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  2. Cemeteries and crematoria in Brighton and Hove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cemeteries_and_crematoria...

    Meadowview Jewish Cemetery, opened in 1919, has its own chapel. Brighton and Hove have had many prominent Jewish citizens, [90] and several are buried in the old cemetery. Henry Solomon, originally a London watchmaker, was Brighton Borough's chief constable and one of the most prominent public figures in 19th-century Brighton. He was murdered ...

  3. St Nicholas Church, Brighton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Nicholas_Church,_Brighton

    The Church of Saint Nicholas of Myra, usually known as St. Nicholas Church, is an Anglican church in Brighton, England. It is both the original parish church of Brighton and, after St Helen's Church, Hangleton and St Peter's Church in Preston village, the third oldest surviving building in the city of Brighton and Hove. It is located on high ...

  4. Hanover Chapel, Brighton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanover_Chapel,_Brighton

    Hanover Chapel Brighton, 2008. Hanover Chapel, Brighton was originally a congregationalist chapel built in Brighton, East Sussex in 1825. It was built on land located beside Church Street and North Road for Rev. James Edwards, a local presbyterian minister.

  5. St Peter's Church, Brighton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Peter's_Church,_Brighton

    St Peter's Church was founded as a chapel of ease associated with Brighton's oldest church and its existing parish church, St Nicholas.The contract to design the new church was won in open competition by Charles Barry, then only in his mid-twenties.

  6. St Andrew's Church, Brighton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Andrew's_Church,_Brighton

    St Andrew's Church, Brighton, designed by Charles Webb and built in 1857. By 1857, the congregation had outgrown the second church building. [4] The parishioner, Brighton resident and prolific Melbourne architect Charles Webb, and his partner Thomas Taylor, were commissioned to design a new bluestone church, school house and vicarage. [9] "

  7. Chapel Royal, Brighton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapel_Royal,_Brighton

    The Chapel Royal is an 18th-century place of worship in the centre of Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove.Built as a chapel of ease, it became one of Brighton's most important churches, gaining its own parish and becoming closely associated with the Prince Regent and fashionable Regency-era society.

  8. List of places of worship in Brighton and Hove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_places_of_worship...

    One of Brighton-based architect Amon Henry Wilds's first commissions, this stuccoed Greek Revival chapel with a gigantic tetrastyle portico was built in 1820 on land sold by the Prince Regent. [288] Brighton's Unitarian community, formed after a split in the Calvinist community in 1791, have worshipped there ever since. [289]

  9. File:Memorial Tablet, Font & Firkin (Former Union Chapel ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Memorial_Tablet,_Font...

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