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Human Remains At Christ Church

June 24, 2015
by the gentle author

Dr Margaret Clegg Keeper of Human Remains at the Natural History Museum will be giving a lecture at Christ Church Spitalfields on Thursday July 2nd at 7pm, talking about exhumations from the crypt thirty years go and subsequent research upon these bones

“They were once living, breathing people – they are you.”

In Spitalfields, people often talk of the human remains that were removed from the crypt – nearly a thousand bodies that were once packed in tight during the eighteenth century, safe from resurrectionists and on their way to eternal bliss.

During the nineteen eighties, they were exhumed and transferred to the Natural History Museum where they rest today under the supervision of Dr Margaret Clegg, Head of the Human Remains Unit, who guards them both with loving attention and scholarly rigour, unravelling the stories that these long-ago residents of Spitalfields have to tell us about the quality of their lives and the nature of the human species.

“From the very first lecture I attended on the subject as an undergraduate, I became fascinated by what human remains can tell us about ourselves,” Dr Clegg admitted to me enthusiastically, “You can’t help but feel some kind of relationship when you are working with them. They were once living, breathing people – they are you.”

Dr Clegg led me through the vast cathedral-like museum and we negotiated the swarming mass of humanity that crowded the galleries on that frosty morning, until we entered a private door into the dusty netherworld where the lights were dimmer and the atmosphere was calm. Next week, Dr Clegg is making the trip to Spitalfields to deliver a report on the human remains – a venerable message home from these ex-residents in the form of a lecture at Christ Church – and thus our brief conversation served as a modest preamble to set the scene for this hotly-anticipated event.

“Dr Theya Mollison did the original excavation of the remains in the nineteen-eighties. There were more than nine hundred and for about half we know their age, sex, and when they were born and when they died, from the coffin plates. After they were removed, the remains were brought here to the Natural History Museum for longer-term analysis and study of the effects of occupation and the types of diseases they suffered. We had a large amount of information and could tell who was related to who. We could also tell who died in childbirth, and we have juveniles so we got information on childhood mortality and the funerary practices for children and babies, for example.

We have a special store for human remains at the museum, where each individual is stored in a separate box – it’s primarily bones but some have fingernails and hair. Any bodies that had been preserved were cremated when they were exhumed. The museum applied for a faculty from the Diocese of London to store the bones, the remains are not part of our permanent collection. The first faculty was for ten years and over time a second and third faculty were granted, but this will be the final one during which a decision will be made about the final disposition of the bones. During these years, the bones have been studied intensively. They are quite rare, there are very few such collections in which we know the age and sex of so many. They are probably our most visited and most researched collection. We have our own internal research and visiting researchers come from all over the world – for a wide variety of research purposes, including important work in forensics and evolutionary studies.

I am by training a biological anthropologist, and I am interested in the study of human archaeological remains from the perspective of how they grew and developed and what that can tell us about them.

In Spitalfields, you can compare families of the same age – one that ages quickly and one that ages slowly, which tells us something about the variables when we try to calibrate the date of remains at other sites. You can’t always tell what they did but you can tell, for example, that they used their upper body or that they developed muscles in their arms or legs as a direct result of their occupation. My dad was a printer and when he started out he used a hand press and developed a muscle in his arm as a consequence of using it. He’s seventy-nine and it’s still there. In those days, people started work at twelve or thirteen while the muscles were still developing and these traits quickly became established based upon their occupation. They were the ordinary working people of eighteenth century Spitalfields.

We get half a dozen emails a year from families who want to know if their ancestor who was buried in Christ Church is in the collection, but often I can’t help because they were buried in the churchyard or another part of the church. Occasionally, relatives ask if they can come and see them.”

Bonnet collected during excavations at Christ Church.

Shroud collected during excavations at Christ Church.

Cotton winding sheet collected during excavations at Christ Church.

Gold lower denture formed from a sheet of gold which was cut and folded around the lower molars.

Medicine bottle found in a child’s coffin during excavations at Christ Church.

Archaeological excavations in the crypt of Christ Church, Spitalfields, London, 1984-1986.

Excavation images © Natural History Museum

Portrait of Dr Clegg © Sarah Ainslie

Click here to book tickets for Dr Margaret Clegg’s lecture at Christ Church on 2nd July

You may also like to read about

The Secrets of Christ Church Spitalfields

A Dead Man in Clerkenwell

The Door to Shakespeare’s London

7 Responses leave one →
  1. Susan permalink
    June 24, 2015

    Oh, this is so painful to read about – to know this completely fascinating lecture will happen and I can’t be there (living about 7,000 miles away). I also looked at the Huguenots of Spitalfields site and was even more distressed at what I’m missing… *sigh*. (Could anyone ever tape these and put them on YouTube or Vimeo?) But thanks, gentle author, for at least letting us know about these events. I know it is not your intention to torture.

  2. Rosemary permalink
    June 24, 2015

    Can you record the lecture? I for one wont be there (I live in Australia) but would love to go to Youtube and see it late.

    Cheers

    R

  3. June 24, 2015

    That should be a very fascinating lecture, sorry I can’t be there. Valerie

  4. marianne isaacs permalink
    June 24, 2015

    It would be wonderful if we could access this lecture online so that those of us who live in other parts of the world could also be informed of this very interesting research . Do you think that would be possible ? Marianne

  5. Daron permalink
    June 24, 2015

    A fascinating piece, thank you GA for the details of the lecture.

  6. June 24, 2015

    this is fascinating and i am sure this new crypt space will be wonderful …….and what of those removed in haste to build a ‘nursery’ on the graveyard ?? !

    A complete lack of respect for setting of a grade 1 / possibly finest baroque church in Europe, design by Nicholas Hawksmoor and what of the bodies that were hastily removed from the graveyard?, a complete lack of respect has been displayed by all those involved in the building of a ‘nursery’ for the school, a truly shameful act.

  7. Philip Venning permalink
    February 9, 2020

    My ancestor Benjamin Duncombe was a Spitalfields dentist in the 18th century, with a surgery in Bell Lane. I do wonder if he was responsible for some of the gold work found in the more prosperous burials. His son and grandson, all dentists, carried on in various locations in Spitalfields until the mid 19th century.

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