Grave Matters at St Mary-at-Finchley

5 Goodgymers helped their local community in Barnet
Paul Salman
Theodore Smith
Cherian Li
Subham Basu
Abidemi
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Barnet

Saturday 14th March

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Paul Salman
Paul Salman

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Subham Basu
Subham Basu

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Report written by Paul Salman

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GoodGym members joined forces with local residents for a satisfying morning of churchyard graft at St Mary-at-Finchley, the oldest building in Finchley, with parts dating back to the 12th century.

This was no ordinary tidy-up. The churchyard is packed with local history, and our task was to help protect it. We worked on the western side near the tower, clearing overgrowth, tackling stubborn roots, cutting back ivy and snowberry, and helping free up gravestones that were being slowly swallowed by vegetation.

It was great to see a healthy turnout, with GoodGym Barnet members and community volunteers all mucking in. Bit by bit, the area started to open up again, revealing memorials that had been hidden and making the churchyard feel more cared for, more visible and more respectful.

And this site really does matter. Among the memorials are Grade II listed gravestones, including the tomb of John Cartwright a significant figure in British political reform. Cartwright campaigned for fairer representation and wider voting rights, and his ideas fed into the long road towards universal suffrage. He also supported the principles behind American independence, so this quiet Finchley churchyard has connections to some very big democratic ideas.

So there we were: cutting roots, hauling back branches, tidying the past, and giving history a bit more breathing space.

A lovely community mission in a beautiful and important setting practical, purposeful, and full of local character.


This task supported
St Marys Church Finchley
A Church looking for assistance

he church was established sometime in the 12th century. There is reference to a church here in 1274, and evidence of a building even before then. By 1356 it was dedicated to St Mary.[2] The building has been altered many times since its foundation and the oldest parts, the north wall and the tower (which seems to have had a steeple during the 16th and 17th centuries), date from the reign of King Henry VII.

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