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22
Jun 2021
A rededication service for a remote rural cemetery near Thruscross will take place next month.
The isolated moorland burial site was opened before the village of West End was flooded in 1966 to create a reservoir to serve West Yorkshire.
Beneath the waters lie the ruined remains of a church, churchyard, school, houses and other buildings.
All residents of West End were relocated from their Washburn Valley homes before construction work on the dam began.
At the same time, the new cemetery was opened so that the bodies exhumed from the churchyard could be reburied.
Before the village disappeared Atlantis-like under millions of gallons of water, a final service took place at Holy Trinity.
The then Dean of Ripon, the Very Revd. Llewelyn Hughes, spoke about a place of Christian worship for a thousand years, soon to be in its own watery grave.
One person, who attended the service, said afterwards:
It's more than 55 years since the deceased men, women and children of West End were relocated to their new place of rest, high on the moors above the reservoir.
During the past two years, Norman Wheat and fellow Thruscross parish councillors, with support from parishioners at St Saviour's Thornthwaite, have transformed the cemetery.
At 3pm on July 4, the lives of all those buried there, will be celebrated.
The service will be conducted by The Revd. Alastair Ferneley, Vicar of Dacre with Hartwith and Darley with Thornthwaite, who said:
The rededication service will be followed by refreshments and a quiz/treasure hunt.
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