Information about cemetery and crematorium records in Durham County Record Office and elsewhere.
Cemetery and crematorium records in the Record Office are on microfilm.
About cemeteries and cemetery records
Until the nineteenth century, most people were buried in parish churchyards. The Society of Friends (Quakers) maintained their own burial grounds but few other nonconformists did so.
With the increase of population and the growth of large towns in the nineteenth century, the Church of England churchyards could no longer provide enough space for burials. Ancient churchyards that were overcrowded were closed on public health grounds, and alternative provision had to be made.
In the early nineteenth century many private cemeteries were opened by private act of parliament. However, most public cemeteries were opened under various Burial Acts from 1852 to 1906 and were run by local authorities, in most cases a burial board. Later acts allowed parish councils and district councils to take over the powers of the burial boards.
With many new cemeteries opening in the second half of the nineteenth century, you will find correspondingly fewer burial entries in parish registers after that date. This is particularly noticeable in urban areas. In a few cases burials may have continued in the churchyard until the present day.
Most registers of burials and registers of grave spaces in municipal and other cemeteries are still in the custody of either the unitary, district or parish council which operates the cemetery.
Our monumental inscriptions, cemetery and crematorium registers includes details of the cemetery registers we have on microfilm.
Guide to cemeteries in County Durham
We sell a guide to cemeteries in County Durham.
This includes a list of the council’s cemeteries and crematoria in the area of the historic county of Durham (the area covered by the present County Durham boundary plus the city of Sunderland, the boroughs of Darlington, Hartlepool and Stockton on Tees, and the metropolitan boroughs of Gateshead and South Tyneside).
Our guide gives cemetery names and locations, opening dates and the location of the cemetery records, either in Durham County Record Office or elsewhere.
We also have a information about the grave plans we keep.
Cemetery registers online
These are the cemetery and crematorium registers you can search online:
- Durham Crematorium: The Durham Crematorium website includes an online search facility.
- Ferryhill: You can search the Duncombe Cemetery indexes (1904 to present) on the Ferryhill Town Council website.
- Spennymoor: Index (1898-2017) on the Spennymoor Town Council cemeteries website.
- Tudhoe: Index (1893-2016) on the Spennymoor Town Council cemeteries website.
Cemeteries operated by Durham County Council
You can search burial records for cemeteries operated by Durham County Council.
Who to contact
If you are unable to find details of the relevant cemetery or crematorium in our guide, please contact us.
You can also contact Durham County Council’s Bereavement Services to search burial registers for cemeteries within the current County Durham boundary area.