Key Hill Cemetery

Key Hill Cemetery
Key Hill Cemetery in the Autumn, Jewellery Quarter station is behind the wall
Map
Details
Established1836
Location
CountryEngland
Coordinates52°29′28″N 1°54′54″W / 52.491°N 1.915°W / 52.491; -1.915
Websitefkwc.org
Find a GraveKey Hill Cemetery
Gates and railings on Icknield Street: listed monument
1903 Ordnance Survey map

Key Hill Cemetery (OS grid reference SP059882), originally called Birmingham General Cemetery, is a cemetery in Hockley (the Jewellery Quarter), Birmingham, England. It opened in 1836 as a nondenominational cemetery (in practice nonconformist), and is the oldest cemetery, not being in a churchyard, in Birmingham.[1] The principal entrance is on Icknield Street to the west, with a secondary entrance on Key Hill to the north. The cemetery contains the graves of many prominent members of Birmingham society in the late 19th century, to the extent that in 1915 E. H. Manning felt able to dub it "the Westminster Abbey of the Midlands".[2]

It is the older of two cemeteries in Hockley, the other being Warstone Lane Cemetery, opened in 1847, which was originally reserved for members of the established Church of England.

The cemetery is no longer available for new burials.

  1. ^ McKenna, Joseph (1992). In The Midst of Life – A History of the Burial Grounds of Birmingham. Birmingham: Birmingham Library Services. ISBN 0-7093-0188-X.
  2. ^ Manning 1924, p. 11.

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