• Warstone Lane Cemetery, (grid reference SP059877), also called Brookfields Cemetery, Church of England Cemetery, or Mint Cemetery (from the adjacent Birmingham Mint)...
  • Warstone Lane Cemetery is one of two cemeteries in the city's Jewellery Quarter, the other being Key Hill Cemetery.
  • Birmingham (Warstone Lane) Cemetery contains 51 First World War burials and 14 from the Second World War.
  • Warstone Lane Cemetery in Birmingham dates back to 1847 and is one of two cemeteries in the city’s Jewellery Quarter.
  • Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter is home to two, Grade II listed cemeteriesWarstone Lane Cemetery and Key Hill Cemetery.
  • The bodies in the vaults were removed and Baskerville’s body was reinterred in the Church of England cemetery in Warstone Lane in a vault under the chapel.
  • Baskerville died in 1775, long before Warstone Lane Cemetery was built. His body was originally interred in his a small mausoleum on the grounds of his home.
  • Warstone Lane Cemetery continues (2000) to be owned by Birmingham City Council and is managed by Birmingham City Council.
  • Have you visited Warstone Lane Cemetery in Birmingham and felt, or perhaps even seen something that you can’t quite explain?
  • Warstone Lane Cemetery. The Church of England Cemetery. Detail from map of Birmingham by Pigott Smith, 1855 (Library of Birmingham.
  • Warstone Lane Cemetery in the Jewellery Quarter , Hockley , Birmingham belonged to the Church of England Cemetery Company.
  • Warstone Lane Cemetery in Birmingham dates from 1847. It is one of two cemeteries in the city's Jewellery Quarter, in Hockley (the other being Key Hill Cemetery).
  • The Birmingham Cemetery Act of 1846 was passed to stop the unpleasant smells emanating from the catacombs at Warstone Lane Cemetery.