The collective burials continued, but the size of the tombs gradually diminished.
The burials in the tombs continued to Roman times.
Portions of the cemetery site were first the old Kingston "burying ground", established about 1737, and burials continued until 1909.
Public worship then lasted to 1690, though burials of troops from the garrison in the surrounding churchyard continued for some time after that.
However, as with most closed cemeteries, additional burials and interment of ashes in existing family graves continued to occur.
Multiple burials within the same tomb continued to be popular into the Roman period, in which one family shared the same tomb.
However, burials of veteran's spouses continues at the rate of approximately ten per year.
After the southern cemetery was full, the burials continued in the north.
However, burials continued on, especially when a church was constructed in 1885.
The burials continued without pause, the only change being that the inhabitants interred remains in the Roman tradition.