East Sheen Cemetery

East Sheen Cemetery
East Sheen Cemetery and chapel
Map
Details
Established1906
Location
CountryEngland
Coordinates51°27′29″N 0°17′03″W / 51.4580°N 0.2843°W / 51.4580; -0.2843
TypeActive
Owned byRichmond upon Thames London Borough Council
Size16 acres (6.5 hectares)
Websitewww.richmond.gov.uk/east_sheen_cemetery
Find a GraveEast Sheen Cemetery
East Sheen Cemetery Chapel
Fulton Mackay's grave and the cemetery's chapel
Map
History
Founded1906
Founder(s)Barnes Urban District Council
Architecture
Architect(s)Reginald Rowell
Style14th-century style
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated5 March 2015
Reference no.1194022

East Sheen Cemetery, originally known as Barnes Cemetery, is a cemetery on Sheen Road in East Sheen in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, England. The cemetery opened in 1906 on what was previously woodland in a rural area of Surrey. Originally, only half the site was given over for burials while the other half was maintained as a nursery before it was converted in the 1930s and the whole site was renamed East Sheen Cemetery. It is today contiguous with Richmond Cemetery, though the original boundary is marked by a hedge. The cemetery's chapel is used for services by both sites, as Richmond Cemetery's chapel is no longer in use as such. The chapel was built in 1906 in the Gothic revival style by local architect Reginald Rowell, who was himself later buried in the cemetery.

Many prominent people are buried in the cemetery, which contains several significant memorials. The most important monument in the cemetery is the memorial to George William Lancaster and his partner (who lived as his wife)[1] by Sydney March — a bronze sculpture of an angel weeping over a stone sarcophagus dating from the 1920s, which is considered to be one of the most important sculptures of its type from the 20th century. Also significant are the memorial to Markham Buxton, a bronze relief on a stone stele by his son Alfred; a miniature walled garden commemorating Edouard Espinosa and his wife Eve Louise Kelland; and several other sculptures, both Christian-themed and secular. The cemetery also contains over 70 war graves, cared for by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Fowler was invoked but never defined (see the help page).