Monday 2 July 2012

London View - Brompton Cemetery.

 The West London and Westminster Cemetery Company, as it was known, was established in 1836 and then opened in 1840 to the design of Benjamin Baud. Regarded as one of the finest Victorian Metropolitan cemeteries in the country, it has a formal layout with a central avenue leading to a chapel based on St Peter's Basilica in Rome. Amongst its shady walks are over 35,000 monuments - many of historical importance.
Buried at the cemetery are people from all walks of life, including thirteen holders of the Victorian Cross, Chelsea Pensioners and the community of West London. The cemetery provides a rare haven of peace, beauty and tranquillity.
After the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, London became the world's commercial capital. Its population increased from 1 million in 1800 to over 2.6 million by 1850. Consequently the inadequate sanitary conditions led to endemic disease and the existing burial grounds were unable to cope. Parliament authorised the establishment of seven commercial cemeteries around London, of which Brompton is an outstanding example. It was known as the West of London and Westminster Cemetery.


Brompton's original 39 acres, purchased from Lord Kensington in 1838, lay on a flat stretch of land, half a mile long, between Old Brompton and Fulham Roads. When the site was chosen, the Kensington Canal formed the western boundary, but this picturesque feature had been replaced by a railway by the time the cemetery opened in 1840. In 1846, John Gunter, a director of the company and later its largest shareholder, passed on a spur of land he had purchased from the Equitable Gas Company, thus providing the site with an entrance on Fulham Road.
South Gate off Fulham Rd. North Gate off Old Brompton Rd

Tube: 
West Brompton - District Line (Wimbledon branch)

Bus: 
14, 74, 190, 211, 328, 414, 430, C1, C3 all operate near Brompton Cemetery

Parking available on site for grave grant holders only.

A Cemetery guide book is available for £4.99 from the Chapel Office on weekdays (excluding Bank Holidays)