When not many people lived in Newcastle, the needs of the dead were met by a few small burial grounds – the Church of England cemetery below the cathedral, the Catholic and Presbyterian cemeteries adjacent to Cottage Creek, and the Wesleyan Methodist cemetery in Newcastle West. With a rising population came the need for a larger general cemetery outside the city, and in 1863 the government reserved 20 acres of land at Waratah.
However, the commencement of mining and a growing township at Waratah soon made that location unsuitable. After many delays, in 1878 the government purchased 50 acres of land at Sandgate for a cemetery. This site had the advantages of being in an unpopulated area, and close to both Maitland Road and the northern railway.
Opened in September 1881, the cemetery included a short branch rail line to provide transport for mourners, as well as the deceased in a special hearse carriage. In 1883 the rail authorities opened a mortuary station and platform in Honeysuckle as the starting point for funeral trains. In 1896 the Tramway Department acquired a hearse carriage that allowed funeral processions from the suburbs to proceed via tram to Honeysuckle, thence by train to Sandgate.
Sandgate became the principal burial ground in the district, and the cemetery train was much used. On a single day in 1932 there were fourteen funerals, ten of which travelled by train. In 1933 the Honeysuckle mortuary station closed, but the cemetery rail continued to carry passengers, with extra trains provided on special occasions. In 1938 the newspaper reported that 3000 mourners had travelled by train to Sandgate on Mother’s Day. With rising car ownership, the need for a cemetery train gradually declined, and the last passenger service ran on Sunday 13 October 1985. Forty years later a low brick platform, half-buried rails and a rusting points lever are the scant reminders of a railway that served both the living and the dead for over a century.


The article above was first published in the October 2025 edition of The Local.
Additional Information
Church of England Cemetery
The cemetery was originally proclaimed in 1817and closed in 1884. For further details, see Greg Ray’s article on the Cathedral Cemetery.

Newcastle West Cemeteries
There were three denominational cemeteries in Newcastle West. The Honeysuckle Point cemeteries for the Presbyterians and the Roman Catholics, were adjacent to Cottage Creek and opened in 1845. A Wesleyan Methodist cemetery a little further west along the Maitland Road opened in 1846.
Interments in all these grounds ceased in 1881 when Sandgate Cemetery opened. The dedication of the Wesleyan cemetery was revoked in 1910. The Honeysuckle Point cemeteries were removed in 1916 to make way for a tram and road bridge over the railway, however due to lack of funds the bridge was never constructed. Refer to my Honeysuckle Point Cemetery and Wesleyan Cemetery pages for further details.


