KEMPSTER, née Finmore (1828–1909); and their daughter Miss Fanny MARIA KEMPSTER (1850–1871)
Frederick KENDRICK (1834–1869), college servant
William KETT (1845–1849), four-year-old son of the apothecary Edward Rogers Kett
Richard KEYS (1788–1863), Under-Sacristan of Christ Church; his wife Mrs Hannah KEYS, née Dawkins (1790–1865); and their son Richard John KEYS (1827–1858)
Mrs Isabella Rebekah KIDD née Savery (1774–1863), wife of John Kidd, Regius Professor of Medicine: her sister Miss Avarilla Susannah SAVERY (1777–1856); and her third daughter Miss Frances Sarah KIDD (1812–1871)
Miss Isabella KIDD (c.1804–1873), daughter of John Kidd, Regius Professor of Medicine, and her sisters Mrs Beatrice WILSON, née Kidd (1807–1874) and Miss Susan KIDD (1814–1894)
William KIRTLAND (1786–1864), Assistant Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum
Matthew KNIGHT (1817–1886), butler to the Master of Balliol College, and his wife Mrs Jane KNIGHT, née WAKEFIELD (1813–1885)
Thomas Robert KNIGHT (1844–1877), a clerk, and his niece Miss Ada Margaret COLES (1874–1930)
L
Thomas Davis LAMB (1815–1895), retired clergyman, and his wife Mrs Isabella LAMB, née Hudleston (1823–1917)
Francis William LAMBERT (1868/9–1899), naturalist, from a family of shoemakers
Miss Eleanor LARGE (c.1797–1872); her son Stephen LARGE (1816–1876), a boat builder; and her daughter-in-law Mrs Elizabeth LARGE (c.1816–1879)
William LEAPINGWELL (1806–1861), surgeon
Henry LEVERETT (1818–1880), carpenter, and his wife Mrs Sarah LEVERETT, née Reeks (c.1815–1895)
Mrs Ellen LISEMORE, née Arnold (1843–1884), wife of a china & glass merchant; and her young children Eleanor LISEMORE (1867–1874), William LISEMORE (1872–1882), and Maud LISEMORE (1876–1879)
William LISEMORE (c.1808–1878), earthenware dealer, and his wife Mrs Mary LISEMORE, née Poultney (c.1808–1883)
William LLEWELLIN (c.1812–1900), retired Inland Revenue collector; his wife Mrs Elizabeth LLEWELLIN née Lack (1812–1892); and their daughter Mrs Elizabeth Ann Hastings HURST, née Llewellin (1839–1924)
Mrs Jane LLOYD, née Solway (c.1821–1871)
Mrs Mary Harriott LLOYD, née Stapleton (1787–1857), widow of the Bishop of Oxford, and her eldest daughter Miss Catherine Eliza LLOYD (1824–1898)
Richard Beeston LOCKEY (1811–1878), civil engineer, and his younger brother John LOCKEY (1814–1875), Manciple of Queen's, and their nephew Charles Oliver LOCKEY (1854–1881)
Henry LOCKWOOD (1801–1854), Broad Street tailor; his wife Mrs Johanna LOCKWOOD, née Manders (c.1810–1879); their daughter Miss Mary Ann LOCKWOOD (c.1835–1899); and their son William Alexander LOCKWOOD (1841/2–1865)
John Samuel LOWE (born 1868, wrongly presumed dead in 1916: inscription only), a commercial traveller with children by five women; his deserted wife Mrs Florence Alice Louisa LOWE, née Sheppard (1870–1949); and their daughter Daisy Louisa Florence LOWE (1890–1910)
Thomas Dawson LUCAS (1808–1870), a shoemaker; his wife Mrs Maria LUCAS, née Brown (c.1812–1907); their daughter Miss Ann LUCAS (1839–1896); and Ann’s son Tom LUCAS (1858–1898)
Thomas LUCAS (1817–1897), a compositor; his wife Mrs Emily LUCAS, née Goddard (c.1816–1886); their niece Mrs Mary Eleanor POTTAGE, née Lucas (1846–1897); their son-in-law James Arthur HOWSE (c.1860–1916); and their daughter Mary Eleanor HOWSE, née Lucas (1850–1931)
Lorenzo LUCENA (1807–1881), Roman Catholic and Church of England priest and Hispanic scholar
William Castle LUCY (c.1807–1861), former London fishmonger; his second wife Mrs Catherine Martha BOSWELL, née Jennings, formerly Mrs Lucy (1813–1868); and his mother-in-law Mrs Mary JENNINGS (c.1778–1860)
William LUCY (1837–1873), of the Eagle Ironworks; his wife Mrs Alice LUCY, née Jennings (1841–1937); and their three infant children: George Reginald LUCY (1863–1864), Alice Maud M. LUCY (1866/7–1870), and Thomas Arnold LUCY (1870–1871)
William LUFF senior (1810/11–1893), a chemist in Cornmarket; his wife Prudence LUFF née Harris (1808–1879); and his daughter Miss Mary LUFF (1844–1892)
William LUFF junior (1845–1897), a chemist in Cornmarket, and his wife Mrs Rosa Ellen LUFF née Harris (1848–1883)
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Mrs Alice MacALPIN née Stone (1839–1869), wife of a Scottish draper, and her infant children Margaret Annie MacALPIN (1867–1868) and William MacALPIN (born and died 1869)
Ernest Edward McCLELLAN (c.1862–1907), assistant at the Radcliffe Observatory
Miss Isabella MAGAREY (c.1780–1857), an Irish lady who formerly ran a small school in London
Miss Emma MAILING (1872–1898), daughter of a Jericho shoemaker
Robert MAIN (1808–1878), Radcliffe Observer
Edward MALE (1817–1897), clergyman, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth MALE, née Geldard (1819/20–1884)
Thomas MALLAM (1817–1895), solicitor; his wife Mrs Martha MALLAM, née Joy (1819–1893); and their daughter Miss Ethel Margaret MALLAM (1862–1911)
William MANDER (1768–1856) and his wife Mrs Sarah MANDER, née Kimber (1774–1853)
George MARGETTS (1812–1866), hatter and woollen draper of Cornmarket Street, and his wife Mrs Frances MARGETTS, née Miles (1820–1904)
Edward MARSHALL (1815–1899), Curate of St Mary Magdalen and later Vicar of Sandford St Martin; his wife Mrs Eliza Julia MARSHALL, née Burton (c.1826–1856); and their infant sons Edward MARSHALL (died 1850) and William Charles MARSHALL (died 1853)
Mrs Harriett Louisa MARTIN, née Bone (c.1850–1894), wife of a cabinet maker in Chiswick
