91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

Westminster Hospital - burial ground

Erection date: 26/6/1935

Inscription

This foundation stone of the first building of the New Westminster Hospital was laid by His Royal Highness Edward Prince of Wales KG on the twenty-sixth day of June in the year 1935.

The foundation stone of the Westminster Hospital for its move from Broad Sanctuary to the first of its buildings east and west of St John's Square. The hospital moved out in 1992 but the buildings remain, though now converted to luxury accommodation.

Site: St John the Evangelist burial ground (2 memorials)

SW1, Horseferry Road, St John the Evangelist garden

The garden's modern information board reads: This garden was acquired by the church of St John the Evangelist, Smith Square, for the use as a cemetery and was consecrated by Dr Wilcocks, Dean of Westminster, on 29 July 1731. the burial ground was overcrowded within 20 years and three feet of earth was deposited over the whole area as a solution to problem {sic}. Overcrowding continued to cause difficulties, and fees were raised several times in attempts to prevent "low fees attracting interments from other parishes". One report said that 5,126 graves had been dug in ten years. The burial ground was not protected by a wall until 1784, but two watchmen were appointed for night duty in 1781, when the stealing of bodies for dissection was common. In 1814, after a time without watchmen, they again were needed, and were armed with pistols.

In 1823 Lord Grosvenor sold adjoining land to the parish, and this was consecrated as a burial ground on 23 June that year. Lord Palmerston closed the burial ground in October 1853, claiming it had become a great public nuisance. After closure it was neglected until 1880 when a committee of inhabitants was appointed to convert it into a public garden. A strip of the ground was given for the widening of Horseferry Road. The garden was opened on 23 May 1885 by the Duke of Westminster, and in 1887 the MP for Marylebone, Sir Frederick Seager Hunt, paid for a shelter to be built in the centre. The layout of the garden remains the same today.

Except, clearly, the shelter has now been replaced with a fountain, and this plaque, recovered from the shelter or elsewhere, has been reclaimed and laid into the slabs around the fountain.

Both plaques are laid into the paving around the fountain.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Westminster Hospital - burial ground

Subjects commemorated i

Westminster Hospital

Originally established as a charitable society, over the years it has occupie...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Westminster Hospital - burial ground

Created by i

King Edward VIII

Born as Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David, at White Lodge i...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Westminster Hospital - burial ground

Also at this site i

St John the Evangelist garden

St John the Evangelist garden

St John the Evangelist Westminster This burial ground, having been closed for...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Central Foundation Girls School

Central Foundation Girls School

E3, Bow Road

Below the first floor bay window a large stone frieze is beginning to crumble but still reads: "Stepney & Bow Foundation Coborn Girls...

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Wakefield

Wakefield

EC3, Trinity Square, 43 and 41

The 'lamp of maintenance' above the bust is the symbol used by Toc H. This whole memorial is unusual and looks rather odd on this buildin...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
Annie Besant - SE19

Annie Besant - SE19

SE19, Colby Road, 39

Annie Besant, 1847 - 1933, social reformer, lived here in 1874. London County Council

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Willen House

Willen House

EC1, Bath Street, Willen House

2018: This Bauhaus-esque building now provides student accommodation. Built by Willen Key and Hardware Co. to replace their WW2-destroyed...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Hunt & Stokoe trees

Hunt & Stokoe trees

E16, North Woolwich Road

On the wall behind are two baskets for flowers and some screw holes. And on the wall a little to the left of the photo is another similar...

2 subjects commemorated