Wallsend Cemetery
Refer to my Wallsend Cemetery page for further details.
Proposed Waratah Cemetery
In the published article above, I stated that the Sandgate cemetery site was selected in preference to a Waratah site “after many delays”. This polite phrase, required for brevity, masks the true omni-shambles of the Government’s and Newcastle Borough Council’s handling of cemetery matters. See my Waratah Cemetery page for further details.
Sandgate Cemetery
After a delay of several decades, the government finally secured a site for a general cemetery at Sandgate.
It is satisfactory to learn that the vote of £3000 for a cemetery for this city has been appropriated. The Government have just purchased 50 acres of land at Waratah from the A. A. Co. at the rate of £50 per acre, the remaining £500 has been placed in the hands of the Municipal Council to defray the expense of inclosing the same with a substantial fence.
Freeman’s Journal, 7 December 1878.
(Note the mention of the land being “at Waratah” meant in the Waratah region, not Waratah township/suburb we know today. The locality name of “Sandgate” was not used until 1882.)
On 9 December 1878 Newcastle Council passed a motion …
That the Town Clerk be instructed to write to the Government, urging the necessity of dedicating the land lately purchased for a general cemetery, and appointing the Municipal Council as trustees; also for taking immediate steps for closing the burial grounds within the municipality, and providing the necessary railway accommodation for the general use of the cemetery.
At the same meeting the council accepted the tender of Mr W W Johnston of Wallsend for fencing the cemetery. The following month Johnston reported to the council …
… that the unusual size of the rails for the cemetery fence had caused him considerable difficulty in procuring same, but he would be in a position to commence the fence within a fortnight.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 14 January 1879.
In June 1879 a major controversy erupted over the proposed distribution of land within the cemetery to the various church denominations.
Our attention has been very forcibly drawn to the extraordinary manner in which the land set apart by the Government for burying purposes has been apportioned to the different denominations.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 3 June 1879.
Half the area of the cemetery had been allocated to two denominations (Church of England, Catholic), some denominations had “manifestly inequitable” allocations, and some no allocation at all.
As for the Baptists, they must all be presumed by the Government Distributors to be translated to heaven as Enoch and Elijah were, without dying, as no place appears to have been provided for their burial!
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 3 June 1879.
At a public meeting held on 26 July 1879, the various denominations discussed how the cemetery should be divided. The Church of England and Roman Catholics wanted it apportioned based on the general census of 1871 (which gave them a greater area), whereas others wanted it apportioned based on the ratio of the denominations in the local district. The meeting resolved to send a deputation to the Minister for Lands on the following Tuesday to argue their respective cases. In August 1879 the Minister issued a new subdivision of the cemetery that reduced the allocation to the Church of England and Roman Catholics, and increased the allocation to the other denominations, including some that had previously been overlooked.
A few months later, Newcastle Council were again asking the Government for a rail link to the cemetery, and reminding them of the need to pass legislation to close the existing cemeteries within the city boundary.
Alderman BROOKS moved – “That the Government be communicated with, urging the necessity of making railway accommodation to the new cemetery; and also passing a bill to restrict the burials in the city, and close all cemeteries within the city boundary.” He had been given to understand that before burials in the municipality could be stopped, a special Bill must be passed, and no steps had been taken by Government to do that. It was the Council’s duty to remind the Government that such a bill was urgently required. If they did not continually peg away at them it would be a couple of years before they had the new cemetery available. The MAYOR remarked that the fencing of the ground was completed. Doubtless each denomination would take steps to see that their section of the enclosure was properly cleared.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 30 October 1879.
The following year, the Government finally got around to appointing trustees for the cemetery, the denominational trustees on 30 July 1880, and trustees for the General section on 1 October 1880. In January 1881 word was received that the Government had agreed to construct a branch rail line into the cemetery.
We are glad to notice that the City Council has at last been successful, aided by the exertions of the members for the city, in inducing the Minister for Works to connect the new general cemetery to the Great Northern Railway by a siding. Mr. Bewick, the Superintendent of Permanent Ways and Works, has been instructed to proceed with this necessary work at once, and in the course of four or five weeks at the furthest we may expect to see this work completed.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 28 January 1881.
In April 1881 several of the trustees of the cemetery visited the site to inspect the railway works, rapidly nearing completion.
To form a connection [from the cemetery] to the main track, a siding has been run in, proceeding by a gentle incline and gradual curve towards the middle of the cemetery, at the exact centre of which a terminus is formed, a platform erected, and a hand- some mortuary receiving house or waiting room provided. The benefit of this arrangement will be readily appreciated; since by the plan thus adopted funeral parties can be conveyed to the nearest approach to either one of the various denominational sections into which the whole is subdivided. The structure itself measures internally 26ft x 16, with a verandah 20 x 17, the platform being 100 foot long, exclusive of two fifteen feet ramps at either end. The upper portion in galvanized iron with neat barge-board fringing the eaves, and ornamental verandah posts, &c., attached. The formal work of constructing it is being carried out by Mr. P. Morrison, who expects to have every- thing complete within a day or two.
Those present made a careful inspection of the ground, which is thus virtually ready for interments. With the infusion of a little energy there can be no reason whatever to prevent every detail being satisfactorily settled within the next fortnight at the utmost.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 14 April 1881.