Mrs Mary MARTIN, née Martin (1792–1862), a corn dealer’s widow, and her daughter Mrs Maria Sarah MARTIN, née Martin (1812–1864), a tailor’s wife
Veargitt William MAUGHAN (1863–1888), undergraduate of St John’s College
Charles William MAXEY (1826–1887), a tailor, and his wife Mrs Emily MAXEY, née Randall (1830–1886)
Alfred MAYCOCK (1852–1947), Walton Street grocer, and his wife Mrs Esther MAYCOCK, née Pollard (1848–1936)
William MERRY (1828–1862), stonemason and Methodist lay preacher; his wife Mrs Elizabeth CLARKE, formerly Mrs Merry, née Maisey (1835–1914); and his daughter Mrs Mary Ann BURDEN, née Merry (1857–1911)
Frederick METCALFE (1815–1885), Vicar of St Michael’s Church and Scandinavian scholar, and his wife Mrs Rosamund METCALFE, née Robinson (c.1835–1860)
John George Manfield MILLER, jeweller (c.1843–1871)
Miss Susannah MILLS (c.1792–1874), a servant never forgotten by Miss Jane Rigaud (terracotta gravestone)
William Richard MORFILL (1834–1909), the first Professor of Russian and Slavonic Languages, and his wife Mrs Charlotte Maria MORFILL, née Lee (1835/6–1881)
William MORRISON (1831/2–1895), retired clergyman, and his wife Mrs Magdalen MORRISON, née Wallace (1834–1916)
Richard MORTIMER (1850–1895), Jericho coal merchant: his wife Mrs Elizabeth MORTIMER, née Bricknell (1852–1898); and their sons (William) Thomas Bricknell MORTIMER (1883–1917) and Firnrick Hercules MORTIMER (1885–1898)
James Bowling MOZLEY (1813–1878), theologian and journalist, Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford, and his wife Mrs Amelia MOZLEY, née Ogle (c.1821–1872)
Frederick Lewis Rowland MÜLLER (1820/1–1868), bookseller’s assistant, and his wife Hannah Hill MÜLLER, née Hawes (c.1823–1908)
George MULLINS (1800–1867), Rector of Great Chalfield in Wiltshire; his wife Mrs Susannah MULLINS, née Gardiner (c.1805–1879); and their daughter Miss Elizabeth Susannah MULLINS (1846–1928)
Walton MUNCASTER (1782–1862), pawnbroker (terracotta gravestone)
James MYERS (1792–1854), a fancy-bread baker; his wife Mrs Diana MYERS, née Carter (1801–1848), and his sister-in-law Mrs Rachel WAY, née Carter (1793–1873): this grave of 1848 the earliest identified
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Charles NAPPER (1817–1885), college servant, and his wife Mrs Esther NAPPER, née Allmond (1818–1899)
William NEALE (c.1905–1927), died aged 22
Miss Louisa NEEDHAM, a Lancashire school teacher (c.1816–1865)
Edward NEWMAN (1781/2–1862) and his daughter Miss Harriet NEWMAN (1824–1905)
Thomas NEWTON (c.1814–1892), china & glass merchant; his first wife Mrs Ann NEWTON, née Martin (c.1814–1864); their daughters Selina NEWTON (1847–1864) and Lucy Kate NEWTON (1854–1879); and his second wife Mrs Mary Ann NEWTON (c.1815–1902)
Richard NICHOLS (1816–1870), a tailor, and his infant daughter Elizabeth Ann NICHOLS (1851–1853)
Richard NICHOLSON (1815–1886), coach painter; his wife Mrs Sarah Harriett NICHOLSON, née Turner (c.1826–1917); and their baby granddaughter Celeste Eugenie Nicholson WALKER (1886–1887)
Mrs Ann NICKOLS (c.1792–1853), wife of the landlord of the Star & Garter and later the Blue Anchor, both in Cornmarket
Henry NICKOLS (1831/2–1895), landlord of the Red Lion at Gloucester Green; his wife Mrs Ann NICKOLS, née Jones (c.1832–1916) and their son Frederick Thomas NICKOLS (c.1816–1890), killed by a train
Walter George NICKOLS (1867–1915) and his brother Herbert Frank NICKOLS (1870–1921), both horse cab drivers
Mrs Charlotte NOON, née White (c.1819–1852), a Jericho mother killed by her husband
Thomas NOON (1795–1863); his son Thomas William NOON (1830–1851); his daughter Mrs Betsy MARKHAM, née Noon (1824–1850); Betsey’s son Thomas James MARKHAM (1847–1916); and Betsey’s daughter-in-law Mrs Emma MARKHAM, née Loosley (1848–1926)
Richard NORRIS (1821–1876), Manciple of Christ Church; his wife Mrs Selina NORRIS, née Brazier (1832–1924); and his sister Miss Mary Oatridge NORRIS (1826–1878)
Mrs Martha NUNNEY, née Combes (1780–1850) and Martha BUDD (c.1793–1855)
Miss Mary Ann NUNNEY (1819–1904), basket maker
Florence Anne NUTTING (1855–1886), who died when she fell out of the door of a moving train and has a distinctive tree-trunk gravestone
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William OGDEN (1830–1903). carpenter/builder, then fine art dealer, and his first wife Mrs Susan OGDEN, née Willows (c.1826–1886)
James Adey OGLE (1792–1857), physician, Regius Professor of Medicine; his aunt Mrs Mary FOUCART, née Ogle (1764/5–1858); and his daughter Janet OGLE (1821–1890)
Hugh Francis O’HANLON (1842–1867), young Fellow of Lincoln who committed suicide in his lodgings in George Street
Erasmus Austin OMMANNEY (1850–1938), Naval Commander who became a priest
George Druce Wynne OMMANNEY (1819–1902), clergyman and theologian, and his wife Mrs Ellen Catherine OMMANNEY, née Ricketts (1819–1892)
Frederick OSBORN (1809–1897), printer; his wife Mrs Ann Elizabeth OSBORN, née Shields (1808–1894); and their daughter Mrs Maria HUNT, née Osborn (1836–1860)
George OSBORNE (1805–1876), servant at Trinity College, and his wife Mrs Jane OSBORNE, née Gilbert (1797–1867)
James OWEN (1853–1928), a baker, and his wife Mrs Clara OWEN, née Blissett (1858/9–1905)
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Paul PACEY (1809–1877), bookseller & stationer, and his daughter Miss Mary Haddon PACEY (1840–1875)
John Robert PALMER (c.1830–1887), GWR train driver; his wife Mrs Elizabeth PALMER (1827/8–1897); and their son Walter PALMER (1868/9–1888)
