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In Pictures: Nicholson Cemetery - a Piece of Forgotten History

A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 

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A quaint sleepy graveyard lies snuggled in one corner of Kashmere Gate–a piece of forgotten history. This is the Nicholson Graveyard, a little Christian cemetery that was established in 1857. The cemetery is named after John Nicholson, the Brigadier General of the Bengal Native Infantry Unit, who played a cardinal role in squashing the Indian sepoys’ mutiny in the Rebellion of 1857. He had punished the Indian mutineers with great severity and is famously quoted to have said, “I would inflict the most excruciating tortures I could think of on them with a perfectly easy conscience...flaying alive, impaling or burning.”

A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
The Nicholson cemetery: Bathed in warm afternoon light. (Photo: The Quint)

Nicholson is also known for leading an infantry unit in the Indo-Afghan War of 1839-1842 and later effortlessly thwarting the forces of Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Mughal king.

Although he is known for his merciless ways in Indian history, the Nicholson cemetery is flooded with serenity.

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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
John Nicholson’s graveyard fenced by iron grills, and neem and gulmohar trees. (Photo: The Quint)
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The cemetery has a broad arrangement. The older graves lay partially hidden by an outgrowth of wild vegetation, while the newer graves are arranged in neat rows in a different part of the cemetery.

One of the oldest graves dates back to 1926, while some cement and marble structures of the older graves have cracks through them. The new graves are mostly maintained by friends and relatives of the departed who pay a meagre sum to the cemetery committee on a monthly basis. The caretaker of the cemetery, a shy middle-aged man, meticulously sweeps the dust away from the gravestones every other day.

A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
An old tombstone amidst a foot long wild grass. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
A tombstone stands erect under the shadow of bougainvillea flowers and grass. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
A journey to a different history. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
The newer graves neatly arranged in rows and columns on one side of the cemetery. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
Graves lay under the cool shades of trees. (Photo: The Quint)
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On November 2, friends and relatives of the deceased celebrated All Souls Day. Almost all the graves, whether old or new, marked or unmarked have flowers placed on them. Some are elaborate decorations, others have a single flower. Through the year, the older graves lie neglected; some gravestones are marked with the names of British soldiers whose families are long gone from Delhi. But on All Souls Day, they too get an offering of flowers.

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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
An old grave taken over by shrubs and ferns, with a single daisy. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
Each grave is unique. While some are ornamental with biblical symbols that depict afterlife or the cause of death, others are plain cemented gravestones. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
A relatively-new grave decorated with flowers. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
The newer graves are decorated and tended to by close friends and relatives. (Photo: The Quint)
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A photo essay on Nicholson Cemetery in Delhi. 
Little lamb he went away... (Photo: The Quint)

Some tombstones are curiously ornamental with various biblical symbols and quotes from the Bible inscripted on them, such as “Jesus says, Weep Not” and “Thy Will Be Done”. Others have little poems about the deceased describing their personalities or even their deaths.

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