place

St Anne's Churchyard

London stubsSoho, London

St Anne's Churchyard, also known as St Anne's Gardens, is a public park on Wardour Street in Soho, London. Formerly the churchyard of St Anne's, Soho, it was closed to burials in 1853. It rises 6 ft above the pavement, because of the 13,000 burials within it. It was laid out as a garden by the landscape gardener Fanny Wilkinson on behalf of the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association in 1891. It was opened to the public by Lady Hobhouse in 1892. The London plane trees remain a notable feature of the garden. It is managed by Westminster City Council and has received the Green Flag Award.War memorials to WWI and WWII are located in the churchyard on the wall of the church tower. The WWII memorial was only installed in 2012. There are a small number of memorials remaining within the churchyard, including the German adventurer Theodore von Neuhoff, who was briefly King of Corsica in 1736, and the essayist William Hazlitt, whose gravestone was restored in 2003.The gardens contain a memorial to the victims of the 1999 Admiral Duncan pub bombing. There are three art installations, all of which serve practical purposes: "Wall of Light" (an illuminated security fence), "Art Loo" (a WC with art displays) and "Table" (a monumentally-sized picnic table).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Anne's Churchyard (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

St Anne's Churchyard
Wardour Street, City of Westminster Soho

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N 51.5124 ° E -0.1323 °
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St Annes Church Grounds

Wardour Street
W1D 6QB City of Westminster, Soho
England, United Kingdom
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