John PANTING (c.1811–1871), gentleman
Christopher PARK (1822–1889), wine merchant; his wife Mrs Julia Mary PARK, née Mayhew (1821–1896); and their daughters Miss Ada Catherine PARK (1854–1939) and Miss Edith Julia PARK (1856–1933)
John Henry PARKER, C.B. (1806–1884), bookshop owner, publisher, and archaeologist, and his wife Mrs Frances Mary PARKER, née Hoskyns (1805–1854)
Joseph PARKER (c.1818–1877), publican at the Oddfellows Arms in George Street; his second wife Mrs Penelope PARKER, née Parker (1810–1883); and their grandson Walter Cunningham BENNETT (1875–1878)
Peter PARKER (1819–1889), fishmonger; his wife Mrs Mary PARKER, née King (1821–1903); and their granddaughter Ethel Mary PARKER (1881–1890)
Mrs Sarah Wilson PARKER, née Hall (1832–1861), wife of the Clerk of the Examination Schools, and her sister Miss Helen (or Ellen) HALL (1840–1861)
William PARKER (1766–1858), a saddle-tree plater; his wife Mrs Lucy PARKER (1793–1855); and their daughter Margaret Cleland PARKER (1836–1852)
John PARRETT (1805/6–1864), a carpenter, and his wife Mrs Harriet PARRETT, née Smith (1799–1865)
Daniel PARSONS (1822/3–1874), college servant, and his wife Mrs Charlotte Elizabeth PARSONS, née Crane (1819/20–1896)
John PARSONS (1814/15–1863), mercer and wine merchant, and his baby daughter Emily Maud Ada PARSONS (1862–1863)
Joseph PARSONS (c.1810–1859), Post Office clerk
Nathaniel PARSONS senior (1814/15–1866), college servant, and his wife Mrs Maria PARSONS, née Harris (1804–1891)
Nathaniel PARSONS junior (1848–1921), college servant; his first wife Mrs Louisa PARSONS, née Hyatt (1847–1903); and his second wife Mrs Elizabeth PARSONS, née Willcox (1856–1943)
Webber PATTERSON (1834–1886), draper at 44 Broad Street
Joseph PATTISON (c.1802–1869), assistant ironmonger; his wife Mrs Elizabeth PATTISON, née Weatherhead (1800–1876); and his wife's sister Mrs Ann LEGG, née Weatherhead (1798–1857)
Asaph PAULING (1852–1939), tailor’s cutter; his wife Mrs Eliza Jane (“Lizzie”) PAULING, née NEWTON (1851–1942); and their son Victor Ernest Newton PAULING (1887/8–1882)
David Augustus PEACHEY (c.1835–1888), Editor of the Oxford Chronicle
Henry Francis PELHAM (1846–1907), historian and President of Trinity College; His wife Laura Priscilla PELHAM, née Buxton (1852–1918); and their children Arthur John PELHAM (1878–1883) and Catherine Harriet PELHAM (1885–1894)
James PENN (1854/5–1918), painter & signwriter; his wife Mrs Eliza PENN, née Collis (1857–1932), and their infant children Ernest, Gertrude, Mildred, Eric, and Dorothy PENN
John Whiteman PENSON (1832/3–1867), clerk at the Old Bank
Walter PEPPERCORN (1844–1911), solicitor, son of the Lord of the Manor of Headington
William Arthur PESTERRE (1842–1885), tutor at Merton College; his wife Mrs Ellen Alice PIGOTT, formerly Mrs PESTERRE, née PAGET (c.1858–1930); and their sons William Thomas Alfred PESTERRE (1881–1916)
and Herbert Carr PESTERRE (1885–1908)
John PHARAOH (1813–1865), coach & cart wheelwright; his wife Mrs Eliza PHARAOH, née Marsh (1816–1898); and their daughters Elizabeth (Bessie) PHARAOH (1851/2–1867) and Martha Eliza PHARAOH (1854/5–1899)
Richard PHARAOH (1817–1881), a tailor who became a dairyman, and his wife Mrs Ann Sophia PHARAOH, née Irons (1825/6–1887)
William Reuben PHILLIPS (1834–1907), stonemason and builder, and his wife Mrs Martha PHILLIPS, née Welford (1840–1901)
Stephen PHIPPS (1804–1865), gardener & horse clipper; his wife Mrs Mary PHIPPS, née Kimbell (1809–1891); and their daughter Mrs Martha HAYNES, née Phipps (1844–1912)
Robert PIKE (1803–1885), accountant and sometime Mayor of Oxford, and his grandson Frederick Grosvenor PIKE (1864–1871)
Henry PITTMAN (c.1826–1877), a coach trimmer; his sons Hambley George Pittman (1861–1867) and Charles PITTMAN (1866–1937); Charles's wife Mrs Elizabeth Hannah PITTMAN, née Panter (c.1860–1914), and Elizabeth's mother Mrs Emma PANTER, née Pratt (1835–1876)
John PILLINGER (1792/3–1868), Yeoman Bedel of Law, and his wife Mrs Martha PILLINGER, née Salmoni (c.1800–1876)
Nicholas Joachim POGOSE (1852–1872), an Armenian undergraduate at Christ Church
Charles William PONSFORD (1858–1892), newspaper reporter in Brighton, and his sister Miss Jessie Avenell PONSFORD (1866–1940)
Edwin PONSFORD (c.1828–1871), Balliol College bedmaker; his wife Mrs Keturah PONSFORD, née Avenell (c.1822–1890); their infant children Kate Matilda PONSFORD (1868–1870) and Edwin PONSFORD (born and died June 1871)
George Uglow POPE (1820–1908), Christian missionary who translated many Tamil texts into English, and his second wife Mrs Henrietta Page POPE, née Van Someren (1830–1911)
Joseph PORTER (1818–1883), keeper of the turnpike gate ont he Botley Road, and his wife Mrs Mary Ann PORTER (c.1813–1896)
Ephraim POTTAGE (1827–1878), tailor; his wife Mrs Matilda POTTAGE, née Unwin (1822–1900); and their daughter Elizabeth POTTAGE (1857–1948)
Samuel POTTAGE (1829–1873), a tailor in Cornmarket and brother of Ephraim Pottage above; his wife Mrs (Hannah) Eliza POTTAGE, née Sumersford (1831–1907); and their sons Frank Edward POTTAGE (1871–1874), William Ephraim POTTAGE (1869–1924), and Frederick Richmond POTTAGE (1857–1918)
John POWELL (1806/7–1890), a retired farmer, and his first wife Mrs Elizabeth POWELL (1815/16–1880)
Stephen PRETTY (1831–1874), a gardener, and his wife Mrs Sarah EDDLES, formerly Mrs Pretty, née Hale (c.1826–1909)
Charles James Coverly PRICE (1838–1905), Fellow of Exeter College, and his wife Mrs (Sarah) Octavia PRICE, née Scott (1838–1925)
