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Kensal Green Cemetery

Kensal Green Cemetery is a cemetery in the Kensal Green area of Queens Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London, England. Inspired by Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, it was founded by the barrister George Frederick Carden.[1] The cemetery opened in 1833 and comprises 72 acres (29 ha) of grounds, including two conservation areas, adjoining a canal. The cemetery is home to at least 33 species of bird and other wildlife. This distinctive cemetery has memorials ranging from large mausoleums housing the rich and famous to many distinctive smaller graves and includes special areas dedicated to the very young. It has three chapels and serves all faiths.[2] It is one of the Magnificent Seven cemeteries in London.

Kensal Green Cemetery
Details
Established1832
Location
CountryEngland
Coordinates51°31′43″N 0°13′27″W / 51.5286°N 0.2241°W / 51.5286; -0.2241
TypePrivate
StyleNeoclassical
Owned byThe General Cemetery Company
Size29 hectares (72 acres)
No. of graves65,000+
No. of interments250,000
WebsiteThe General Cemetery Company website
Find a GraveKensal Green Cemetery
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameKensal Green Cemetery
Designated1 October 1987
Reference no.1000817
Official nameKensal Green Cemetery
Designated1 October 1987
Reference no.1000817
A typical mausoleum, that of Sir John Dean Paul
Grave of Baldomero de Bertodano
Andrew Ducrow's monument

The cemetery was immortalised in the lines of G. K. Chesterton's poem "The Rolling English Road" from his book The Flying Inn:[3]

For there is good news yet to hear and fine things to be seen;
Before we go to Paradise by way of Kensal Green.

Despite its Grecian-style buildings, the cemetery is primarily Gothic in character, due to the high number of private Gothic monuments. Due to this atmosphere, the cemetery was the chosen location of several scenes in movies, notably in Theatre of Blood.

The cemetery is listed Grade I on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.[4] It remains in use.

Location

The cemetery is in London's Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Its main entrance is on Harrow Road (west of where Ladbroke Grove and Chamberlayne Road meet). Its other entrance, Alma Place (the West Gate, almost opposite Greyhound Road) is also on the north side. Alma Place leads to the West London Crematorium (whose owner and operator is the same) and St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cemetery, which are in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. The cemetery lies between Harrow Road and the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal to the south which has long been separated by a wall.

A set of defunct gates is set in the southern wall which adjoins the canal where barges took a proportion of earth from excavating graves and occasionally coffins carried by barge were unloaded.

History and description

Establishment and design

George Frederick Carden had failed with an earlier attempt to establish a British equivalent to Paris's Père Lachaise Cemetery in 1825, but a new committee established in February 1830,[5] including Andrew Spottiswoode, MP for Saltash, sculptor Robert William Sievier, banker Sir John Dean Paul,[1] Charles Broughton Bowman (first committee secretary),[6] and architects Thomas Willson (who had previously proposed an ambitious Metropolitan Sepulchre project) and Augustus Charles Pugin,[7] gained more financial, political and public support to fund the "General Cemetery Company". Public meetings were held in June and July 1830 at the Freemasons' Tavern, and George Carden was elected treasurer.[5]

Paul, a partner in the London banking firm of Strahan, Paul, Paul and Bates, found and conditionally purchased the 54 acres (22 ha) of land at Kensal Green for £9,500. However, Paul and Carden were already embroiled in a dispute regarding the design of the cemetery, where Paul favoured the Grecian style and Carden the Gothic style. A succession of architects were contemplated, including Benjamin Wyatt (who declined), Charles Fowler (proposal not taken up), Francis Goodwin, Willson, and a Mr Lidell, a pupil of John Nash, before an architectural competition was launched in November 1831. This attracted 46 entrants, and in March 1832 the premium was awarded, despite some opposition, for a Gothic Revival design by Henry Edward Kendall;[7] this decision was, however, eventually overturned.

On 11 July 1832, the Act of Parliament establishing a "General Cemetery Company for the interment of the Dead in the Neighbourhood of the Metropolis" gained Royal Assent. The Act authorised it to raise up to £45,000 in shares, buy up to 80 acres of land and build a cemetery and a Church of England chapel. Company directors appointed after the Bill received Royal Assent asserted their control and preference for a different style. One of the competition judges and a company shareholder, John Griffith of Finbury, who had previously produced working drawings for a boundary wall,[8][9] ultimately designed the cemetery's two chapels and the main gateway[5] and 15,000 trees were supplied and planted by Hugh Ronalds from his nursery in Brentford.[10] Founded as the General Cemetery of All Souls, Kensal Green, the cemetery was the first of the "Magnificent Seven" garden-style cemeteries in London. It was consecrated on 24 January 1833 by Charles James Blomfield, the Bishop of London, receiving its first funeral the same month.

In the early 1850s, after a series of cholera epidemics in London caused an examination of London's burial facilities, health commissioner Edwin Chadwick proposed the closure of all existing burial grounds in the vicinity of London other than the privately owned Kensal Green Cemetery, north-west of the city, which was to be nationalised and greatly enlarged to provide a single burial ground for west London. (A large tract of land on the Thames around 9 miles (14 km) south-east of London in Abbey Wood was to become a single burial ground for east London.[11]) The Treasury was sceptical that Chadwick's scheme would ever be financially viable, and it was widely unpopular.[12][13] Although the Metropolitan Interments Act 1850 authorised the scheme, it was abandoned in 1852.[13][14]

 
A typical statuary detail

Layout

The overall layout is on an east–west axis, with a central path leading to a raised chapel towards the west. The entrance is to the north-east and the largest monuments line the central path to the chapel.

The Church of England was allotted 39 acres and the remaining 15, clearly separated, acres were given over to Dissenters,[15] a distinction deemed crucial at the time. Originally there was a division between the Dissenters' part of the cemetery and the Anglican section. This took the form of a "sunk fence" from the canal to the gate piers on the path. There were also decorative iron gates. The small area designated for non-Anglican burials is approximately oval in shape and was formerly made prominent by a wider central axis path that terminated with the neo-classical chapel with curved colonnades. The Anglican Chapel dominates the western section of the cemetery, being raised on a terrace beneath that is an extensive catacomb; there is a hydraulic catafalque for lowering coffins into the catacomb.[16]

It is still in operation today; burials and cremations take place daily, although cremations are now more common than interments. The cemetery is still run by the General Cemetery Company under its original Act of Parliament. This mandates that bodies there may not be exhumed and cremated or the land sold for development. Once the cemetery has exhausted all its interment space and can no longer function as a cemetery, the mandate requires that it shall remain a memorial park. The General Cemetery Company constructed and runs the West London Crematorium within the grounds of the cemetery.