Despite the optimism of the trustees of an imminent opening, four months later the cemetery was still not ready. A meeting on 12 August 1881 outlined four main issues to be resolved.
- The need for clearing the ground.
- The need for a caretaker to be appointed and a caretaker’s house to be erected.
- The need for “an official sketch plan of the ground, shewing the various denominational sub-divisions, together with a plan of the paths, sizes of graves, distinguishing sections.”
- The need for “a committee of trustees to draw up a code of by-laws, to be submitted to Government for approval.”
In addition to the above there were issues with white-ants attacking the mortuary building, fences removed by residents who claimed a right of way, and other fences erected in the wrong position.
On 8 September 1881 the trustees met again at the cemetery site, and …
- reported that the Government had promised £200 towards clearing and fencing;
- moved that tenders for the clearing work be invited;
- moved that a a surveyor be employed to prepare a plan of the whole cemetery;
- moved that the draft by-laws prepared by the sub-committee be submitted to the next general meeting for approval.
Twenty two years after it was first called for, the general cemetery was finally ready. The first interment took place two days later on 10 September 1881, when Mary Wilson, the wife of John Miller was buried in the Presbyterian section of the cemetery. The Government Railways advertised that funeral trains to the General Cemetery would run daily from Newcastle Station, if required.


At the next meeting of the cemetery trustees, plans for the improvement of the cemetery progressed.
[Funds] will be devoted to clearing the main avenue of the cemetery to a width of 66 feet, and trees of an appropriate character will be planted on each side. Application is also to be made to the Minister for Works for the erection of a residence for a caretaker, the site of which has been approved of by the trustees.
Efforts have also been made to secure telephonic communication between the cemetery and Newcastle, so that no time need be lost in any case of emergency . The Trustees are applying to the Government for a platform to be constructed so that the various kinds of material likely to be required for interments, such as timber, monumental masonry, iron railings, etc, may be easily unloaded, and also that parties wishing to visit the burial ground may disembark there from any ordinary train without being compelled to travel by the special mortuary one.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 30 September 1881.
In April 1882 we see the first reference to the name “Sandgate” as the locality of the cemetery, and on 19 July 1882 the first reference to the name “Sandgate Cemetery” appears. There is no clear information on the origin of the name. (In 1928 there was a short-lived agitation to change the name of the suburb. One resident gives a confusing explanation for the naming of Sandgate, but coming nearly 50 years later it should be received with some skepticism.)



Mortuary Station, Newcastle West
When Sandgate Cemetery opened in September 1881, cemetery trains departed from Newcastle Station. In 1883 the Government erected a mortuary station and platform at Honeysuckle, and from 9 April 1883 funeral trains departed from this station.




The mortuary station was used for 50 years, and closed at the end of March 1933, because of declining patronage and a deteriorating building.
The old mortuary platform at Honey suckle railway station is to be closed from April 1. After that date funerals at Honeysuckle will entrain from the main platform for Sandgate Cemetery. The question of closing down the mortuary, platform has been under consideration by the Railway Department for a long time. At present the platform buildings are in a state of disrepair, and need painting, and it has been decided that the change should be made at the end of this month. The department claims that no public inconvenience will be caused; its records show that of the 228 funerals that went by rail from the Newcastle district stations between August and December of last year, only 35 left from the Honey suckle mortuary platform.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 11 March 1933.
Although the mortuary station closed, the train service to the cemetery continued, particularly passenger traffic for mourners and visitors. Transport of the deceased to the cemetery via train appears to have waned quickly, with the last mention in the paper of this practice being the funeral of Mrs Eleanor J Varley on 24 June 1935.
It is often remarked that Newcastle gets a poor allocation of funds for projects compared with spending in Sydney, and the mortuary stations in the respective cities is a fine example. While Sydney got a magnificent architect designed Victorian Free Gothic style sandstone building in 1868, fifteen years later the Government could only manage a weatherboard shed for Newcastle.

