place

Hannen Columbarium

1906 establishments in EnglandBuildings and structures completed in 1906Byzantine Revival architecture in the United KingdomGrade II* listed buildings in BerkshireMausoleums in England
Monuments and memorials in BerkshireUse British English from February 2023Works of Edwin Lutyens in England
Hannen Columbarium
Hannen Columbarium

The Hannen Columbarium is a columbarium mausoleum – a resting place for the cremated remains of the deceased – built for the Hannen family of Wargrave, Berkshire, England and designed by Edwin Lutyens.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hannen Columbarium (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hannen Columbarium
Station Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Hannen ColumbariumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.49948 ° E -0.87339 °
placeShow on map

Address

Station Road
RG10 8EU
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Hannen Columbarium
Hannen Columbarium
Share experience

Nearby Places

Shiplake railway station
Shiplake railway station

Shiplake railway station is a railway station in the village of Lower Shiplake (formerly Lashbrook) in Oxfordshire, England. The station is on the Henley-on-Thames branch line that links the towns of Henley-on-Thames and Twyford. It is 2 miles 60 chains (4.4 km) down the line from Twyford and 33 miles 61 chains (54.3 km) measured from London Paddington. It is served by local services operated by Great Western Railway.The station has a single platform, which is used by trains in both directions. There is a 50-space car park, but no station building other than a simple shelter. The station is unmanned, and tickets must be purchased on the train.The station was built in the village of Lashbrook in 1857, but named for the main village of Shiplake. The village of Shiplake, with the parish Church and grand manor houses of Shiplake Court and Shiplake House is actually over a mile away to the south of Shiplake Station. Victorian developers and their commuting commercial customers however then chose to build new houses close to the station, and the hamlet of Lashbrook grew rapidly and eventually changed its name to Lower Shiplake in the early twentieth century. In June 1914, it is said suffragettes were intending to burn Shiplake Church, but on realising it was such a distance from the station of the same name, burned Wargrave Church down instead. A camping coach was positioned here by the Western Region from 1956 to 1963.