Halloween at the Newtown Road Cemetery

Halloween at Newtown Road Cemetery 2023
This Halloween, the historic Newton Road Cemetery in Rushden, England, became
the stage of an original event that blended slow tourism with an educational
note.

Event organisation

Sexton

In October 2023, Friends of Newtown Road Cemetery linked up with
City Arts, a community art centre, based in an old Wesleyan
Missionary Chapel, to organise a unique Halloween event like no
other.

The purpose of the event was to celebrate Samhain. Samhain (a
Gaelic word pronounced ‘sow-win’) is a Celtic ceremony marking the
transition from light to dark as the year unfolds and it is the precursor of
Halloween.

With a total of eight executed performances over three
nights, the event proved to be a great success, leaving participants
with lasting memories and a newfound appreciation for the
stories embedded in Newton Road Cemetery. The participation fee was £10
per person. 

Three different “ghosts” appeared in the event’s performances – all
based on real people buried near the ceremonial space (a motor mechanic, a
female parish visitor and a wine merchant/Freemason).

Event program

Sexton

Participants started by doing crafts, mostly decorating small skulls, before
encountering the Great Memergiser (downstairs). He explained
their tasks for the evening. They had to follow three alleys towards the
local cemetery. On the way, they would meet three wise women who
would give them items to carry and information to remember.

Two volunteers shepherded the group along the alleys. The
“Maiden” gave each person a sprig of rosemary (for
remembrance). Then to acquire energy they had to touch green on green. They
used the rosemary to swipe any overhanging branches. The
“Mother” gave them each a red candle. As they walked along the
outside high wall of the cemetery, they could hear a drum beating, sticks
snapping, whining noise, and screams. Then, the “Crone” gave
each person a black stone decorated with a rune, took them to
the cemetery gate and called out “Is anybody there?”. The
cemetery sexton appeared, opened the gates, and told the group to
follow him/her. As they walked along, they were told to touch iron to
increase their strength. Many of the graves have iron railings around so it
was easy to complete that task. 

Eventually they reached the ceremonial space where the
Great Memergiser appeared. First, he asked them to crush the
rosemary and smell it, then drop it to the ground and stamp on it. Then
they all lit their candle, still holding it. He asked what they had been
told by the Wise Women, who might be memergised. Then they held their
stone and started chanting. The chant, as it got faster, became
“We Remember Them”.

Ghost

At this point they had turned around and were
facing the Chapel which was in darkness. Inside there were disco
smoke machines with coloured lights. The doors of the Chapel slowly
opened, the smoke billowed out and through the smoke walked the
“ghost”. The ghost thanked them for memergising him/her. Said a
little about what they were going to do with this opportunity and walked
away.

The group was then led towards the Chapel. As they reached it, the lights
were switched on and they came inside. Warm spiced apple juice awaited them
and the Magister who asked them to look at some
19th century photos (CDVs) to see if they could spot the ghost they
had seen. Of course, they couldn’t, despite all the photos being taken by
professional photographers in Newbury. No-one had bothered to write on the
photos who each person was. 

The participants could also match the design of the rune on the stone
to see what its meaning was.

Educational messages

There were two messages to take away from this event. First, the
importance of remembering those who had died every year in some way
(flowers, visiting graves, looking at letters, photos, talking about them).
And second, taking time to print off photos and then
writing who each person was on the back. A good winter evening
project.

Note: “Memergise” is a word that Ros Clow, one of the organizers of
the event, made up for a Halloween story in 2017. The word communicates that
remembering someone gives us the energy to walk around the cemetery on
Halloween and talk with anyone we meet, ghost or not.

Two of the wise women

Path home lit by candles in jars

Sexton and the ghost of wine merchant

Searching for photo of the ghost

Looking for meaning of their rune

Teenage runner did the sounds - the most frightening part of the evening

side test