This article concerns the folklore surrounding the Boy’s Grave, a wayside burial at a crossroads on the Suffolk–Cambridgeshire border. This grave has been decorated with flowers by anonymous caretakers for more than a century. Analysing historical sources from the early 1900s to the present, the study explores how competing narratives about the grave (suicide, murder, accident) reflect changing societal attitudes towards suicide burials. Comparing the Boy’s Grave with similar wayside graves throughout England, the author argues that these anonymous floral tributes represent community reclamation of once-stigmatized burials with acts of care. The persistence of these traditions demonstrates how outcast deaths are reintegrated into community memory in spontaneous memorial practices.
Simon Young (Fri,) studied this question.
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