While borrowing from the ideals established at Père Lachaise some years before,[17] Kensal Green Cemetery contributed to the design and management basis for many cemetery projects throughout the British Empire of the time. In Australia, for example, the Necropolis at Rookwood (1868) and Waverley Cemetery (1877), both in Sydney, are noted for their use of the "gardenesque" landscape qualities and importantly self-sustaining management structures championed by the General Cemetery Company.

The cemetery is the burial site of approximately 250,000 individuals in over 65,000 graves,[18] including upwards of 500 members of the British nobility and 970 people listed in the Dictionary of National Biography. Many monuments, particularly the larger ones, lean precariously as they have settled over time on the underlying London clay.

Notable structures

Many buildings and structures within Kensal Green are listed.

The Anglican Chapel is listed Grade I,[19] while the Dissenters' Chapel, Kensal Green is listed Grade II* and the colonnade/catacomb and perimeter walls and railings are listed Grade II. Of the many tombs, memorials and mausoleums, eight are listed Grade II*, while The Reformers' Memorial is listed Grade II. The Tomb of Charles Spencer Ricketts is listed Grade II* and was designed by William Burges.[20]

Anglican Chapel

The Anglican Chapel is at the centre of the cemetery, and contains several tombs. The chapel was damaged during the Second World War but was restored in 1954.[21] Under the chapel is a catacomb, one of the few in London. The catacomb is currently not maintained but can be visited as part of a guided tour. It still has a working coffin-lift or catafalque, restored by The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery in 1997.

Dissenters' Chapel

Situated in the eastern corner of the cemetery this Greek Revival structure was for the use of all non-Anglican denominations and of non-believers. Only part of the cemetery was consecrated, and Dissenters could opt to be buried in the non-consecrated areas following a service here. The cemetery became favoured by nonconformists, free-thinkers, non-Christians and atheists, and thus this chapel became popular. The Dissenters' Chapel had become derelict and partly roofless, so in 1995 was leased to the Historic Chapels Trust who undertook £447,000 of restoration. The chapel currently serves as the office of The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery, but is also available for funeral services.

 
Detail of the Reformers' Memorial
 
Robert Owen memorial (with the Reformers' Memorial to the right)

The Reformers' Memorial

The Reformers' Memorial was erected in 1885. It was erected at the instigation of Joseph Corfield "to the memory of men and women who have generously given their time and means to improve the conditions and enlarge the happiness of all classes of society". The monument has lists of names of reformers and radicals on its north and east sides (together with further names added in 1907 by Emma Corfield). It is paired with the Robert Owen memorial, and a second instance of a non-funerary memorial in the cemetery's nonconformist section.

The memorial was amended to include Lloyd Jones to recognise his contribution.

"THIS MEMORIAL IS RAISED AS A TOKEN OF REGARD TO THE BRAVE MEN AND WOMEN WHOSE NAMES IT BEARS BY JOSEPH W. CORFIELD, AUGUST 1895."

"THE REFORMERS' MEMORIAL

ERECTED TO THE GLORY OF MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE GENEROUSLY GIVEN THEIR TIME AND MEANS TO IMPROVE THE CONDITIONS AND ENHANCE THE HAPPINESS OF ALL CLASSES OF SOCIETY. THEY HAVE FELT THAT A FAR HAPPIER AND MORE PROSPEROUS LIFE IS WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL MEN, AND THEY HAVE EARNESTLY SOUGHT TO REALIZE IT. THE OLD BRUTAL LAWS OF IMPRISONMENT FOR FREE PRINTING HAVE BEEN SWEPT AWAY AND THE RIGHT OF SELECTING OUR OWN LAW MAKERS HAS BEEN GAINED MAINLY BY THEIR EFFORTS. THE EXERCISE OF THESE RIGHTS WILL GIVE THE PEOPLE AN INTEREST IN THE LAWS THAT GOVERN THEM, AND WILL MAKE THEM BETTER MEN AND BETTER CITIZENS."[22]

The names of over seventy people are inscribed on the monument. These are, in order shown on the monument:

The entry for Robert Owen reads:

The cenotaph to Robert Owen, who was buried in Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales, is fittingly at the side of the Reformers' Memorial.

"ROBERT OWEN PHILANTHROPIST BORN MAY 14TH. 1771. DIED NOVR. 17TH. 1858."

"1879 ERECTED BY SUBSCRIPTION IN MEMORY OF ROBERT OWEN OF NEW LANARK, BORN AT NEWTOWN, N. WALES 1771. HE DIED AND WAS BURIED AT THE SAME PLACE 1858, AGED 87 YEARS. ––––––––––––– HE ORIGINATED AND ORGANIZED INFANT SCHOOLS, HE SECURED A REDUCTION OF THE HOURS OF LABOUR FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN FACTORIES. HE WAS A LIBERAL SUPPORTER OF THE EARLY EFFORTS IN FAVOUR OF NATIONAL EDUCATION AND LABOURED TO PROMOTE INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION. HE WAS ONE OF THE FOREMOST ENGLISHMEN [sic[23]] WHO TAUGHT MEN TO ASPIRE TO A HIGHER SOCIAL STATE BY RECONCILING THE INTERESTS OF CAPITAL AND LABOUR. HE SPENT HIS LIFE AND A LARGE FORTUNE IN SEEKING TO IMPROVE HIS FELLOW MEN BY GIVING THEM EDUCATION, SELF-RELIANCE AND MORE WORTH.

HIS LIFE WAS SANCTIFIED BY HUMAN AFFECTION AND LOFTY EFFORT.
J. W. CORFIELD"

"MR. OWEN'S WRITINGS ––––––––––––––––– REPORT TO THE COUNTY OF LANARK. NEW VIEWS OF SOCIETY. TWELVE LECTURES. LECTURES ON MARRIAGE. LECTURES ON A NEW STATE OF SOCIETY. THE BOOK OF THE NEW MORAL WORLD. SIX LECTURES AT MANCHESTER. MANIFESTO OF ROBERT OWEN. SELF SUPPORTING HOME COLONIES. LETTERS TO THE HUMAN RACE. REVOLUTION IN MIND AND PRACTICE. ROBERT OWEN'S JOURNAL. LIFE OF ROBERT OWEN."[22]

The memorial is listed as grade II.[24]

The Catacombs

 
The Catacombs

The cemetery has three catacombs for the deposit of lead-sealed, triple-shelled coffins and cremated remains. Catacomb A, beneath the North Terrace Colonnade is now sealed. Catacomb Z, beneath the Dissenters' Chapel at the eastern end of the cemetery, suffered significant bomb damage during World War II, and is also closed to further deposits. Catacomb B, beneath the Anglican Chapel in the centre of the cemetery, has space for some 4,000 deposits, and still offers both private loculi and shelves or vaults for family groups. The catacomb extends under the entire footprint of the chapel and its colonnades. There are six aisles, within which each vault is numbered, running consecutively to number 216 at the south-western end of aisle 6.

