Showing posts with label Major-General Sir William Casement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Major-General Sir William Casement. Show all posts

Monday, July 06, 2026

Kensal Green Cemetery (General Cemetery of All Souls)

Kensal Green Cemetery (General Cemetery of All Souls)

The General Cemetery of All Souls was the first of the eight private garden cemeteries to open, between 1833 and 1845.

Amidst the sprawl of North Kensington lies a 72-acre sanctuary where the grand, the eccentric, and the entirely bizarre rest side by side. Opened in 1833, Kensal Green Cemetery holds the crown as the oldest of London’s 'Magnificent Eight' Victorian burial grounds.

Before its creation, London was facing a macabre crisis: its inner-city parish churchyards were dangerously overflowing, prompting a desperate need for sanitary, suburban alternatives. Inspired by the elegant Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, barrister George Frederick Carden envisioned a secure, picturesque 'garden cemetery' that would double as a public park.

Kensal Green Cemetery

The concept was a roaring success. When Prince Augustus Frederick (a son of King George III) chose to be buried here in 1843, rather than at Windsor, Kensal Green instantly became the most fashionable place in the British Empire to be laid to rest. Wealthy Victorians flocked to outdo one another with towering Gothic monuments, neoclassical columns, and theatrical mausoleums. 

Today, it remains a wildly atmospheric labyrinth of history.