... good money was to be made by charging wealthy parishioners to stack coffins containing their dead family members under the church.The daily blog Spitalfields Life publishes a timely item, A Brief History of Crypts, written by Malcolm Johnson, author of Crypts of London and formerly Rector of St Botolph’s, Aldgate.
We learn that:
"in the eighteenth century most parishes received around seven per cent of their income from interments, although at St James Garlickhythe the average was nearly twenty-seven per cent.No wonder there was resistance from the clergy to the closure of London churches to further burials as a sanitary measure in 1852.
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