Deposit within the catacombs of Kensal Green has always been more expensive and prestigious than burial in a simple plot in the grounds of the cemetery, although less costly than a brick-lined grave or mausoleum. Without the further expense and responsibility of a monument above the grave, the catacombs have afforded a secure, dignified and exclusive resting place for the well-to-do, particularly the unmarried, the childless and young children of those without family plots or mausolea elsewhere.[25]

War graves

The cemetery contains the graves of 473 Commonwealth service personnel of the First World War—half of whom form a war graves plot in the south-west corner, the remainder in small groups or individual graves scattered throughout the grounds—and 51 of the Second who are all dispersed. In the First World War plot, at Section 213, a Screen Wall memorial lists casualties of both world wars whose graves could not be marked by headstones, besides five Second World War servicemen who were cremated at Kensal Green (also known as West London) Crematorium.[26] The highest-ranking person buried here who is commemorated by the CWGC is General Sir Charles Douglas (1850–1914), Chief of the Imperial General Staff in early months of the First World War.[27]

Notable burials

 
Monuments and chapel
 
Grave of Frederick Scott Archer, inventor of the collodion photographic process in 1851. Location
 
Monument of Dwarkanath Tagore at Kensal Green Cemetery renovated by Bengal Heritage Foundation on 11 August 2018
 
Grave of William Makepeace Thackeray (marble slab in front of brick tomb)

The cemetery is remarkable for the number of Fellows of the Royal Society who are buried there, of whom the following is a small sample:

Royal burials

British
Overseas
  • Maharani Jind Kaur, of the Sikh Empire, mother of the last Punjabi Maharaja Duleep Singh – temporarily deposited in the catacomb below the Dissenters' Chapel following her death in exile in 1863 before her body was allowed to return to the Punjab for cremation. Following the discovery of a slab commemorating Jind Kaur (now in the Ancient House Museum, Thetford), a memorial was erected here in 2009.[33]

Notable cremations

 
West London Crematorium

The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery

Although the cemetery is owned and run by the General Cemetery Company, The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery is a charitable organisation[34] whose purpose is the preservation, conservation and restoration for the public benefit of Kensal Green Cemetery. The charity organises tours and other events in the cemetery and has published books about the cemetery. The office of the Friends is in the Dissenters Chapel. The Friends group is a member of The National Federation of Cemetery Friends.

See also

Sources

  • Records held at Kensal Green Cemetery
  • Liza Picard (2006). Victorian London. Orion. pp. 361–365. ISBN 0753820900.

References

  1. ^ a b The Founding of Kensal Green Cemetery 13 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Kensalgreen.co.uk, accessed 7 February 2014
  2. ^ "Kensal Green Cemetery – and West London Crematorium". kensalgreencemetery.com.
  3. ^ Chesterton, Gilbert Keith (1914). "The Rolling English Road". The Flying Inn.
  4. ^ Historic England. "Kensal Green (All Souls) Cemetery (1000817)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  5. ^ a b c "Kensal Green", Survey of London: volume 37: Northern Kensington (1973), pp. 333–339. Accessed 10 February 2014.
  6. ^ Kensal Green Founders 5 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Kensalgreen.co.uk, accessed 10 February 2014
  7. ^ a b Arnold, Catharine (2006). Necropolis: London and its dead. London: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1416502487.
  8. ^ Curl, James Stevens (1980). A Celebration of Death. Constable. p. 218. ISBN 0094630003.
  9. ^ The Builder, Obituary of John Griffith 1888, volume 55, page 345
  10. ^ Ronalds, B.F. (2017). "Ronalds Nurserymen in Brentford and Beyond". Garden History. 45: 82–100.
  11. ^ Clarke, John M. (2006). The Brookwood Necropolis Railway, Locomotive Press 143 (4th ed.). The Orchard Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0853616559.
  12. ^ Arnold, Catherine (2006). Necropolis:London and its dead. Simon & Schuster. p. 160. ISBN 978-1416502487.
  13. ^ a b The Brookwood Necropolis Railway. p. 11.
  14. ^ Glen, William Cunningham (1850). Metropolitan Interments Act, 1850, with introduction, notes, and appendix. London: Shaw and Sons. OCLC 19522913. Metropolitan Interments Act: 1850.
  15. ^ "Field Trip: The Geology of Kensal Green Cemetery". Ougs.org.
  16. ^ "Dissenters' Chapel", Kensal Green Cemetery.
  17. ^ a b "Humanist Heritage: Kensal Green Cemetery". Heritage.humanists.uk.
  18. ^ "Cemetery – Kensal Green Cemetery". Kensalgreencemetry.com. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  19. ^ Historic England. "The Anglican Chapel (Grade I) (1190995)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  20. ^ Historic England. "Tomb of Commander Charles Spencer Ricketts, Royal Navy (Grade II*) (1080630)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  21. ^ a b "Kensal Green | British History Online". british-history.ac.uk.
  22. ^ a b c "Dr Tony Shaw's website". Tonyshaw3.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  23. ^ Robert Owen was ethnically Welsh on both sides of his parentage.
  24. ^ Historic England. "The Reformers' Memorial (1271535)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  25. ^ "Home – Friends of Kensal Green". Friends of Kensal Green.
  26. ^ "Kensal Green (All Souls') Cemetery | Cemetery Details | CWGC". Cwgc.org. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  27. ^ "CWGC Debt of Honour Register". Cwgc.org. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  28. ^ Remembering Frederick Scott Archer BBC article, 27 April 2010
  29. ^ Freeman, Jennifer (2019). "A farewell to Marigold". The Telamon. No. 87. London: The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery. p. 3.
  30. ^ Boase, George Clement (1896). "Quin, Frederic Hervey Foster" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 47. London: Smith, Elder & Co. ... and was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery on 28 Nov.
  31. ^ W. B. Owen, revised by H. C. G. Matthew, 'Reich, Emil (1854–1910)', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) online version (subscription required), accessed 26 September 2013
  32. ^ "History – Kensal Green Cemetery". Kensalgreencemetry.com. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  33. ^ Basu, Shrabani (26 July 2009). "Rebel With a Cause". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 30 June 2013.
  34. ^ Entry on the Charity Commission website

