Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Gunnersbury Cemetery

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Established
  
1929

Type
  
Public

Phone
  
+44 20 8992 2924

Country
  
United Kingdom

Founded
  
1929

Gunnersbury Cemetery

Location
  
143 Gunnersbury Avenue Acton LONDON W3 8LE

Size
  
8.9 hectares (22 acres)

Address
  
143 Gunnersbury Ave, London W3 8LE, UK

Hours
  
Closed today SundayClosedMonday8AM–4:30PMTuesday8AM–4:30PMWednesday8AM–4:30PMThursday8AM–4:30PMFriday8AM–4:30PMSaturdayClosed

Owner
  
Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea

Burials
  
Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski, Zygmunt Witymir Bieńkowski

Similar
  
Brompton Cemetery, Kensal Green Cemetery, Hanwell Cemetery, Putney Vale Cemetery, Greenford Park Cemetery

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Gunnersbury Cemetery, also known as Kensington or New Kensington Cemetery, is a cemetery opened in 1929. Although it is owned and managed by the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, it is geographically located within the London Borough of Hounslow at 143, Gunnersbury Avenue in Acton - most of the rest of which is in the London Borough of Ealing.

Contents

History

A triangle of land between the Gunnersbury Avenue and the Great West Road, part of the Gunnersbury Park, was bought in 1925 from the Rothschild family by the borough. The cemetery was founded soon afterwards, in 1929, on the former parkland.

Location and facilities

The cemetery is situated adjacent to Gunnersbury Park and covers about 8.9 hectares. It has numerous floral displays and shrubberies, and a chapel. The cemetery's buildings, including the chapel, are simple brick structures. A Garden of Remembrance serves as the place for the interment of cremated remains. There is also a Book of Remembrance for memorial inscriptions. Gunnersbury Cemetery is the location of the main office for both the Borough's cemeteries (the other being the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Cemetery, Hanwell).

A notable landmark at the cemetery is a monument, in the form of a black obelisk, dedicated to the Polish victims of the Katyn massacre. It was designed by Louis Fitzgibbon and Count Stefan Zamoyski. This monument was unveiled on 18 September 1976 amid considerable controversy. During the period of the Cold War, successive British governments objected to plans by the UK's Polish community to build a major monument to commemorate the massacre. The Soviet Union did not want Katyn to be remembered, and put pressure on Britain to prevent the creation of the monument. As a result, the construction of the Katyn monument was delayed for many years. After the local community had finally secured the right to build the monument, no official government representative was present at the opening ceremony (although some Members of Parliament did attend the event unofficially).

Gunnersbury cemetery also contains the graves of 49 Commonwealth service personnel of World War II.

There used to be a notable sculpture by Nereo Cescott in the cemetery but it was destroyed by vandals prior to 1994.

Burials

As of January 2010 Find a Grave describes this cemetery as having "49 famous interments." They include:

  • A plot dedicated to the 24th Polish Lancers Regiment and their families
  • Denzil Batchelor, British journalist, writer, playwright and broadcaster.
  • Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski, Polish general, during World War II, commander of the Warsaw Uprising and Polish Commander-in-Chief
  • Hugh Burden, British actor and playwright
  • William Davison, 1st Baron Broughshane
  • Charles Benjamin Dowse, 8th Bishop of Killaloe
  • Matila Costiesco Ghyka, Romanian prince, novelist, mathematician, historian, philosopher and diplomat
  • George Humphreys, British civil engineer
  • Harold Brownlow Martin, Australian pilot
  • Charles Langbridge Morgan, British playwright and novelist
  • John Ogdon, English pianist and composer
  • Vera Page, victim of an unresolved murder
  • Carol Reed, English film director
  • Prince Vsevolod Ivanovich of Russia
  • Kazimierz Sabbat, Prime Minister and President of Poland in Exile
  • Kazimierz Sawicki
  • Matthew Smith, English painter
  • Marda Vanne, South African actress
  • Aston Webb, English architect
  • Dixie "Elmira" Ross, one of the Ross Sisters, US Dancer
  • Natasha Bagration, Georgian royal princess
  • References

    Gunnersbury Cemetery Wikipedia


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