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Kinson Cemetery

1936 establishments in EnglandBournemouthCemeteries in DorsetCommonwealth War Graves Commission cemeteries in England
West Howe, Kinson cemetery gates geograph.org.uk 926042
West Howe, Kinson cemetery gates geograph.org.uk 926042

Kinson Cemetery is a municipal cemetery in Kinson, a suburb of Bournemouth, England. The cemetery is owned by Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council. The cemetery has a section maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission containing 4 burials from the Second World War.

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

Kinson Cemetery
Wakely Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.762222222222 ° E -1.9044444444444 °
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Address

Kinson Common

Wakely Road
BH11 9EG , Bear Cross
England, United Kingdom
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West Howe, Kinson cemetery gates geograph.org.uk 926042
West Howe, Kinson cemetery gates geograph.org.uk 926042
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Kinson
Kinson

Kinson is a former village which has been absorbed by the town of Bournemouth in the county of Dorset in England. The area became part of Bournemouth on 1 April 1931. There were two electoral wards containing the name Kinson (North & South). Their joint population at the 2011 Census was 19,824.The village has a shopping centre and a pub, Gulliver’s Tavern, known for much of the 19th and 20th centuries as 'The Dolphin Inn', after the boat named Dolphin owned by Isaac Gulliver. Kinson nearly became part of Poole in 1931; however, a vigorous campaign by the residents saw the parish added to Bournemouth instead, necessitating an adjustment to the Hampshire/Dorset county boundary, which had separated the two areas. The area centres on Kinson village green which is on the Wimborne Road (at this point the A341) next to Kinson Library (now part of The Kinson Hub). The present green, which features a set of stocks, was once the site of the village school. The 1887 Ordnance Survey map for Kinson shows the school, which is now on a site to the south off Kinson Road. By the time of the 1949 survey maps, a library had taken the place of the old school. It was only when the library moved to a new location nearby that the old school/library site was combined with the village pound to form a new village green. A commemorative stone bench was officially unveiled by Mayor Benwell and his wife. The older village green, where cricket matches were played, has now become a development of bungalows, with the name Wicket Road surviving to mark its older use.

The Bourne Academy
The Bourne Academy