External links

  • Official website
  • Friends of the Cemetery.
  • Aerial view from 1938, from the English Heritage "Britain from Above" archive

kensal, green, cemetery, cemetery, kensal, green, area, queens, park, royal, borough, kensington, chelsea, london, england, inspired, père, lachaise, cemetery, paris, founded, barrister, george, frederick, carden, cemetery, opened, 1833, comprises, acres, grou. Kensal Green Cemetery is a cemetery in the Kensal Green area of Queens Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London England Inspired by Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris it was founded by the barrister George Frederick Carden 1 The cemetery opened in 1833 and comprises 72 acres 29 ha of grounds including two conservation areas adjoining a canal The cemetery is home to at least 33 species of bird and other wildlife This distinctive cemetery has memorials ranging from large mausoleums housing the rich and famous to many distinctive smaller graves and includes special areas dedicated to the very young It has three chapels and serves all faiths 2 It is one of the Magnificent Seven cemeteries in London Kensal Green CemeteryDetailsEstablished1832LocationHarrow Road Queens Park London W10 4RACountryEnglandCoordinates51 31 43 N 0 13 27 W 51 5286 N 0 2241 W 51 5286 0 2241TypePrivateStyleNeoclassicalOwned byThe General Cemetery CompanySize29 hectares 72 acres No of graves65 000 No of interments250 000WebsiteThe General Cemetery Company websiteFind a GraveKensal Green CemeteryListed Building Grade IOfficial nameKensal Green CemeteryDesignated1 October 1987Reference no 1000817National Register of Historic Parks and GardensOfficial nameKensal Green CemeteryDesignated1 October 1987Reference no 1000817A typical mausoleum that of Sir John Dean Paul Grave of Baldomero de Bertodano Tomb of Charles Spencer Ricketts Andrew Ducrow s monument The cemetery was immortalised in the lines of G K Chesterton s poem The Rolling English Road from his book The Flying Inn 3 For there is good news yet to hear and fine things to be seen Before we go to Paradise by way of Kensal Green Despite its Grecian style buildings the cemetery is primarily Gothic in character due to the high number of private Gothic monuments Due to this atmosphere the cemetery was the chosen location of several scenes in movies notably in Theatre of Blood The cemetery is listed Grade I on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens 4 It remains in use Contents 1 Location 2 History and description 2 1 Establishment and design 2 2 Layout 3 Notable structures 3 1 Anglican Chapel 3 2 Dissenters Chapel 3 3 The Reformers Memorial 4 The Catacombs 5 War graves 6 Notable burials 6 1 Royal burials 6 2 Notable cremations 7 The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery 8 See also 9 Sources 10 References 11 External linksLocation EditThe cemetery is in London s Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Its main entrance is on Harrow Road west of where Ladbroke Grove and Chamberlayne Road meet Its other entrance Alma Place the West Gate almost opposite Greyhound Road is also on the north side Alma Place leads to the West London Crematorium whose owner and operator is the same and St Mary s Roman Catholic Cemetery which are in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham The cemetery lies between Harrow Road and the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal to the south which has long been separated by a wall A set of defunct gates is set in the southern wall which adjoins the canal where barges took a proportion of earth from excavating graves and occasionally coffins carried by barge were unloaded History and description EditEstablishment and design Edit George Frederick Carden had failed with an earlier attempt to establish a British equivalent to Paris s Pere Lachaise Cemetery in 1825 but a new committee established in February 1830 5 including Andrew Spottiswoode MP for Saltash sculptor Robert William Sievier banker Sir John Dean Paul 1 Charles Broughton Bowman first committee secretary 6 and architects Thomas Willson who had previously proposed an ambitious Metropolitan Sepulchre project and Augustus Charles Pugin 7 gained more financial political and public support to fund the General Cemetery Company Public meetings were held in June and July 1830 at the Freemasons Tavern and George Carden was elected treasurer 5 Paul a partner in the London banking firm of Strahan Paul Paul and Bates found and conditionally purchased the 54 acres 22 ha of land at Kensal Green for 9 500 However Paul and Carden were already embroiled in a dispute regarding the design of the cemetery where Paul favoured the Grecian style and Carden the Gothic style A succession of architects were contemplated including Benjamin Wyatt who declined Charles Fowler proposal not taken up Francis Goodwin Willson and a Mr Lidell a pupil of John Nash before an architectural competition was launched in November 1831 This attracted 46 entrants and in March 1832 the premium was awarded despite some opposition for a Gothic Revival design by Henry Edward Kendall 7 this decision was however eventually overturned On 11 July 1832 the Act of Parliament establishing a General Cemetery Company for the interment of the Dead in the Neighbourhood of the Metropolis gained Royal Assent The Act authorised it to raise up to 45 000 in shares buy up to 80 acres of land and build a cemetery and a Church of England chapel Company directors appointed after the Bill received Royal Assent asserted their control and preference for a different style One of the competition judges and a company shareholder John Griffith of Finbury who had previously produced working drawings for a boundary wall 8 9 ultimately designed the cemetery s two chapels and the main gateway 5 and 15 000 trees were supplied and planted by Hugh Ronalds from his nursery in Brentford 10 Founded as the General Cemetery of All Souls Kensal Green the cemetery was the first of the Magnificent Seven garden style cemeteries in London It was consecrated on 24 January 1833 by Charles James Blomfield the Bishop of London receiving its first funeral the same month In the early 1850s after a series of cholera epidemics in London caused an examination of London s burial facilities health commissioner Edwin Chadwick proposed the closure of all existing burial grounds in the vicinity of London other than the privately owned Kensal Green Cemetery north west of the city which was to be nationalised and greatly enlarged to provide a single burial ground for west London A large tract of land on the Thames around 9 miles 14 km south east of London in Abbey Wood was to become a single burial ground for east London 11 The Treasury was sceptical that Chadwick s scheme would ever be financially viable and it was widely unpopular 12 13 Although the Metropolitan Interments Act 1850 authorised the scheme it was abandoned in 1852 13 14 A typical statuary detail Layout Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The