James PRICKETT (1793–1881), butler of Trinity College, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth PRICKETT, née Hitchings (1797–1875)
John Alexander PRICKETT (1849–1929), a carpenter, and his wife Mrs Caroline Sarah PRICKETT, née Sturges (1852–1899)
James PRIOR (1800–1850), landlord of the Bell Inn at 18 Cornmarket
Thomas PRIOR (1810/11–1880), bargeman/coal heaver, and his second wife Mrs Ann PRIOR, formerly Mrs Jones (c.1819–1863)
Harry Saltley PUTTICK (1880–1929), a schoolmaster, and the ashes of his wife Mrs Alice Clara PUTTICK, née Bulbeck (1882–1976)
Mrs Elizabeth QUARTERMAN, née Gadney (1803–1857) and her aunt Mrs Sarah CASTLE (c.1779–1858)
R
George RADBONE (c.1785–1860), porter at the Radcliffe Infirmary and his wife Mrs Tabitha Baughan RADBONE, née SPITTLE (1795–1867); and their son George William RADBONE (1828–1885), a carpenter, and his wife Mrs Mary Ann RADBONE, née Neave (1833–1890)
Henry RADBONE (1821–1893), carpenter/builder and his wife Mrs Jane RADBONE, née Ibbs (1814–1890)
Edith Hannah RAVEN (1865–1878), a schoolmaster’s daughter
Ernest RAWLINS-INNS (1869–1938), builder, his wife Martha Emily RAWLINS-INNS, née Walton (1867–1954), and their son Jack Douglas RAWLINS-INNS (1915–1928)
James RAY (1826–1894), servant of Trinity College; his wife Mrs Susan RAY, née Sheldon (1832–1902); and their daughter Miss Alice Mary RAY (1863–1918)
Thomas READE (1832–1871), stableman, and his niece Amy MUNDY (1870–1872)
Stephen REAY (1782–1861), orientalist, and his wife Mrs Eleanora REAY, née Hargreave (1790–1861)
Miss Sarah Harriet Florence REED (1850–1875), a young woman from New Zealand
Robert Frank RESTALL (born and died 1882) and his sister Dorothy RESTALL (1887–1888), infant children of a coal dealer at Hayfield Wharf
Miss Mary Ann REYNOLDS (c.1798–1877), a servant
James RIDGWAY (1826–1881), Canon of Christ Church, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth Bennett RIDGWAY, née Edwards (c.1817–1891)
Mrs Catherine RILEY, née Peers (c.1765–1849)
William RIVIERE (1806–1876), drawing master
Mary Kent ROBERTS (1813–1878) and her younger brother John ROBERTS (c.1816–1873)
Mrs Sarah ROBERTS, née Savory, wife of the grocer John Roberts (1821–1879)
Miss Margaret Maria Eleanor ROBINSON (1840–1886), daughter of the Rector of Stonesfield
James Edwin Thorold ROGERS (1823–1890) political economist and politician; his wife Mrs Ann Susanna Charlotte ROGERS, née Reynolds (1826–1899); and their son Henry Reynolds Knatchbull ROGERS (1858–1876)
Joseph ROLPH (1828/9–1890), grocer, later accountant; his wife Mrs Sarah Adelaide ROLPH, née Lovegrove (1832–1920); and their daughter Mrs Sarah Adelaide THORNTON, née Rolph (1854–1884) and her baby son Harry Joseph Rolph THORNTON (born and died 1885)
Joseph ROUND (1804–1880), coal merchant and sometime Mayor of Oxford, and his wife Mrs Louisa ROUND (1809–1876)
George Augustus ROWELL (1804–1892), meteorologist and paper-hanger, and his wife Mrs Maria ROWELL née Barrett (1807/8–1864)
George Joseph ROWELL (1843–1891), son of George Augustus Rowell above, paper-hanger
Mrs Maria Eliza ROWELL, née Brown (1854–1874), who died aged 20 after having her first child
Mrs Mary ROWLES, née Clarke (1834–1875) and her son Francis Henry C. ROWLES (1865/6–1870)
Mrs Eliza RUDDLE (formerly Mrs Cotterell), née Fry (1828–1889)
S
Henry SADLER (1830–1871), college servant; his wife Mrs Matilda Elizabeth SADLER née Hinton (1838–1918); and their son Henry John SADLER (1867–1942)
Mrs Ann SARJENT, née Harbidge (1816–1881)
John SAUNDERS (1791–1867), bootmaker; his wife Ann SAUNDERS, née Webb (1813–1877); and their daughter Annie SAUNDERS (1839–1866)
Arthur John SAVAGE (1839–1896), a college servant; his wife Mrs Elizabeth SAVAGE, née Johnson (1839–1900); and their sons Alfred John SAVAGE (1865–1890), who was killed in a railway accident, and Thomas Hubert SAVAGE (born and died 1877)
William SAVAGE (1836–1911), butler of University College; his first wife Mrs Kate SAVAGE, née Besley (1826–1872); and his second wife Mrs Susannah SAVAGE (c.1838–1913)
Mrs Maria SAVILL, née Woodman (1788–1861) and her brother John WOODMAN (1791/2–1865), a carpenter
Harry SAYERS (1850–1871), undergraduate of Worcester College
Edward SCHÖNBERG (1863–1886), an undergraduate at Exeter College, Oxford who died in a boating accident
Mrs Ann SCOWN (c.1816–1859), wife of the landlord of the Bell & Crown in Magdalen Street
Constance Henrietta SEALY (1860–1874), daughter of a Major-General
Mrs Maria SEARY, née Harris (1823–1886), a nurse
Mrs Susanna SECKHAM née Mallett (c.1793–1852), a china dealer of Broad Street; her daughter Miss Jane Mallett SECKHAM (c.1826–1900); and her grandson Alfred Henry ANDREWS (1855–1932)
Mrs Ann SERGEANT (c.1817–1881)
Miss Margaret SETON (c.1853–1878), a Colonel's daughter
Mrs Mary Margaret SHAWYER, née Holloway (1850–1879), and her niece Miss Amy Fanny Margaret HANLEY (1869–1889)
Mrs Philippa Frances Emilia SHIRLEY, née Knight (1829–1902), widow of a Canon of Christ Church whose son became Lord Ferrers, and her daughter Miss Mary Philippa SHIRLEY (1857–1917)
George SHRIMPTON (1816–1908), bookseller; and his wife Mrs Amy Emma SHRIMPTON, née Goodwyn (1818–1900), shoe seller
Mrs Rebecca SHRIMPTON (c.1775–1860); her daughter-in-law Mrs Hannah SHRIMPTON, née Wall (1803–1877); and her granddaughter Mrs Hannah Maria HINE, née Shrimpton (1839–1867)
Thomas SHRIMPTON (1806–1885), bookseller, and his second wife Mrs Harriet Ann SHRIMPTON, née Chapman (1837–1900)
