Acton Cemetery

{{Short description|Historic burial ground in London}}

File:Acton Cemetery 2023.jpg]]

Acton Cemetery is an historic late–Victorian burial ground in the London Borough of Ealing. Managed by Ealing London Borough Council, the site is located in North Ealing, near to North Acton Underground Station.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}

File:Heroessamuellewis (1).gif, a founder of modern Sierra Leone]]

File:Ad678a ca3176f9d53047889364f4753a231688 mv22.webp was buried in Acton Cemetery in 1946]]

History

The land for the Cemetery was purchased in 1893 by the Acton Urban District Council. It was previously part of Lower Place Farm. Two chapels were built in 1895, and the 6.5 acres were consecrated and opened for burials that year.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}

The Metropolitan District Railway (now the Central Line) was built through the site in 1903, dividing the cemetery into two halves, connected by a metal bridge.{{cite book |last1=Meller |first1=Hugh |last2=Parsons |first2=Brian |title=London Cemeteries: An Illustrated Guide and Gazetteer |date=2008 |publisher=Sutton |isbn=9780750946223 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HTKLJQAACAAJ |access-date=24 January 2023}} More stations along the line as a result of the construction of a new Royal Agricultural Show site made the cemetery more accessible. Opened in 1903 by the Prince of Wales, the show site gave its name to the area now known as Park Royal{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery. |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}

The cemetery has a war memorial, and 143 graves relating to WWI and WWII are recorded at the site by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery |url=https://www.cwgc.org/visit–us/find–cemeteries–memorials/cemetery–details/42400/acton–cemetery/ |website=Commonwealth War Graves Commission |publisher=Commonwealth War Graves Commission |access-date=26 January 2023}}

Notable People Buried & Memorialised

  • The watercolour artist Henry Charles Brewer (1866–1950) lived on Perryn Road in Acton. Brewer executed the wall paintings at St Peter's Church, Ealing. He is buried in the northern section of the cemetery, near to his brother James Alphege Brewer.{{cite book |last1=Peatfield |first1=Susan |title=Angels in Ealing |date=2022 |publisher=St Peter's Church Ealing |location=London}}
  • The notable creator of etchings, James Alphege Brewer (1881–1946), who lived on Avenue Road in Acton is buried in the northern section of the cemetery, near to his brother Henry Charles Brewer.{{cite book |last1=Peatfield |first1=Susan |title=Angels in Ealing |date=2022 |publisher=St Peter's Church Ealing |location=London}}
  • Sir K. A. C. Creswell (1879–1974), was an English architectural historian who wrote seminal works on Islamic architecture in Egypt.
  • Jamal Edwards (1990–2022). English music entrepreneur. Served as an ambassador for the Prince's Trust and awarded an MBE in 2015.
  • Francis Robert Japp (1848–1925), was a British chemist noted for his discovery of the Japp–Klingemann reaction in 1887.England & Scotland, Select Cemetery Registers, 1800–2016
  • Sir Samuel Lewis (barrister) (1843–1903), was the first West African to be knighted in Great Britain, and a founder of modern Sierra Leone.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery. |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}
  • Albert Norris Perry, who died in 1915 in the sinking of the Lusitania. His memorial has a lifebelt around it.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery. |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}
  • George Lee Temple (1892–1914). Born in Acton, Temple was first Englishman to fly upside down and the youngest at the time (1914) to fly from London to Paris.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery. |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}
  • Susan Mary Yeats (d. 1900). Yeats was the mother of Nobel Prize Winner for literature and poet, William Butler Yeats. She died in France and is buried in Drumcliff.{{cite web |title=Acton Cemetery. |url=https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201036/deaths/1570/acton_cemetery |website=Ealing Borough Council |publisher=Ealing Borough Council |access-date=24 January 2023}}

References

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