Re-Thinking Victorian Women at West Norwood Cemetery Guided Walk

Sunday 8 March
2pm-3.30pm
Advance booking is by donation (£10) and essential due to limited places HERE 
Please click on the headline for more info and details of where to meet

International Women's Day guided walk through one of London's Magnificent Seven cemetery with a guide from the Friends of West Norwood Cemetery.
Join Dr Jane Jordan to discover the histories of C19th women who defied social convention and whose careers took them into the public sphere.

The Friends of West Norwood Cemetery are experts on the cemetery, with research continued over thirty years into its social history, and the characters buried here. 
Their published and unpublished research, giving you the widest and deepest understanding of the significance of this cemetery.

West Norwood Cemetery was the second of the Magnificent Seven: early Victorian cemeteries set up by private companies between 1833-1841 to provide for London’s expanding population. 

West Norwood was the first Gothic-Revival cemetery, the buildings and landscaping designed by William Tite (who was himself interred in the catacombs). In addition to original features like the entrance arch, and iron railings made by Bramah & Robinson (the two Gothic chapels, Anglican and Nonconformist, have not survived), a key feature of the cemetery is its ornate Gothic monuments and mausolea. Known as the Millionaires’ Cemetery, West Norwood is predominantly the resting place of self-made industrialists (often inventors) and manufacturers. The sheer variety of stylised grave stones and monuments (Gothic, Classical, Italianate, Egyptian) is a testament to the commercial expansion of nineteenth-century memorial masonry which, crucially, enabled the self-fashioning of new identities.

Please meet at the arched main entrance on the corner of Norwood Road and Robson Road.
Find out more about the Friends of West Norwood Cemetery here