Wilfred SHRIMPTON (1848–1850), an infant, and his cousins Reginald Arthur SHRIMPTON (1855–1919) and Fanny Beatrice SHRIMPTON (1859–1936)
Henry Joseph SHUFFREY (1848–1928), assistant librarian at the Bodleian
Thomas Ball SHURROCK (1790–1868), carpenter; his second wife Mrs Eliza SHURROCK, née Hughes (1801–1886); and his daughter-in-law Mrs Ann SHURROCK, née Swadling (c.1822–1862)
John SIDES senior (1813/14–1853), saddler; his wife Harriett SIDES, later Mrs HIGGINS, née Mathews (1816/17–1889); and their sons John SIDES junior (1844–1889) bookseller’s porter, Joseph Henry SIDES (1847–1850), and William SIDES (1849–1857)
John Henry SILLMAN (1924–1932), an eight-year-old boy
James Robert SIMMS (1831–1877), bootmaker
Thomas Collyns SIMON (c.1811–1883), scientific author
James SLATTER (1825–1906), carpenter; his wife Mrs Emily SLATTER, née Hemmings (1829–1910); and their son James Slatter junior (1847–1862)
Ambrose Frederick SMITH (1854–1912), butcher, and his young daughter Ellen Mary SMITH (1884–1891)
Ambrose Henry SMITH (1823–1893), butcher; his wife Mrs Frances Ann SMITH, née Kimber (1829–1895); and their son Thomas James SMITH (1864–1892), butcher's assistant
Ellis SMITH senior (1814–1878), a whitesmith; his wife Mrs Sarah SMITH, née Midwinter (1825–1883); and their son Ellis SMITH junior (1853–1877)
Miss Frances Martha Jane SMITH (1860–1912), a dressmaker who opened a draper’s shop in Headington
Henry John Stephen SMITH (1826–1883), mathematician and Fellow of Balliol College, and his sister Eleanor Elizabeth SMITH, philanthropist (1822–1896)
Isaac SMITH (c.1788–1849), plasterer; his wife Mrs Sarah SMITH, née Temple (c.1787–1871); and their sons John SMITH (1813–1824) [buried elsewhere] and Isaac SMITH (1816–1867)
John SMITH (c.1804–1872), retired draper who died during a service in New College chapel, and his wife Mrs Janet SMITH née Romanis (1817–1886)
Joseph SMITH (1816–1865), tailor turned grocer; his wife Mrs Elisabeth SMITH, née Baylis (1815–1875), and their grandson Ernest Alfred NUNNEY (born and died 1870)
Miss Mary Ann SMITH (1825–1854), a servant
Richard Clements SMITH (c.1832–1916), cabinet maker; his wife Mrs Eliza SMITH née Honour (1830–1897); his mother-in-law Mrs Jane HONOUR, née Ratford (c.1792–1859); their daughter Miss Clara Annie SMITH (c.1863–1944); and their infant children Richard Henry Honour SMITH (1865–1865) and Kate Eliza SMITH (1870–1874)
Samuel Nicholson SMITH (1810–1886), clergyman; his wife Mrs Mary Frances SMITH, née Nixon (1822–1904); their son-in-law Thomas Collins SNOW (1852–1926), Fellow of St John's College, and their daughter Mrs Edith Mary Nixon SNOW (1859–1933)
Joseph SODEN (c.1834–1882), chimney sweep; his wife Mrs Eliza SODEN, née Lisemore (c.1835–1905); and their baby son Joseph SODEN junior (1869–1870)
William Daniel SOLLOWAY (1827–1865), butcher & cattle dealer, and his wife Mrs Kate SOLLOWAY, née Brooks (1828–1896)
Miss Eleanor SOTHAM (1800–1871), a housekeeper
Mrs Anne SPELLER née Humfrey (c.1798–1875); her daughter Miss Elizabeth SPELLER (1833–1869); and her daughter Anne's son Robert Frederick JOLLIFFE, a compositor (1855–1881)
Richard James SPIERS (1806–1877), owner of a famous fancy-goods shop and sometime Mayor of Oxford; his wife Mrs Elizabeth Phené SPIERS née Joy (1818–1858); and their son Samuel Patey SPIERS (1840–1891)
Mrs Catherine SPOFFORD, née Green (1783–1871)
Richard SPRAWSON (1828–1875), LNWR ticket collector; his wife Mrs Frances SPRAWSON, née Gibbs (1829–1909); their son Richard Henry SPRAWSON (1857–1872); and their daughter Emma SPRAWSON (1861–1877)
Mrs Eleanor STALLWOOD, née Cross (1836–1883), bootmaker’s wife
Mrs Mary STANBROOK, née Pullen (1824–1875)
Mark Dugald STARK (1853–1906), a Canadian doctor with a practice in Broad Street, and his wife Mrs Mary Helena Henrietta STARK, née Wienholt (1853–1908)
Herbert Greenwood STEEL (1845–1907), and his three sisters Miss Sophia Margaret STEEL (1848–1942), Miss Marion Frances STEEL (1850–1923), and Mrs Helen Bessie STUART-PAIN, née Steel (1857–1930), children of the next
Thomas Henry STEEL (1806–1881), retired master at Harrow School, and his wife Mrs Sophia Sarah STEEL, née Harris (1818–1885)
Isaac Thomas STEFF (1849–1899), printer; his wife Mrs Helen Mary STEFF, née Parker (1847–1888); and their daughter Miss Nellie Martha Parker STEFF (1888–1941)
Edwin Henry Douglas STOCK (1845–1887)
Mrs Letitia Maria STOCK, née Foot (1851–1880)
Mrs Anne STOKES, née Goddard (1832–1873), schoolmistress, and her son George William STOKES (1861–1939)
Edward James STONE (1831–1897), Radcliffe Observer; his wife Mrs Grace STONE, née Tuckett (1844–1920); and their daughter Dora Magdalene Wordsworth STONE (1886–1891)
John STREAKS (1817–1863), a labourer; his wife Mrs Miranda STREAKS, née Aldridge (c.1819–1849); and their son Thomas STREAKS (1847–1850)
Jonathan STRINGER (1806–1869), butler of Exeter College; his first wife Mrs Elizabeth STRINGER, née Rowell (1806–1854); and his second wife Mrs Mary Ann STRINGER, née Bayne (1817–1888)
Mrs Anne STROUD née Bond (1792–1867) and her sister Miss Elizabeth BOND (1786–1871)
William STUART (c.1788–1860), First Lieutenant in the Royal Marines
Helena Marian STUBBS (1864–1868), Edward Geoffrey Henlock STUBBS (born & died 1867), and Francis STUBBS (born & died 1871), infant children of William Stubbs, Regius Professor of Modern History
Thomas SUMMERS (1823–1861), a valet, and his sister-in law Mrs Emma SUMMERS née Hammick (1824–1872)