overall layout is on an east west axis with a central path leading to a raised chapel towards the west The entrance is to the north east and the largest monuments line the central path to the chapel The Church of England was allotted 39 acres and the remaining 15 clearly separated acres were given over to Dissenters 15 a distinction deemed crucial at the time Originally there was a division between the Dissenters part of the cemetery and the Anglican section This took the form of a sunk fence from the canal to the gate piers on the path There were also decorative iron gates The small area designated for non Anglican burials is approximately oval in shape and was formerly made prominent by a wider central axis path that terminated with the neo classical chapel with curved colonnades The Anglican Chapel dominates the western section of the cemetery being raised on a terrace beneath that is an extensive catacomb there is a hydraulic catafalque for lowering coffins into the catacomb 16 It is still in operation today burials and cremations take place daily although cremations are now more common than interments The cemetery is still run by the General Cemetery Company under its original Act of Parliament This mandates that bodies there may not be exhumed and cremated or the land sold for development Once the cemetery has exhausted all its interment space and can no longer function as a cemetery the mandate requires that it shall remain a memorial park The General Cemetery Company constructed and runs the West London Crematorium within the grounds of the cemetery While borrowing from the ideals established at Pere Lachaise some years before 17 Kensal Green Cemetery contributed to the design and management basis for many cemetery projects throughout the British Empire of the time In Australia for example the Necropolis at Rookwood 1868 and Waverley Cemetery 1877 both in Sydney are noted for their use of the gardenesque landscape qualities and importantly self sustaining management structures championed by the General Cemetery Company The cemetery is the burial site of approximately 250 000 individuals in over 65 000 graves 18 including upwards of 500 members of the British nobility and 970 people listed in the Dictionary of National Biography Many monuments particularly the larger ones lean precariously as they have settled over time on the underlying London clay Notable structures EditMany buildings and structures within Kensal Green are listed The Anglican Chapel is listed Grade I 19 while the Dissenters Chapel Kensal Green is listed Grade II and the colonnade catacomb and perimeter walls and railings are listed Grade II Of the many tombs memorials and mausoleums eight are listed Grade II while The Reformers Memorial is listed Grade II The Tomb of Charles Spencer Ricketts is listed Grade II and was designed by William Burges 20 Anglican Chapel Edit The Anglican Chapel is at the centre of the cemetery and contains several tombs The chapel was damaged during the Second World War but was restored in 1954 21 Under the chapel is a catacomb one of the few in London The catacomb is currently not maintained but can be visited as part of a guided tour It still has a working coffin lift or catafalque restored by The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery in 1997 Dissenters Chapel Edit Main article Dissenters Chapel Kensal Green Situated in the eastern corner of the cemetery this Greek Revival structure was for the use of all non Anglican denominations and of non believers Only part of the cemetery was consecrated and Dissenters could opt to be buried in the non consecrated areas following a service here The cemetery became favoured by nonconformists free thinkers non Christians and atheists and thus this chapel became popular The Dissenters Chapel had become derelict and partly roofless so in 1995 was leased to the Historic Chapels Trust who undertook 447 000 of restoration The chapel currently serves as the office of The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery but is also available for funeral services Detail of the Reformers Memorial Robert Owen memorial with the Reformers Memorial to the right The Reformers Memorial Edit The Reformers Memorial was erected in 1885 It was erected at the instigation of Joseph Corfield to the memory of men and women who have generously given their time and means to improve the conditions and enlarge the happiness of all classes of society The monument has lists of names of reformers and radicals on its north and east sides together with further names added in 1907 by Emma Corfield It is paired with the Robert Owen memorial and a second instance of a non funerary memorial in the cemetery s nonconformist section The memorial was amended to include Lloyd Jones to recognise his contribution THIS MEMORIAL IS RAISED AS A TOKEN OF REGARD TO THE BRAVE MEN AND WOMEN WHOSE NAMES IT BEARS BY JOSEPH W CORFIELD AUGUST 1895 THE REFORMERS MEMORIALERECTED TO THE GLORY OF MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE GENEROUSLY GIVEN THEIR TIME AND MEANS TO IMPROVE THE CONDITIONS AND ENHANCE THE HAPPINESS OF ALL CLASSES OF SOCIETY THEY HAVE FELT THAT A FAR HAPPIER AND MORE PROSPEROUS LIFE IS WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL MEN AND THEY HAVE EARNESTLY SOUGHT TO REALIZE IT THE OLD BRUTAL LAWS OF IMPRISONMENT FOR FREE PRINTING HAVE BEEN SWEPT AWAY AND THE RIGHT OF SELECTING OUR OWN LAW MAKERS HAS BEEN GAINED MAINLY BY THEIR EFFORTS THE EXERCISE OF THESE RIGHTS WILL GIVE THE PEOPLE AN INTEREST IN THE LAWS THAT GOVERN THEM AND WILL MAKE THEM BETTER MEN AND BETTER CITIZENS 22 The names of over seventy people are inscribed on the monument These are in order shown on the monument FRONT FACE EAST Robert Owen New Lanark John Bellers Robert Dale Owen Abraham Combe Joseph Lancaster William Thompson John Minter Morgan William Pare William Galpin Henry Travis MD Alex Campbell James Rigby W D Saull Julian Hibbert Rev Charles Kingsley Lady Noel Byron Frances Wright Thomas Spence Allan Davenport Mary Hennell Francis Place Harriet Martineau George Odger Lloyd Jones SOUTH FACE Elizabeth Fry Sarah Martin Mary Carpenter Benjamin Flower Henry Fawcett Barbara Bodichon Maria Grey Arnold Toynbee W K Clifford Edward T Craig C Dobson Collet Charles Bradlaugh Richard Congreve William Morris John Ruskin F Power Cobbe Herbert Spencer Wathen M W Call Francis Newman Hodgson Pratt Lydia Becker Josephine Butler Anna Swanwick C Jacob Holyoake J Kells Ingram NORTH FACE Joseph Priestley Thomas Paine William Hone John Stuart Mill Major Cartwright Richard Carlile William Lovett William Carpenter Henry Hetherington John Frost William Cobbett W J Fox Richard Moore William Howitt Samuel Bamford Henry Hunt George Thompson David Williams Thomas Wooller Ebenezer Elliott Ernest Jones Alex Macdonald Richard Cobden Robert Cooper 22 The entry for Robert Owen reads The cenotaph to Robert Owen who was buried in Newtown Montgomeryshire Wales is fittingly at the side of the Reformers Memorial ROBERT OWEN