Robin Hood Cemetery

Robin Hood Cemetery and Crematorium is located near Shirley, West Midlands, within the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull, in the West Midlands. The cemetery was opened in 1917 and covers an area of 45 acres (18 ha) and comprises extensive landscaped lawn graves interspersed with ancient woodland. A cemetery chapel was built in 1931, and the crematorium was built in 1958, including for modifications to the chapel to cater for the cremation facilities.[1]

Robin Hood Cemetery
The cemetery chapel was built in 1931 for the then Solihull Urban District Council and enlarged in 1958 with the addition of a crematorium. This view from the east along the avenue of ancient Arden oaks, supplemented by more recent holly bushes, shows the earlier part of the building.
Details
Established1917
Location
Streetsbrook Road, Solihull, West Midlands
CountryEngland, UK
Coordinates52.421°N 1.827°W / 52.421; -1.827
Owned bySolihull Metropolitan Borough Council
Size45 acres (18 ha)

There are 43 Commonwealth service personnel buried in the cemetery whose graves are registered and maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, 2 from World War I and 41 from World War II.[2] A World War I Victoria Cross recipient, Thomas Turrall (1885-1964) is buried here.[3] Janet Parker, a medical photographer who in 1978 became the last person to die from smallpox, was cremated here in accordance with disease control measures.[4]

The cemetery is very nearly full to capacity and the council generally only allows interments in existing graves. There are however above ground vaults, which were constructed in 2005, for cremated remains for which leases are available.[1]

References

  1. "Solihull M.B.C website". Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 26 March 2012.
  2. CWGC Cemetery Report. Breakdown of figures obtained from casualties record. 'Robin Hood' is omitted from the registered title but acknowledged to be a locally-given name.
  3. Burial location of Victoria Cross holders in Warwickshire.
  4. Brett Gibbons, Haunting Memories of Smallpox Drama, in Birmingham Mail, 21 June 2011 (online), accessed 12 August 2015

See also


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