Frederick John SWEATMAN (1873–1936), assistant for 43 years on the Oxford English Dictionary
William Albert SWEATMAN (1845–1930), printer, father of Frederick John Sweatman, above; his wife Mrs Mary Ann SWEATMAN, née Dodd (1846/7–1922); their daughter Mary Dodd SWEATMAN (1884–1887); and a mention of their son William Henry SWEATMAN (1871–1921)
Dan SYMES (1850–1915), coal merchant, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth SYMES, née Rippington, formerly Mrs Brown (1850–1935)
Thomas Alexander SYMMONS (1856–1928), compositor at Oxford University Press, and his wife Mrs (Harriet) Ellen SYMMONS, née Stokes (1864/5–1935)
Frederick SYMONDS (1813–1881), Surgeon at the Radcliffe Infirmary; his wife Mrs Anne SYMONDS, née Dewar (1823/4–1910); and their daughters Mrs Mary Georgina PERCIVAL, née Symonds (1851/2–1926) and Miss Anne Harrison SYMONDS (1852/3–1938)
Mrs Janet Catherine SYMONDS, née North (1837–1913), long-suffering wife of John Addington Symonds
T
Charles Gunning TAMAN (1824–1865), printer and publican; his wife Mrs Ann TAMAN, née Price (c.1823–1888); and their granddaughters Miss Florence Marian SCARSBROOK (1875–1903) and Miss Laura Alice Jane SCARSBROOK (1880–1930)
Richard Charles Eyre TANNER (1819–1897), builder, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth TANNER, née Walker (1821–1899)
Charles TAPHOUSE (1815–1886), founder of Taphouse’s music shop; his wife Mrs Sarah TAPHOUSE, née Nevill (c.1818–1887); and their daughter-in-law Mrs Alice TAPHOUSE, née Milner (1845–1868)
Charles TAPLIN (1786–1864), hairdresser of Woodstock; his wife Mrs Sarah TAPLIN (c.1791–1863); and their daughter Miss Mary TAPLIN (1811–1875)
Mrs Mary TAPLIN, née Taplin (c.1820–1853), wife of a servant of Worcester College
William TARRANT (1788–1863), shoemaker; his wife Mrs Ann TARRANT, née Evans (1794–1875), and their son Alfred TARRANT (1825–1869), college bedmaker
William Elias TAUNTON (1817–1903); army major; his brothers George TAUNTON (1825–1895), surgeon, and Charles Daniel TAUNTON (1828–1908); and Charles’s wife Mrs Sarah Ann TAUNTON (c.1830–1911)
Archer Robert TAWNEY (1818–1893), banker, and his wife Mrs Emma Harriett TAWNEY, née Richards (1828–1915)
Francis Leonard Cyril TAYLER (1905–1934), who died in a racing-car crash on the Isle of Man; his father Francis Henry TAYLER (d.1944); his mother Mrs Ellen TAYLER (d.1963); his wife Mrs Phyllis TAYLER, née Dickenson (d.2000); and his sister Mrs Margaret KNIGHT, née Tayler (d.2009)
James TELLING (c.1822–1904), college servant; his wife Mrs Mary Ann TELLING, née Fletcher (1820–1872); and his sister Miss Eliza TELLING (c.1818–1908)
George TESTER (1819–1872), fishmonger; his wife Mrs Charlotte TESTER, née Carr (1820–1877); and their son Richard Carr TESTER (1852–1877)
Mrs Catherine THOMAS née Johnston (1792/3–1871), widow of the philanthropist the Revd Vaughan Thomas, and her sister Miss Jane JOHNSTON (1798/9–1877)
Frank Alfred THOMAS (1857–1921), butler turned boarding-house keeper, and his wife Mrs Christiana Harriett THOMAS, née Cole (1858–1930)
George THOMAS (c.1822–1854), publican of the University Arms, and his son Robert THOMAS (1854–1858)
Charles Thomason THOMPSON (1812–1883), physician, and his second wife Mrs Hannah THOMPSON, née Anderson (1823–1895)
Mrs Ellen THOMPSON, née Godfrey (1840–1867) and Mrs Mary THOMPSON, née Taylor (c.1846–1873), the first and second of the three wives of William Allin Thompson
Mrs Emma THOMPSON, née Prior (1830/1–1855), who ran the Bell Inn at 18 Cornmarket after her father’s death
Francis Octavius THOMPSON (1828–1890), china & glass dealer, and his second wife Mrs Eliza THOMPSON, née Lipscomb (1835–1897)
John Henry THORNTON (1845–1924), bookseller; his wife Mrs Clara THORNTON, née Stanbury (1848–1935); and his sister-in-law Miss Clara STANBURY (1846–1889)
Joseph THORNTON (1808–1891), founder of Thornton’s bookshop; his second wife Mrs Clara Sophia THORNTON, née Lambert (c.1825–1890); and his daughter Miss Lydia THORNTON (1853–1934)
John Harris THOROGOOD (1837–1902), founder of Bedford House School in Walton Street; his wife Mrs Amelia Maria THOROGOOD, née Knapp (1826–1903); and their son John Harris THOROGOOD junior (1866–1871)
Joseph TIDMAS (1764–1851), retired farmer; his wife Mrs Ann TIDMAS, née Staley (1771–1863); and their daughter Miss Ann TIDMAS (1798–1853)
Richard TIMS (c.1828–1849) and his brother William TIMS (1834–1866), a college servant
Joseph TOLLIT (1809–1890), stagecoach man and livery stable keeper
Joseph Skipper TREACHER (1816–1912), Vicar of St. John the Baptist Church, Oxford and Keeper of the Hope Collection of Engraved Portraits and Books in the Bodleian Library; his first wife Mrs Pauline Louise Blanche TREACHER, née Pierret (1822/3–1863); and his second wife Mrs Rosa Lavinia TREACHER, née Evans (1825/6–1904)
Miss Ann TREDWELL (1788/9–1860), who took over her father’s waggon office in Cornmarket, and her sister Miss Mary Ann TREDWELL (c.1809–1875)
John TRINDER (1814–1886), gardener and staff sergeant in the Oxford Militia; his second wife Mrs Mary Ann TRINDER, née Dore (1813–1855); and their infant daughter Sarah Ann TRINDER (born and died 1855)
Henry TRUSCOTT (c.1815–1894), GWR inspector, and his second wife Mrs Mary TRUSCOTT, née Gazey, formerly Mrs Goodchild (1833–1902), housekeeper to Dr Kidd’s daughters
Mrs Ada Dawson TURNER, née Rivers (1862–1893) and her daughter Miss Beatrice Louise TURNER (1886/7–1902)
Miss Caroline TURNER (1804–1871)
