Rowland Howard Crooke plot
Who is buried here?
Read about the life of the person buried here — click on the name to view their biography.
Do you know these people?
If you have any memories, family history or photographs that could help us to build up more information about these burials, please contact us - we would love to hear from you.
If you have any memories, family history or photographs that could help us to build up more information about these burials, please contact us - we would love to hear from you.
Memorial details
Family name | Crooke |
Burial date | Not known |
Burial capacity | 2 (1 used) |
Burial depth | Not known |
From burial books? | |
Burial visible (2019)? | |
Burial visible (1991)? |
NEW RESERVE
Condition: good
Photos
In Memoriam
If you have a family or other connection with anyone buried in this plot, you are welcome to post your memories or photographs here.
Posted by Roland Crooke – Woodbridge, Suffolk on 18/09/20
Roland was one of four sons to William Crooke, a senior British Indian civil servant and ethnographer, whose name is well respected in the Indian ethnographic community to this day, partly because he gave equal billing to his Indian collaborators in anything they published. Roland and two of his three brothers served in the First World War. His two brothers were both killed during the carnage of the battle of the Somme and Roland was invalided out after suffering wounds at Gallipoli. After the war he resumed his career as a civil servant in the Ministry of Health and moved with his family to Berkhamsted in the early 1920s, where they lived at 95 High Street. He contracted meningitis and died very quickly in early 1931. His wife Edith, known in the family as Mig for unknown reasons, was left with three young sons and extraordinarily little money. Despite this she brought three sons up at 95 High Street, two of whom wen to Berkhamsted Boys School. Hugh ended his career as Cultural Attache in Washington, and Pat became a world-renowned expert in low cost housing. Johh, after becoming a prisoner of war in Thailand, lived and worked in Malaysia for more than 20 years. We are enormously proud of this family and their connection to Berkhamsted. Roland Crooke September 2020