Although it's not very remarkable to look at and you would easily walk past it without a second glance, this is a fascinating part of Partick's history, and Glasgow's smallest graveyard. It is the only Quaker cemetery surviving in Scotland.
Partick has had a long association with the Society of Friends, but following the Reformation they suffered persecution from the increasingly Protestant population, as did many other minority beliefs. However in 1689 they were given leave to worship in their own fashion, although they were still not permitted to bury their dead in the parish churchyards. This changed in 1711 when a prominent local landowner John Purdon, whose wife Margaret was a Quaker, donated the land on her death so that they would have their own burial ground and 'Quaker Meg', as she was known, became the first person to be interred there. Nearby Purdon Street was named in honour of them.
Even though they were no longer persecuted, the Quakers were still regarded with superstitious awe, and local rumours abounded about Meg's ghost haunting the area. Quaker burials would attract a crowd of jeering, heckling locals who would climb onto the walls and hurl abuse and derogatory jokes at the mourners. The distress that this must have caused the peaceable Quakers was no doubt at least partly behind their decision to close the cemetery in 1857, and thereafter their dead were buried in the city Necropolis.
Today, the ground is under the charge of the Parks Department, although most of the maintenance is actually done by local residents of Keith Court. It seems fitting that they are making karmic amends for the deeds of their predecessors on the site. read more