Miss Caroline TURNER (1809–1887), and her sister Miss Emma Tournor TURNER (1811–1892)
Edward TURNER (1817–1878), a wholesale clothier, and his wife Mrs Elizabeth TURNER, née Bunting (1823–1908)
Henry Joseph TURRELL (1825–1895), founder of Turrell’s Hall, and his wife Mrs Honor Wearne TURRELL, née Hocking (1832–1897)
James TURRILL (1816–1880), a poulterer, and his daughter Maria TURRILL (1844–1858)
Mrs Rosetta Maria TURRILL, née Smith (1815–1891), wife of the poulterer James Turrill, and their daughter Miss Susannah TURRILL (1849–1874)
Walter TURRILL (1852–1927), fish and poultry dealer; his wife Mrs Sarah Jane TURRILL, née Wheeler (c.1854–1933); and their children Walter TURRILL junior (1879–1916), and Rosetta Jane TURRILL (1885–1890)
Thomas Fletcher TYERMAN, surgeon (1812–1884)
U, V
John UBINGER (1880–1917), Bavarian house decorator and musician, and his son Eric Adrian Allington UBINGER (1906–1929)
Charles UNDERHILL (1820–1903), grocer and sometime Mayor of Oxford; his second wife Mrs Ellen UNDERHILL, née Francis (c.1824–1904); his daughter by his first wife Miss Emily Rosa UNDERHILL (1856–1941); and his son by his second wife George Francis UNDERHILL (1863/4–1885)
Mrs Mary UNDERHILL, née Tozer (1817–1858), first wife of Charles Underhill
John USHER (1828/9–1880), a carpenter; his wife Mrs Betsy USHER, née Tims (1832–1860); their only son George Henry USHER (1855–1875), and their only daughter Miss Mary Ann USHER (1857–1886)
William VARNEY (c. 1774–1858); his son Frederick VARNEY (1801–1858), a carver & gilder who became an accountant; and his daughter-in-law Mrs Miriam VARNEY, née Crapper (1800–1876)
Addington Robert Peel VENABLES (1827–1876), Curate of St Paul’s and Bishop of Nassau, commemorated on the grave of his young children Thomas VENABLES (born and died 1863) and Anne Catherine VENABLES (c.1866–1875)
Henry VENABLES (1823–1889), clergyman; his wife Mrs Jessy Maria Jeddere VENABLES, née Fisher (1823–1901); and their daughter Agnes Grace VENABLES (1859–1919)
Guðbrandur VIGFÚSSON (1827–1889), scholar of Icelandic literature, Reader in Icelandic at Oxford
Francis VIZE (1812–1861), coachman and publican; his second wife Mrs Sarah VIZE, née Humphries (1817–1886); and their infant sons Charles VIZE (1854–1855) and George VIZE (1859–1861)
Thomas VOLLER (1847–1896), army sergeant turned pub landlord; and his wife Mrs Emma VOLLER, née Cooke (1853–1904)
Ferdinand VON ELLRODT (1797–1873), retired merchant (terracotta gravestone)
W, X, Y, Z
James WALDIE (1824–1876); his wife Mrs Ann Hester WALDIE, née Thorp (1824–1880); their daughter Ellen Isabel WALDIE (1861–1864); and their son Ronald James Thorp WALDIE (1865–1911)
David WALKER (1860–1915), printer's warehouseman, and his wife Mrs Celeste Mary WALKER, née Nicholson (1861–1949)
Edward Tyrrell WALKER (1867–1909), compositor, and his wife Mrs Maud Mary WALKER, née Smith (1868–1938)
Francis John Chesshyre WALKER (1850–1871), undergraduate of Balliol College who committed suicide
William WALKER (1831–1895), who kept the off-licence at 13 Kingston Road; his wife Mrs Anne WALKER, née Ashton (1830–1909); and their daughter Georgina Anne WALKER (1864–1875)
John WALKLETT (1825–1868), servant of Wadham College, and his wife Mrs Mary WALKLETT, née Bliss (1827–1899)
The Revd Henry WALL (1810–1873), Rector of Huntspill, Wykeham Professor of Logic and Fellow of Balliol College
Mrs Magdalen WALLACE, née Sharpe (1804–1880), school teacher
Miss Margaret Christina WALLACE (1798–1889) and her sister Miss Caroline WALLACE (1808–1865), school teachers
John Ernest WALSH (1863–1891), the son of an Oxford solicitor, and his siblings Frederick Albert WALSH (1868–1934), Miss Mabel Henrietta WALSH (1875–1877), and Miss Frances Gertrude WALSH (1874–1928)
Mrs Martha WALTER, née Callis (1812–1892), builder's widow; her son James WALTER junior (1840–1902), builder; and Martha's grandson (and James's son) Frederick James WALTER (1873–1876)
George WARD (1822–1887), ironmonger and magistrate; his wife Mrs Jane WARD, née Timmis (1823/4–1913); and their only child Miss Fanny WARD (1850–1939)
Jesse James WARD (1851–1938), groom and gardener, and his son John Henry WARD (1872–1892)
George WARING (1807–1878), scholar
Henry Saunders WARLAND (1820–1909), grocer; his wife Mrs Ann WARLAND, née Cooper (1819–1852); and their son Charles Cooper WARLAND (1862–1882)
John WARLAND (1849–1906), wine merchant, later chutney maker; and his baby sisters Ann WARLAND (1851–1852) and Martha WARLAND (1857–1858)
William WARMAN (c.1799–1850), carpenter, and his wife Mrs Mary WARMAN (c.1796–1874)
Joseph Henry WARNER (1854–1921), sub-editor of the Oxford Times; his first wife Mrs Fanny WARNER, née Stone (1853–1894); and his second wife Mrs Jane Beatrice WARNER, née Palmer (1861–1939)
Mrs Sarah WATERS, formerly Mrs Sylvester, née Sheen (1800–1872), and her son Edward SYLVESTER (1826–1874), an accountant who died in the Shipton-on-Cherwell railway disaster
Sarah Jane WATKIN (1859–1865), a little girl aged five
George WATKINS (c.1801–1888), Manciple of Magdalen Hall; his first wife Mrs Esther WATKINS née Pinnock (1799–1865); his second wife Mrs Fanny WATKINS (c.1824–1866); and his third wife Mrs Eleanor WATKINS formerly Mrs Bennet, née Shillingford (1811–1899)
Mrs Esther WATMORE, née Slyfield, railwayman’s wife (1838–1896)
Mrs Emma WATTS, née Tidmarsh, wife of the college servant John Watts (c.1832–1867)
William WAY (1811–1880), porter of Jesus College; and his son George WAY (1852–1867)
