This list of burials at Southern Cemetery, Manchester covers notable people who have been interred at the municipal burial ground in Manchester, North West England.
Name | Dates | Info | Section | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel Adamson | 1820–1890 | English engineer and builder of the Manchester Ship Canal | Centre A39 (CE)[1][2] | |
Flight Com. Sir John W. Alcock | 1892–1919 | RAF officer, piloted the first non-stop transatlantic flight | Centre - G (CE)[3][2][4] | |
Philip James Baybutt | 1844–1907 | Union Army soldier in the American Civil War | H2085 (CE)[5][6][7][2] | |
Maud Boyd | 1867–1929 | English actress and singer
Memorial is broken and inscription is partly submerged |
D641 (RC)[8] | |
Sir Matt Busby | 1909–1994 | Manager of Manchester United FC | G997 (RC)[9][2] | |
Jerome Caminada | 1844–1914 | Policeman and Manchester's first CID superintendent. | H1742 (RC)[10][2] | |
John Cassidy | 1860–1939 | Irish sculptor and painter | I800 (RC)[11][12][2] | |
John Henry Davies | 1864–1927 | Beer brewer and founder of Manchester United FC | A (NC)[13] | |
Lesley Ann Downey | 1954-1964 | Victim of the Moors murders | ||
Edward Evans | 1948-1965 | Victim of the Moors murders | ||
Rob Gretton | 1953–1999 | Music manager of Joy Division and New Order and a director of Factory Records | G278 (RC)[14][2] | |
Leopold Hartley Grindon | 1818–1904 | English educator and botanist | B899 (CE)[15] | |
Martin Hannett | 1948–1991 | Guitarist, record producer, and a director of Factory Records | FF713 (RC)[16][17] | |
Major Howard Harker | 1891–1919 | British World War I flying ace and recipient of the Military Cross | D84 (NC)[18] | |
Frank Johnson (real name Frank Williamson) | 1928-1970 | English boxer and British lightweight and welterweight champion | AA 2925(CE)?[19][2] | |
Len Johnson | 1902–1974 | Boxer and civil rights campaigner | EE740 (CE)[20] | |
Henry Kelly VC | 1887–1960 | WWI and WWII soldier and recipient of the Victoria Cross | I372 (RC)[21][2] | |
Marcel King | 1957–1995 | English singer with the Soul music band Sweet Sensation | F1398 (RC)[22] | |
L. S. Lowry | 1887–1976 | Painter of industrial scenes in Lancashire | C772 (CE)[23][2] | |
John Makeague | d.1919 | Lord Mayor of the City of Manchester 1918-19 | G964 (CE)[24] | |
Sir Alfred Ernest Marples, Baron Marples of Wallasey | 1907–1978 | Politician who served as Postmaster General and Minister of Transport | G898 (CE)[25][26][2] | |
Billy Meredith | 1874–1958 | Footballer for both Manchester City FC and Manchester United FC | Y760 (CE)[27][28][2] | |
Sergeant Major Joseph Pardoe | 1820-1889 | Heavy Brigade Officer at the Battle of Balaclava in the Crimean War | L 1691 (CE)[29][2] | |
Henry Patteson | 1835–1887 | Lord Mayor of the City of Manchester 1879-80 | ||
Maria Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska | 1891–1945 | Polish poet and playwright | I2182 (RC)[30][2] | |
Sir Robert Peacock | 1859-1926 | Chief constable of Manchester City Police 1898-1926 | D 1133 (NC) [2][31] | |
Wilfred Pickles | 1904–1978 | Film actor and BBC Radio presenter. | I1012 (RC)[32][2] | |
John Prettyjohns VC | 1823–1887 | Royal Marine in the Crimean War and recipient of the Victoria Cross | L642 (CE)[33][2] | |
Sir Samuel Walter Royse | 1850–1916 | Lord Mayor of the City of Manchester 1911-13 | ||
John Rylands Enriquetta Augustina Rylands |
1801–1888 | Entrepreneur and philanthropist husband and wife behind the John Rylands Library | E 201/2 (NC)[34][2][4] | |
Joseph Sunlight | 1889– 1978 | Belarusian/ English architect and Liberal politician | DD9 (J)[35][36] | |
Dr Henry Watson | 1846-1911 | Composer and RNCM professor of music | B 297 (CE)[2][37] | |
Winifred Wilding and David Wilding | d.1957 | Mother and infant son killed in their house in the 1957 Wythenshawe plane crash | K 286 (RC)[38][39] | |
Tony Wilson | 1950–2007 | Broadcaster, impresario and a director of Factory Records | B118 (NC) [40][41][42][2] | |
Olive Zorian | 1916–1965 | classical violinist and founder of the Zorian String Quartet | D557 (NC) [43] |
Key: CE=Church of England RC=Roman Catholic NC=Nonconformist J=Jewish
53°25′43″N 2°15′30″W / 53.4286°N 2.2582°W / 53.4286; -2.2582