There’s not a lot left of the vibrant community that existed in Sheffield’s Lower Don Valley until the late 1950s. Two ancient structures – Carbrook Hall and Hill Top Chapel – survive from the seventeenth century. There are some twentieth-century buildings, such as Banners Department Store and the former Adelphi Cinema. Other, less prepossessing buildings have become significant simply because they survived – a number of banks and pubs, two Burton’s tailors, a chapel, a swimming baths and a library.
In a corner behind the remaining shops on Attercliffe Road is a historic discovery.
Parallel to the main road runs Zion Lane, a narrow alley still paved with bricks and stone setts. It takes its name from the former Zion Congregational Church, a place of worship since 1793, the site ultimately occupied by a grand Romanesque chapel with a tower and spire, opened in 1863.
Inevitably, as the houses were cleared in the 1950s and 1960s the church became unsustainable. The building was sold in 1976 and the church became a furniture store until it burnt down in 1987 and was afterwards demolished. The Zion Sabbath School across the lane survives as a motor-repair business.
Through all this, in the graveyard behind the church generations of Attercliffe people slept undisturbed. I photographed it in 1977, and another photographer recorded it in 1994, when it still looked like a burial ground.
Eventually it became a jungle, owned by the United Reformed Church, which needed to divest itself of the responsibility.
A sharp-eyed member of the Upper Wincobank Chapel, a historic independent congregation located a couple of miles away, spotted the sale notice, which led to the formation of the Friends of Zion Graveyard who cleared sufficient clutter to reveal that this place is freighted with historic significance,
With the help of a crowdfunding campaign and a Heritage Lottery Fund grant, the Friends have bought the graveyard and, in co-operation with its neighbours, made it accessible on specified open days.
Among the graves uncovered and identified are ~
- Mark Oakes (died September 19, 1856), assayer, refiner and crucible maker
- John Pearson of Hall Carr House (died January 14th 1877), whose daughter Martha was assistant organist to Zion Church, buried with his wife and sister in an elaborate grave marked with iron posts and railings
- and Jonathan Wood (died October 20th 1848), owner of Wood’s (or Bridge) Foundry, member of the Zion Church choir, buried with his wife and their two infant children in an tomb surrounded by iron railings that were once painted gold, alongside the graves of their daughter Catherine and her husband Frank Barnsley, and two grandchildren, aged one year and two months, close by
A Walk Round Attercliffe: The Heritage Open Days Walk Round Attercliffe is always oversubscribed, so I’m piloting a revised version of the tour on Sunday April 26th at 2.00pm, starting and finishing near the Attercliffe tram stop.
The only site visit will be to the Zion Graveyard: the other two sites, St Charles Borromeo Roman Catholic Church and the former Sheffield & Hallamshire Bank Branch, are unavailable on Sundays, but there will be a half-hour comfort stop, with hot drinks and cake available, at the Don Valley Hotel, formerly the Coach & Horses pub (built 1901).
Further details and bookings are at A Walk Round Attercliffe | Eventbrite.

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As a young boy, born 22.11.44, I resided on Beall St Attercliffe, and I would sit and play on and around the grave stones in this particular graveyard and, although the huge dark stone built church was then still standing, I never ever felt afraid. Some of us boys would actually pass through this graveyard and climb down the rear wall, at night, as a short cut to reach Otter Street situated behind.
I attended Huntsman Gardens School situated just across Attercliffe Common, on Bodmin Street/Britnall Street
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