Wallsend Mortuary Train and TramWay hearses
In 1886 the rail authorities commenced mortuary train service from Wallsend to Sandgate Cemetery, that used the Newcastle-Wallsend Coal Company railway.
The funeral [of John Kilpatrick] took place on Monday, and was the first mortuary train from Wallsend to the District Cemetery. I understood that 83 tickets were issued, proving conclusively that in cases when the remains of any member of our friendly society is conveyed by rail to Sandgate the authorities will be called upon to provide plenty of carriage accommodation.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 1 September 1886.
After trams in Newcastle commenced operation in 1887 the opportunity arose for a funeral tram service. In May 1896 the Railway Commissioners announced that a hearse trailer for the tram network in Newcastle would soon be provided.
It is expected that a hearse will be available for use on the tramways about the 1st June. This will supply a want which has been long experienced by residents in the suburbs.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 23 May 1896.
A hearse car has just been added to the tramway rolling stock. It is intended to attach this car to funeral trams, which are henceforth to be run as required from the suburbs to the railway station in competition against the undertakers.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 8 June 1896.
With the introduction of a tram hearse, the Railway Commissioners decided to discontinue the funeral train service that had been running from Wallsend for the previous ten years.
The Commissioners promised to arrange for the arrival and departure of the tram from Newcastle so as to prevent any unnecessary delay and insure a return to Wallsend by 6pm, so that it will now be understood that in lieu of a funeral train, a hearse will be attached to the tram leaving Wallsend at 2pm and returning at 5pm, the return fare being 1s.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 7 AUgust 1896.

The introduction of the funeral tram service allowed quite large funeral processions to travel to Sandgate Cemetery from the suburbs.
The funeral of the late Mr. John Avery took place yesterday, and was one of the largest attended that ever left Lambton, upwards of 700 persons joined in the procession from the house to the tram, and about 500 proceeded by tram and train to Sandgate Cemetery.
Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners’ Advocate, 30 September 1907.

Ralph Snowball’s Cemetery Photos
Ralph Snowball took a large number of photographs of headstones and monuments at Sandgate Cemetery, many of which are in Newcastle Libraries Online Collection. Some of these photographs show trains, or rail infrastructure in the background.





