Udny Mort House
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Udny Mort House is a morthouse in the old kirkyard at Udny Green, Aberdeenshire, in the north-east of Scotland. Built in 1832, it is today a Category B listed building. It housed corpses until decomposition had progressed sufficiently that their graves would not be desecrated by resurrectionists and body-snatchers seeking to sell cadavers to medical colleges for dissection. Bodies were permitted to be stored for up to three months before burial. The circular morthouse was designed with a revolving platform and double doors. After the passage of the Anatomy Act 1832 Udny Mort House gradually fell into disuse; minutes of the committee responsible for its operation cease in about July 1836.
In the 18th and 19th centuries body-snatchers, also known as resurrectionists, shush-lifters or noddies, excavated graves to meet the increasing demand from medical colleges for bodies to dissect, as executions no longer supplied sufficient numbers. Precautions were taken to protect the bodies and various methods were used to prevent access to graves. In Scotland, vaults, watch houses, mort houses and mortsafes were used. Grave-robbing was a widespread problem and, in 1821, the minister for West Calder, Reverend W. Fleming wrote:[1]
Few burial grounds in Scotland, it is believed, have escaped the ravaging hands of resurrection men; and it is reported that with respect to a church-yard not far from Edinburgh, that, till within three years ago, when the inhabitants began to watch the graves, the persons interred did not remain in their graves above a night, and that these depredations were successfully carried on for nine successive winters.
Bodies were securely kept in locked buildings until the process of natural decomposition rendered the cadavers useless for dissection.[2]