PHILANTHROPIST BORN MAY 14TH 1771 DIED NOVR 17TH 1858 1879 ERECTED BY SUBSCRIPTION IN MEMORY OF ROBERT OWEN OF NEW LANARK BORN AT NEWTOWN N WALES 1771 HE DIED AND WAS BURIED AT THE SAME PLACE 1858 AGED 87 YEARS HE ORIGINATED AND ORGANIZED INFANT SCHOOLS HE SECURED A REDUCTION OF THE HOURS OF LABOUR FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN FACTORIES HE WAS A LIBERAL SUPPORTER OF THE EARLY EFFORTS IN FAVOUR OF NATIONAL EDUCATION AND LABOURED TO PROMOTE INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION HE WAS ONE OF THE FOREMOST ENGLISHMEN sic 23 WHO TAUGHT MEN TO ASPIRE TO A HIGHER SOCIAL STATE BY RECONCILING THE INTERESTS OF CAPITAL AND LABOUR HE SPENT HIS LIFE AND A LARGE FORTUNE IN SEEKING TO IMPROVE HIS FELLOW MEN BY GIVING THEM EDUCATION SELF RELIANCE AND MORE WORTH HIS LIFE WAS SANCTIFIED BY HUMAN AFFECTION AND LOFTY EFFORT J W CORFIELD dd dd dd MR OWEN S WRITINGS REPORT TO THE COUNTY OF LANARK NEW VIEWS OF SOCIETY TWELVE LECTURES LECTURES ON MARRIAGE LECTURES ON A NEW STATE OF SOCIETY THE BOOK OF THE NEW MORAL WORLD SIX LECTURES AT MANCHESTER MANIFESTO OF ROBERT OWEN SELF SUPPORTING HOME COLONIES LETTERS TO THE HUMAN RACE REVOLUTION IN MIND AND PRACTICE ROBERT OWEN S JOURNAL LIFE OF ROBERT OWEN 22 The memorial is listed as grade II 24 The Catacombs Edit The Catacombs The cemetery has three catacombs for the deposit of lead sealed triple shelled coffins and cremated remains Catacomb A beneath the North Terrace Colonnade is now sealed Catacomb Z beneath the Dissenters Chapel at the eastern end of the cemetery suffered significant bomb damage during World War II and is also closed to further deposits Catacomb B beneath the Anglican Chapel in the centre of the cemetery has space for some 4 000 deposits and still offers both private loculi and shelves or vaults for family groups The catacomb extends under the entire footprint of the chapel and its colonnades There are six aisles within which each vault is numbered running consecutively to number 216 at the south western end of aisle 6 Deposit within the catacombs of Kensal Green has always been more expensive and prestigious than burial in a simple plot in the grounds of the cemetery although less costly than a brick lined grave or mausoleum Without the further expense and responsibility of a monument above the grave the catacombs have afforded a secure dignified and exclusive resting place for the well to do particularly the unmarried the childless and young children of those without family plots or mausolea elsewhere 25 War graves EditThe cemetery contains the graves of 473 Commonwealth service personnel of the First World War half of whom form a war graves plot in the south west corner the remainder in small groups or individual graves scattered throughout the grounds and 51 of the Second who are all dispersed In the First World War plot at Section 213 a Screen Wall memorial lists casualties of both world wars whose graves could not be marked by headstones besides five Second World War servicemen who were cremated at Kensal Green also known as West London Crematorium 26 The highest ranking person buried here who is commemorated by the CWGC is General Sir Charles Douglas 1850 1914 Chief of the Imperial General Staff in early months of the First World War 27 Notable burials EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kensal Green Cemetery news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article List of burials at Kensal Green Cemetery Monuments and chapel Henry Ainley 1879 1945 actor Harrison Ainsworth 1805 1882 author Thomas Allom 1804 1872 artist and architect Frederick Scott Archer 1813 1857 sculptor photographer Inventor of the Collodion process 28 Charles Phillip Brown 1798 1884 an Englishman known for writing the first Telugu dictionary and for his contributions towards the Telugu language and Andhra people George Percy Badger 1815 1888 English Anglican missionary and scholar of oriental studies Betsy Balcombe 1802 1871 as a young girl a close friend and confidante of Napoleon Bonaparte during his imprisonment on St Helena Island Michael William Balfe 1808 1870 composer Grave of Frederick Scott Archer inventor of the collodion photographic process in 1851 Location Frederick Settle Barff 1822 1866 chemist inventor of Bower Barff process James Barry 1795 1865 surgeon George Birkbeck 1776 1841 doctor academic and adult education pioneer Suzanne Beauclerk Duchess of St Albans 1921 2010 writer and painter William Behnes 1795 1864 sculptor Julius Benedict 1804 1885 composer Maria Bjornson 1949 2002 theatre designer Charles Blondin 1824 1897 acrobat tightrope walker Sir George Bowen 1821 1899 colonial administrator and 9th Governor of Hong Kong Diamantina Lady Bowen c 1832 1833 1893 grand dame John Braham 1774 1856 singer George Bridgetower 1782 1860 West Indian Polish violin virtuoso and friend of Beethoven Louis Charles Mahe de La Bourdonnais 1795 1840 chess master Howe Browne 2nd Marquess of Sligo 1788 1845 Samuel George Bonham 1803 1863 1st Baronet J Lewis Bonhote 1875 1922 zoologist ornithologist and writer Isambard Kingdom Brunel 1806 1859 engineer son of Marc Isambard Brunel and Sophia Kingdom also buried here Marc Isambard Brunel 1769 1849 engineer father of Isambard William Burn eminent Scottish architect 1789 1870 Pete Burns lead singer of Dead or Alive 1959 2016 Peter Burrowes 1753 1841 Irish politician Decimus Burton 1800 1881 architect Sir Augustus Wall Callcott 1779 1844 painter Lady Maria Callcott 1785 1842 travel writer George Frederick Carden 1798 1874 founder of the cemetery John Edward Carew 1785 1868 sculptor Anthony Carlisle 1768 1840 surgeon and scientist Sir Ernest Cassel 1852 1921 merchant banker John Hobart Caunter 1792 1851 writer and clergyman William Cavendish Scott Bentinck 5th Duke of Portland 1800 1879 landowner and eccentric Frederic Chapman 1823 1895 publisher Marigold Frances Churchill daughter of Sir Winston and Lady Clementine Churchill who died from a fever in 1921 at age three the monument by Eric Gill was listed Grade II in 2001 In 2019 the Churchill family acted on a long held desire to reunite Marigold s remains with the rest of her family in Bladon churchyard The empty grave and monument will remain at Kensal Green 29 Henry Savile Clarke 1841 1893 dramatist and critic Thomas John Cochrane Sir 1789 1872 Cemetery plot number 21777 1st governor of Newfoundland 1825 34 Member of Parliament for Ipswich 1839 41 Admiral of the fleet 1865 72 Timothy Augustine Coghlan 1856 1926 Australian statistician engineer and diplomat Wilkie Collins 1824 1889 author James Combe d 1867 engineer of Temple Works Leeds Joshua Compston 1970 1996 curator Montague Corry 1st Baron Rowton 1838 1903 secretary to Disraeli and philanthropic founder of Rowton Houses Sir Michael Costa 1808 1884 conductor and composer Anne Crawford 1920 1956 actress Rev John Cumming 1807 1881 author UK Major General Sir Alexander Cunningham KCIE CSI archaeologist aide de camp to Governor General Lord Aukland of India executive engineer to the king of