Newspaper articles
| Article Date Event Date | Notes |
|---|---|
| 5 Oct 1859 4 Oct 1859 | Meeting of Newcastle Town Council: "Alderman Bolton then brought on his motion that application be made to the General Superintendent of the Australian Agricultural Company for a grant of land for the purpose of a general cemetery. In introducing it, he said that he had little to say, as all were aware of its necessity. The Church of England cemetery was in the centre of the town, and was nearly full and the others were small, and not suited for the purpose." |
| 22 Aug 1878 | "The COLONIAL SECRETARY has informed the deputation that the Minister for Lands had directed that the manager of the A. A. Co. should be communicated with, and that the purchase of the site should be completed before the end of the present month. The fact is, that if the land is not purchased by that time, the offer of the company to sell the land for the purpose required will lapse, and the citizens will have to look round again, but perhaps in vain." |
| 24 Aug 1878 | "Negotiations had been entered into with the Australian Agricultural Company for the purchase of fifty acres of land for a cemetery at £2500, and that, in fact, £3000 had been voted by Parliament for buying a piece of land for this purpose, and for fencing it in." |
| 7 Dec 1878 | "It is satisfactory to learn that the vote of £3000 for a cemetery for this city has been appropriated. The Government have just purchased 50 acres of land at Waratah from the A. A. Co. at the rate of £50 per acre, the remaining £500 has been placed in the hands of the Municipal Council to defray the expense of inclosing the same with a substantial fence." |
| 10 Dec 1878 9 Dec 1878 | Newcastle Council meeting: acceptance of tender for cemetery fencing; letter to Government regarding trustees and rail line to cemetery. |
| 14 Jan 1879 13 Jan 1879 | Delay to cemetery fencing due to difficulty procuring timber. |
| 3 Jun 1879 | Disgruntlement with the apportionment areas of the new general cemetery to the various denominations. |
| 28 Jul 1879 26 Jul 1879 | Public meeting to consider the question of apportioning areas of the new cemetery to the various denominations. |
| 31 Jul 1879 29 Jul 1879 | Deputation meets with Minister for Lands regarding the apportioning to the denomimations. |
| 19 Aug 1879 18 Aug 1879 | Minister for Lands issues a revised allocation of land in the cemetery. |
| 30 Oct 1879 27 Oct 1879 | Newcastle council meeting, calling on Government to provide a rail line to the cemetery. |
| 30 Jul 1880 | Appointment of denominational trustees for the new cemetery. |
| 1 Oct 1880 1 Oct 1880 | Appointment of trustees for General section of the new cemetery at Sandgate. |
| 28 Jan 1881 | Government agrees to construct a branch rail line into the cemetery. |
| 14 Apr 1881 | Branch rail line into cemetery nearing completion. |
| 13 Aug 1881 12 Aug 1881 | Meeting of the trustees to progress matters delaying the cemetery opening. |
| 19 Aug 1881 | Deputation to Minister for Lands regarding issues preventing the opening of the new cemetery. |
| 9 Sep 1881 8 Sep 1881 | Final meeting of the trustees, at the cemetery site, before the first burial two days later. |
| 10 Sep 1881 10 Sep 1881 | The first interment in the new Newcastle General Cemetery at Sandgate. |
| 10 Sep 1881 | Advertisement with funeral train information. |
| 10 Sep 1881 | Advertisement for funeral of Mary Wilson, first person to be interred at the new general cemetery at Sandgate. |
| 30 Sep 1881 28 Sep 1881 | Meeting of the cemetery trustees, plans for an avenue of ornamental trees, and another railway platform for the easy unloading of timber, monumental masonry etc. |
| 6 Apr 1882 | First mention of "Sandgate" as a locality name. |
| 19 Jul 1882 | First reference to the name "Sandgate Cemetery". |
| 5 Apr 1883 9 May 1883 | Opening of mortuary station at Honeysuckle Point. |
| 1 Sep 1886 30 Oct 1886 | Funeral of John Kilpatrick - first mortuary train from Wallsend to Sandgate Cemetery. |
| 10 Jul 1887 10 Jul 1887 | Formal gazetting of 50 acres of land in Newcastle for the General Cemetery. |
| 23 May 1896 | "It is expected that a hearse will be available for use on the tramways about the 1st June." |
| 8 Jun 1896 | "A hearse car has just been added to the tramway rolling stock." |
| 7 Aug 1896 | With the introduction of the tram hearse, the funeral train service from Wallsend is discontinued. |
| 30 Sep 1907 29 Sep 1907 | Funeral of John Avery where 500 mourners proceeded from Lambton by tram and train to Sandgate Cemetery. |
| 2 Jul 1932 1 Jul 1932 | "Fourteen funerals, described by an undertaker as the highest number for one day since the influenza epidemic, took place in the Newcastle district yesterday. Three special trains, two from Newcastle and one from Kahibah, had to be run by the Railway Department to cope with the situation. Ten of the funerals entrained for the cemetery, the others went by road." |
| 11 Mar 1933 30 Mar 1933 | Closure of mortuary station at Honeysuckle Point. |
| 26 Jun 1935 24 Jun 1935 | Funeral of Mrs. Eleanor J. Varley, the last reference found in the newspaper of the body being taken by train to the cemetery. |
| 9 May 1938 8 May 1938 | "Four special trains from Newcastle and suburbs, in addition to the ordinary Sunday trains, carried about 3000 people to Sandgate cemetery yesterday afternoon. Hundreds went in cars and on motor cycles and bicycles. " |
| 8 May 1950 | Photo of funeral train at Sandgate Cemetery "taken 60 years ago." |

















































