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Hastings Cemetery is a cemetery in Hastings, East Sussex, located off the Ridge road. The cemetery was opened on 28 November 1856. The Church of England section was consecrated by Ashurst Gilbert, Bishop of Chichester, followed by a service in All Saints Church. [1] Hastings Crematorium is located within the cemetery.
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The later northern section of the cemetery has two Jewish burial grounds overseen by the Brighton and Hove Reform Synagogue, and there are sections for Polish burials, [23] BaháΚΌí adherents and Coptic Orthodox Christians [3] (there is a Coptic Orthodox church in Hove). [143]
Enlarged twice and now covering over 28 acres (11 ha), today the grounds house over 44,000 burials. [1] In June 2014, a new Friends of Tunbridge Wells Cemetery association were formed. [5] The cemetery contains the war graves of 72 Commonwealth service personnel of World War I and 63 of World War II. [6]
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Lewes Friends Meeting House is a Religious Society of Friends (Quaker) place of worship in the town of Lewes, part of the district of the same name in East Sussex, England.A Quaker community became established in the town in 1655 when George Fox, prominent Dissenter and founder of the Religious Society of Friends, first visited.
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