place

Weeke

Hampshire geography stubsHistory of Winchester
St Matthew's Church, Weeke geograph.org.uk 616368
St Matthew's Church, Weeke geograph.org.uk 616368

Weeke is an ecclesiastical parish, based around St Matthew's Church, is an ecclesiastical parish to the north-west of Winchester, Hampshire, England.

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

Weeke
Stockbridge Road, Winchester Harestock

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: WeekeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.07166 ° E -1.3336833333333 °
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Address

Stockbridge Road
SO22 5GZ Winchester, Harestock
England, United Kingdom
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St Matthew's Church, Weeke geograph.org.uk 616368
St Matthew's Church, Weeke geograph.org.uk 616368
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Nearby Places

West Hill Cemetery, Winchester
West Hill Cemetery, Winchester

West Hill Cemetery is a cemetery to the west of the city centre of Winchester in the English county of Hampshire. Opened in the 1840s, the cemetery became the principal place of burial for the city. However by the 1900s it was almost full, and the Magdalen Hill Cemetery, to the east of the city, opened in 1914 as a replacement.The cemetery comprises 13 acres (5.3 ha) of land. The grade II listed perimeter wall, which fronts onto St James' Lane and Sparkford Road, includes red brick piers with stone caps and wrought iron railings and gates. The cemetery formerly had two chapels, one for the Church of England and the second for other denominations, together with a gate lodge. Both chapels were demolished in the 1920s, but the gate lodge still stands.The cemetery contains the grave of Charles Freeman, a circus entertainer and bare-knuckle boxer known as the "American Giant", who died of tuberculosis in Winchester in 1845. His grave is marked by a 10 ft (3.0 m) high stone obelisk erected in 1860. The cemetery also contains war graves from World War I (115) and World War II (4).Initially run by the Winchester Cemetery Company, which was established by Act of Parliament in 1840, the cemetery has been managed by Winchester City Council since 1958, and is now closed for burials. It is managed to allow its chalk downland to flourish as a habitat for insects and reptiles. A footpath across the cemetery provide access to the adjacent University of Winchester.