George Walter WEBB (1837–1895), gunsmith; his wife Mrs Amelia WEBB, née Lockwood (1838–1899); and their daughter Miss Winifred May WEBB (1876–1900)
Benjamin WELFORD (1825–1876), carman at Pickford's; and his wife Mrs Mary WELFORD, née Judge (1833–1899)
Edwin WELFORD (1844–1903), coal dealer; his wife Mrs Ellen WELFORD, née Woodward (1848–1923); and their son William Ernest WELFORD (1875–1900)
Joseph WELFORD (c.1793–1872), coal dealer, and his wife Mrs Susannah WELFORD, née Bates (c.1807–1889), and his wife’s mother Mrs Mary Ann BATES (c.1783–1863)
Benjamin WELLS (c.1820–1895), cabinet maker: his first wife Mrs Harriet WELLS, née Cox (c.1820–1870); his second wife Mrs Elizabeth WELLS, née Belcher (c.1834–1874); his third wife Mrs Marion WELLS, née Belcher (1841–1938); and his eldest son Benjamin Thomas WELLS (1843–1897)
Mrs Hannah WELLS (c.1769–1858); her daughter Mrs Ann NOON, née Wells (1797–1865); and Miss Eleanor BOWERMAN (c.1829–1891)
Mrs Jane WEST, née Marshall (1803–1864), wife of the Perpetual Curate of Holy Trinity Church in St Ebbe’s
Richard WEST (1817–1868), landlord of the Abingdon Arms in Market Street; his second wife Mrs Sarah WEST, née Axtell (1823–1881); and their son Richard Henry WEST (1862–1900)
John Obadiah WESTWOOD (1805–1893), entomologist and palaeographer, Hope Professor of Zoology, and his wife Eliza WESTWOOD, née Richardson (1804–1882)
John WHEELER (1811–1872), servant of Worcester College; his wife Mrs Sarah WHEELER, née Smith (c.1810–1906); and their son Thomas WHEELER (1844–1883), cook of Balliol College
Thomas Brown WHEELER (1868–1889), killed by a train at Bristol
George WHEELHOUSE (1820–1901), Oxford City Missionary, and his wife Sarah WHEELHOUSE (1819/20–1895)
Edward Hornsey WHITBREAD (1838–1883), Manciple of Oriel College; his wife Mrs Harriet WHITBREAD, née Lucas (1843–1886); his brother Alfred Hornsey WHITBREAD (1843–1868), clerk; and their son Alfred William Lucas WHITBREAD (1867–1893), librarian
William WHITE (c.1811–1881), Sergeant of the Royal Militia; his wife Mrs Mary Ann WHITE (c.1821–1857); their daughters Ellen Stroud WHITE (born and died 1857) and Mary Ann WHITE (1854–1860); and their son William WHITE (1852–1924) and his wife Mrs Esther Ann WHITE née Earl (c.1851–1929)
Alfred William WHITEHEAD (1862–1903), a music teacher; his wife Mrs Annie Miriam WHITEHEAD, née Hughes (1863–1945); and their infant son Cyril Eustace WHITEHEAD (1889–1890)
Charles WHITEHEAD (1817–1866), servant of Worcester College; his first wife Mrs Esther Ann WHITEHEAD, née Horewood (1808–1851); and his second wife Mrs Sarah WHITEHEAD, née Stanton (1817–1892)
Horace WHITMAN (1839–1910), shoemaker/cricket-ball maker; his wife Mrs Rosina WHITMAN, née Miles (1843–1901); their son Ernest Edwin WHITMAN (1873–1897) of the Royal Hussars; their son-in-law Henry SMITH (1858–1927), servant/cab-driver; and their daughter Mrs Frances Lottie SMITH, née Whitman (1865–1935)
Mrs Anne WIBLIN, née Clifton (1827–1867), first wife of the butcher Charles Wiblin; their daughter Miss Harriett Eliza WIBLIN (1854–1872); and Wiblin’s daughter by his second wife, Miss Amelia Florence Clifton WIBLIN (1868–1892)
Mrs Helène Henriette WIENHOLT, née Mutzenbecher (1823–1906), daughter of a Hamburg merchant
William WILLIAMS (1815–1895), college servant, and (probably) His first wife Mrs Elizabeth WILLIAMS, née Wells (1825–1884)
John WIGZELL (1789–1870), retired civil servant, and his wife Mrs Ann WIGZELL, née Calcutt Spiers (1807–1863)
Miss Jane WILKINSON (1790–1869), a servant, and her sister Miss Charlotte WILKINSON (1793–1875)
John WILSON (c.1781–1850), porter of Worcester College for 44 years, and his daughter Miss Ann WILSON (1809–1866)
John WILSON (1838–1923), butler; his wife Mrs Annie WILSON née Trinder (1841–1927); their daughter Miss Lydia Annie WILSON (1870–1899); and their infant son Thomas William John WILSON (1880–1881)
William WILSON senior (1818–1876), hairdresser, and his son William WILSON junior (1846–1857)
Thomas WINCHESTER (c.1817–1864), a painter, and his brother George WINCHESTER (1823–1863), messenger at the Radcliffe Observatory
Alfred WINKFIELD (1837–1917), Surgeon to the Radcliffe Infirmary; his wife Mrs Rosalie Anna WINKFIELD, née Wilson (1846/7–1907); and their son Alfie WINKFIELD (1874–1882)
Mrs Sarah WITHERS, née Mason (c.1777–1850), an ostler’s wife, and her daughters Miss Sophia WITHERS (1824–1895) and Miss Eliza WITHERS (1828–1850)
Henry WOOD (c.1788–1873), retired army lieutenant, and his wife Mrs Sarah WOOD, née Bush (c.1784–1866)
John William WOOD (1822–1870), cook & manciple of Balliol College, and his wife Mrs Frances WOOD, née Margetts (1820/1–1867)
William Dyson WOOD (1844–1900), Medical Officer of Health for Oxfordshire
Benjamin WOOLLAMS senior (c.1793–1877), Butler of Trinity College; his wife Mrs Susannah WOOLLAMS, née Knight (1801–1869); and their son Benjamin WOOLLAMS junior (1823–1888)
James WRIGHT (1788–1875), Printer to Oxford University Press; his wife Mrs Elizabeth WRIGHT, née Robson (1791–1875); their son John Robson Lane WRIGHT (1830–1857); and Mrs Wright’s sister Miss Sarah Sidney ROBSON (c.1782–1877)
George WYATT (1804/5–1872), ironmonger; his second wife Mrs Martha WYATT née West (1814–1894); their married daughters Mrs Mary RADFORD, née Wyatt (1849–1891) and Mrs Martha BURBIDGE, née Wyatt (1850–1879)
Thomas Alder WYATT (1834/5–1883), builder; his wife Mrs Sarah Susannah HAWKINS, formerly Mrs Wyatt, née Radford (1843–1932) and her second husband Thomas Frederick HAWKINS (1840–1927)