Oudh India chief engineer of Burma Colonel of the Royal Engineers James Dark 1795 1871 proprietor of Lord s Cricket Ground Philmore Boots Davidson 1928 1993 Trinidadian musician Introduced the steel band to Britain Admiral Ross Donnelly 1761 1840 John Doubleday about 1798 1856 restorer at the British Museum who reassembled the Portland Vase Andrew Ducrow 1793 1842 circus performer and horse rider Willie Edouin 1841 1908 comedian actor and theatre manager Sir George Elliot 1784 1863 naval officer Dr John Epps 1805 1869 phrenologist John Edward Errington 1806 1862 civil engineer Edward Francis Fitzwilliam 1824 1857 composer Fanny Fitzwilliam 1801 1854 actress singer and theatre manager Ann Foster 1827 1882 widow of John Foster of Hobart Member of the Tasmanian Legislative Assembly Formerly Ann Dinham she was transported to Tasmania in 1852 and was one of few Australian convicts to return to her native land Grave No 28305 Henri Jean Baptiste Victoire Fradelle 1778 1865 Franco English Victorian painter Erich Fried 1921 1988 Austrian poet and essayist Henry Gauntlett 1810 1876 composer John Gibson 1817 1892 architect RIBA Gold Medal recipient 1890 Sir Walter Raleigh Gilbert 1785 1853 George Bellas Greenough 1778 1855 geologist George Grossmith 1847 1912 actor and comedian Philip Hardwick 1792 1870 architect Philip Charles Hardwick 1822 1892 architect Fairlie Harmar Viscountess Harbeton RA 1876 1945 painter and suffragette Henry Hawkins 1st Baron Brampton 1817 1907 Catherine Hayes 1818 1861 opera singer Henry Herman 1832 1894 English dramatist and novelist Rev Ridley Herschell 1807 1864 Major General Sir John Hills FRSE CB KCB 1834 1902 Thomas Hood 1799 1845 poet humorist and journalist Grave of Henry Howard 3rd Earl of Effingham Henry Howard 3rd Earl of Effingham 1837 1898 Sir Neville Howse 1863 1930 the first Australian recipient of the Victoria Cross and one of 13 holders of the award buried in this cemetery Joseph Hume 1777 1855 MP and political campaigner James Henry Leigh Hunt 1784 1859 Romantic critic essayist and poet 17 Austen Hurgon 1862 1942 theatrical director Frank Linsly James 1851 1890 exhumed in 1917 and re interred in the family plot at West Dean West Sussex Sir Leander Starr Jameson 1853 1917 former Prime Minister of Cape Colony and architect of the Jameson Raid initially buried in a vault here later reburied in Matobo Hills Zimbabwe Lionel Johnson 1867 1902 poet member of the Rhymer s Club and an influence on W B Yeats Charles Kemble 1775 1854 actor and theatre manager Fanny Kemble 1809 1893 famous British actress and author Halina Korn 1902 1978 Polish painter and sculptor Marian Kukiel 1885 1972 Polish General and Minister for War in exile during World War II Michael Lane 1802 1868 civil engineer William Garrett Lewis b before 1834 d 1885 pastor of Westbourne Grove Church Wyndham Lewis 1882 1957 painter and author co founder of the Vorticist movement Joseph Locke 1805 1860 civil engineer John St John Long 1798 1834 quack doctor John Claudius Loudon 1783 1843 Scottish botanist and writer on cemeteries John Graham Lough 1789 1876 sculptor Sir John Louis 2nd Baronet 1785 1863 Sir Andrew Lusk 1st Baronet 1810 1909 Lord Mayor of London 1873 74 John Robinson McClean 1817 1873 politician Vice Admiral Sir Robert John Le Mesurier McClure CB 1807 1873 discoverer of the Northwest Passage 1850 53 Grave of Robert McClure in Kensal Green Cemetery London Alexander McDonnell 1798 1835 chess master Richard Graves MacDonnell 1814 1881 colonial administrator and 6th Governor of Hong Kong Sir James McGrigor 1771 1858 Scottish botanist Sir Donald Friell McLeod 1810 1872 William Macready 1793 1873 actor Sir George Makins 1853 1933 surgeon Edward Maltby 1770 1859 bishop of Durham Florence Marryat 1833 1899 novelist editor actress and playwright Kitty Melrose 1883 1912 actress Archibald Menzies 1754 1842 botanist surgeon Ras Andargachew Messai 1902 1981 Ethiopian ruler Kate Meyrick 1875 1933 night club owner John Maddison Morton 1811 1891 playwright John Lothrop Motley 1814 1877 American historian Billy Murdoch 1854 1911 Australian cricket captain John Trivett Nettleship 1841 1902 painter and author Feargus O Connor 1796 1855 MP Chartist Leader amp social reformer Patrick O Connell 1887 1959 Footballer with Belfast Celtic captain of Ireland amp Manchester United 1914 Manager of Barcelona FC during Spanish Civil War Admiral Robert Otway 1773 1846 Robert Owen cenotaph only 1771 1858 industrialist and major social reformer John Thomas Perceval 1803 1876 army officer writer and campaigner Jacob Perkins 1766 1849 American inventor George Perry 1793 1862 composer Harold Pinter 1930 2008 playwright actor director screenwriter poet and political activist Frederic Hervey Foster Quin 1799 1878 physician 30 Sir Terence Rattigan 1911 1977 playwright Emidio Recchioni 1864 1933 Italian anarchist and businessman Robert Reece 1838 1891 comic playwright and librettist Emil Reich 1854 1910 Austro Hungarian born historian 31 John Rennie the Younger 1794 1874 civil engineer Monument of Dwarkanath Tagore at Kensal Green Cemetery renovated by Bengal Heritage Foundation on 11 August 2018 Dwarkanath Tagore 1794 1846 Bengali industrialist and benefactor John Wigham Richardson 1837 1908 shipbuilder Charles Ritchie 1st Baron Ritchie of Dundee 1838 1906 politician former Chancellor of Exchequer Henry Sandham 1842 1910 artist Eileen Sharp 1900 1958 singer and actress Byam Shaw 1872 1919 artist John Shaw Jr 1803 1870 architect and brother in law of Philip Hardwick listed above Sir William Siemens 1823 1883 industrialist Robert William Sievier 1794 1865 sculptor also member of Cemetery board John Benjamin Smith 1794 1879 MP John Mark Frederick Smith 1790 1874 British Army general William Henry Smith 1792 1865 businessman Alexis Soyer 1810 1858 Chef and Humanitarian Howard Staunton 1810 1874 prominent chess player John McDouall Stuart 1815 1866 explorer in Australia Grave of William Makepeace Thackeray marble slab in front of brick tomb William Makepeace Thackeray 1811 1863 writer Bert Thomas 1883 1966 cartoonist Lydia Thompson 1838 1908 dancer and actress Therese Tietjens 1831 1877 opera singer Sir Nicholas Conyngham Tindal 1776 1846 Solicitor General and Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Steve Peregrin Took 1949 1980 English musician and songwriter best known as a founding member of Tyrannosaurus Rex Anthony Trollope 1815 1882 novelist Sir Thomas Troubridge 3rd Baronet 1815 1867 British army officer J Stuart Russell 1816 1895 theologian and author James Malcolm Rymer 1814 1884 writer William Vincent Wallace 1812 1865 composer Thomas Wakley 1795 1862 surgeon campaigner and founder of The Lancet John William Waterhouse 1849 1917 artist John Whichcord Jr 1823 1885 architect Jane Williams 1798 1884 subject of poems by Percy Bysshe Shelley Alfred Wigan 1814 1878 actor manager William Williams 1788 1865 radical MP Walter Clopton Wingfield 1833 1912 pioneer of lawn tennisThe cemetery is remarkable for the number of Fellows of the Royal Society who are