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53°51′N 1°36′W / 53.85°N 1.60°W / 53.85; -1.60. Lawnswood is a small suburb in the north west of the city of Leeds in West Yorkshire, England. As such it is in the north north east of the West Yorkshire Urban Area. The suburb falls within the Adel and Wharefdale Ward of the City of Leeds Council. The Boundaries of Lawnswood ...
Corson won a competition for the landscaping of Roundhay Park in 1873, [13] and in 1874 designed the layout and many of the buildings of Lawnswood cemetery, where he himself was buried in 1910. His gravestone, a celtic cross with five bosses, is grade II listed, one of only four listed memorials at Lawnswood. [14][15] Spenfield House, 1875–77.
Breakspear Crematorium, Ruislip. City of London Cemetery and Crematorium. Croydon Crematorium (located inside Mitcham Road Cemetery) East Finchley Cemetery and Crematorium. East London Cemetery and Crematorium. Eltham Crematorium. Enfield Crematorium. Forest Park Cemetery and Crematorium, Hainault. Golders Green Crematorium.
Joseph Hubert Priestley. Joseph Hubert Priestley DSO FLS (né Priestlay; 5 October 1883 – 31 October 1944) was a British lecturer in botany at University College, Bristol, and professor of botany and pro-vice-chancellor at the University of Leeds. He has been described as a gifted teacher who attracted many graduate research students to Leeds.
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Dylan Morgan. (John) Dylan Morgan. John Dylan Morgan (3 May 1946 – 5 March 2011) was a Welsh mathematician, physicist, hypnotherapist and author. He developed a theoretical approach to hypnotherapy which he published in his book Principles of Hypnotherapy. [1] He also made contributions in theoretical and applied physics.
Woodhouse Cemetery. The Leeds General Cemetery (also known as Woodhouse Cemetery, Woodhouse Lane Cemetery and, since its closure in 1969, St George's Fields) is a former cemetery in Woodhouse, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is now within the campus of the University of Leeds and has been landscaped and kept as an open space.
Dightam married Ernest Dightam, also from Leeds, in 1904 and had a daughter, Eveline Mary, in 1905. Ernest was a conscientious objector during World War I. Maud Dightam died at her home on York Road in Leeds on 24 December 1932. She was cremated at Lawnswood Crematorium and her ashes were scattered on Ilkley Moor at her request. [6]