Skip to content
All Saints Church Toftrees
Project

HOME

/

GRAVES

/

BUTCHER, JAMES ALGAR

BUTCHER, James Algar

Buried Date

26th May 1896

Grave #

11

Grave image for BUTCHER, James Algar
Grave image for BUTCHER, James Algar
Grave image for BUTCHER, James Algar
Grave image for BUTCHER, James Algar
Grave image for BUTCHER, James Algar
Grave image for BUTCHER, James Algar

Burial Details

Please see below for the details on BUTCHER, James Algar.

Buried Date

26th May 1896

Age

49

GRO Record

Q2 1896 Walsingham 4b 162

Ref

1896 P.56 F.441

Inscription

In Loving Memory of James Algar BUTCHER Died May 26th 1896 in the 50th Year of his age

Grave Details

Location

Located halfway along the west boundary.

Headstone Condition

Not specified

FootStone

No

Type of Grave

flat

Additional Information

The grave has a kerbing, and an inscription is located on the side.

Inside Toftrees church

Understanding Our Records

GRO refers to the General Records Office records of deaths. So Q is the quarter of the year when the death occurred, followed by the year of birth. Then comes the local government area where the death was registered, followed by the volume number, and sometimes the letter of an additional volume, of their records, and finally the page where it is recorded.

REF refers to the parish Burial Register. First there is the year of the death, then the page number, and finally the entry number.

Deaths after 1999 may not yet have a GRO or Parish Register entry recorded on the website.

A portion of the interactive churchyard map is shown for context, although you can also view the whole churchyard by clicking on the Map button at the top of the page. This is especially useful if you find that there are more than one person buried in our churchyard with the name you are searching for.

We are always mindful that there are many people buried in our churchyard that do not have a memorial, and so are not included in this list. We remember all of them in our prayers.

img
Rich History in a 
Rural Location

There has been a church on this site since Saxon times. Shortly after the Norman invasion the church was rebuilt, incorporating both materials from an earlier church and also some Roman tiles no doubt picked up from the field opposite, where there had been a building in the days when a Roman road went past the church site.

Explore History
All Saints Church Toftrees
GravesProjectHistoryGrants & Funding

© 2025 Toftrees Churchyard Project

Privacy PolicyTerms & ConditionsContactWebsite produced by Timberyard

© 2025 Toftrees Churchyard Project

Privacy PolicyTerms & ConditionsContact
Website produced by Timberyard