buried there of whom the following is a small sample Charles Babbage FRS 1816 1791 1871 mathematician and computer scientist George Bishop FRS 1848 William John Broderip FRS 1828 Robert Brown FRS 1839 1773 1858 botanist discoverer of Brownian motion Samuel Hawksley Burbury FRS 1890 George Busk FRS 1850 1807 1886 naval surgeon zoologist and palaeontologist Alexander John Ellis FRS 1864 Hugh Falconer FRS 1845 1808 1865 naturalist David Forbes FRS 1858 mineralogist Thomas Galloway FRS 1848 John Hall Gladstone FRS 1853 Joseph Glynn FRS 1838 John Gould FRS 1843 William Robert Grove Sir FRS 1847 Edmond Herbert Grove Hills FRS 1911 Frank McClean FRS 1895 George Newport FRS 1846 Reverend Baden Powell FRS 1824 father of Robert and Agnes Baden Powell Joseph Sabine FRS 1799 George James Symons FRS 1879 Edward Troughton FRS 1810 Edward Turner FRS 1830 chemist Nathaniel Wallich FRS 1829 Sir Charles Wheatstone FRS FRSE 1802 1875 inventor of the Wheatstone bridgeRoyal burials Edit BritishPrince Augustus Frederick Duke of Sussex and son of King George III 32 Princess Sophia sister of Prince Augustus Frederick and daughter of King George III 21 Prince George Duke of Cambridge grandson of George III and commander in chief of the British ArmyOverseasMaharani Jind Kaur of the Sikh Empire mother of the last Punjabi Maharaja Duleep Singh temporarily deposited in the catacomb below the Dissenters Chapel following her death in exile in 1863 before her body was allowed to return to the Punjab for cremation Following the discovery of a slab commemorating Jind Kaur now in the Ancient House Museum Thetford a memorial was erected here in 2009 33 Tomb of Prince Augustus Frederick Duke of Sussex Tomb of Princess Sophia Funerary monument Duke of CambridgeNotable cremations Edit West London Crematorium Major Herbert James 1888 1958 VC winner at Gallipoli First World War Ingrid Bergman 1915 1982 actress most of her ashes were scattered around the islet of Dannholmen off the fishing village of Fjallbacka on the west coast of Sweden where she spent most summers from 1958 to her death in 1982 with the remainder of her ashes buried at Norra begravningsplatsen in Stockholm Sweden next to her parents Freddie Mercury 1946 1991 singer in the rock band Queen is commemorated by a small plinth under his birth name Farrokh Bulsara Sir Anthony Nutting 1920 1999 former diplomat and Conservative MP Alan Rickman 1946 2016 actor and director Pete Burns 1959 2016 Singer songwriter and TV personality Christine Keeler 1942 2017 Gary Rhodes 1960 2019 chefThe Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery EditAlthough the cemetery is owned and run by the General Cemetery Company The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery is a charitable organisation 34 whose purpose is the preservation conservation and restoration for the public benefit of Kensal Green Cemetery The charity organises tours and other events in the cemetery and has published books about the cemetery The office of the Friends is in the Dissenters Chapel The Friends group is a member of The National Federation of Cemetery Friends See also EditDissenters Chapel Kensal Green List of notable burials at Kensal Green Cemetery St Mary s Catholic Cemetery Kensal GreenSources EditRecords held at Kensal Green Cemetery Liza Picard 2006 Victorian London Orion pp 361 365 ISBN 0753820900 References Edit a b The Founding of Kensal Green Cemetery Archived 13 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Kensalgreen co uk accessed 7 February 2014 Kensal Green Cemetery and West London Crematorium kensalgreencemetery com Chesterton Gilbert Keith 1914 The Rolling English Road The Flying Inn Historic England Kensal Green All Souls Cemetery 1000817 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 November 2017 a b c Kensal Green Survey of London volume 37 Northern Kensington 1973 pp 333 339 Accessed 10 February 2014 Kensal Green Founders Archived 5 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Kensalgreen co uk accessed 10 February 2014 a b Arnold Catharine 2006 Necropolis London and its dead London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1416502487 Curl James Stevens 1980 A Celebration of Death Constable p 218 ISBN 0094630003 The Builder Obituary of John Griffith 1888 volume 55 page 345 Ronalds B F 2017 Ronalds Nurserymen in Brentford and Beyond Garden History 45 82 100 Clarke John M 2006 The Brookwood Necropolis Railway Locomotive Press 143 4th ed The Orchard Press p 9 ISBN 978 0853616559 Arnold Catherine 2006 Necropolis London and its dead Simon amp Schuster p 160 ISBN 978 1416502487 a b The Brookwood Necropolis Railway p 11 Glen William Cunningham 1850 Metropolitan Interments Act 1850 with introduction notes and appendix London Shaw and Sons OCLC 19522913 Metropolitan Interments Act 1850 Field Trip The Geology of Kensal Green Cemetery Ougs org Dissenters Chapel Kensal Green Cemetery a b Humanist Heritage Kensal Green Cemetery Heritage humanists uk Cemetery Kensal Green Cemetery Kensalgreencemetry com Retrieved 18 April 2023 Historic England The Anglican Chapel Grade I 1190995 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 15 February 2022 Historic England Tomb of Commander Charles Spencer Ricketts Royal Navy Grade II 1080630 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 1 February 2021 a b Kensal Green British History Online british history ac uk a b c Dr Tony Shaw s website Tonyshaw3 blogspot co uk Retrieved 18 April 2023 Robert Owen was ethnically Welsh on both sides of his parentage Historic England The Reformers Memorial 1271535 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 11 June 2020 Home Friends of Kensal Green Friends of Kensal Green Kensal Green All Souls Cemetery Cemetery Details CWGC Cwgc org Retrieved 18 April 2023 CWGC Debt of Honour Register Cwgc org Retrieved 18 April 2023 Remembering Frederick Scott Archer BBC article 27 April 2010 Freeman Jennifer 2019 A farewell to Marigold The Telamon No 87 London The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery p 3 Boase George Clement 1896 Quin Frederic Hervey Foster In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 47 London Smith Elder amp Co and was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery on 28 Nov W B Owen revised by H C G Matthew Reich Emil 1854 1910 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online version subscription required accessed 26 September 2013 History Kensal Green Cemetery Kensalgreencemetry com Retrieved 18 April 2023 Basu Shrabani 26 July 2009 Rebel With a Cause The Telegraph Archived from the original on 30 June 2013 Entry on the Charity Commission websiteExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kensal Green Cemetery Official website Friends of the Cemetery Aerial view from 1938 from the English Heritage Britain from Above archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kensal Green Cemetery amp oldid 1158090939, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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