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Hammersmith cemetery


Margravine Cemetery, also known as Hammersmith Cemetery, is in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. The closest London Underground station is Barons Court tube station.

Designed by local architect George Saunders, Margravine Cemetery was opened in 1868 on a site previously occupied by market gardens and orchards, known as Fulham Fields. The first burial took place on 3 November 1869.

Margravine closed for new burials in 1951, when the 16.5 acres of cemetery land was restored by the council and designated a 'Garden of Rest'.

The cemetery contains a number of distinctive monuments three of which are listed buildings. Most striking is the green bronze memorial to George Broad, who owned the foundry which made the Eros statue at Piccadilly. Nearest Charing Cross Hospital, the Young family mausoleum is a single-storey building in gothic architecture style. The third listed grave is that of an Australian gold prospector, with a bas relief of him, opposite the Young family mausoleum.

A Screen Wall memorial erected by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (who list it as Hammersmith Old Cemetery) in Section 31 lists all 191 Commonwealth service personnel buried in registered war graves in the cemetery – 186 from World War I and 5 from World War II.

The cemetery is now a part of the Barons Court Conservation Area, designated in April 1989.

Hammersmith and Fulham council states in its 2008 management plan that the site is designated a Nature Conservation Area of Local Importance. It is a particularly useful space for viewing migrating songbirds, bees and butterflies.

Coordinates: 51°29′20″N 0°12′55″W / 51.48889°N 0.21536°W / 51.48889; -0.21536


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