Willesden Jewish Cemetery is bursting with life
Come and discover the inspiring stories of generations buried here: hundreds of them were celebrities in their time, and many thousands more lived out their days beyond the glare of publicity.
Here are chief rabbis and politicians, baronets and businessmen, tailors and teachers. People who built a community, some who died too young. Some became household names; many deserve to be better known.
More than 50 people buried at Willesden are remembered in the cemetery’s new visitor experience, in touch screen displays in the Visitor Centre, information panels in the grounds and marked on our new cemetery map.
Here we highlight just a dozen or so people whose legacy touches us today.
Inspiring Lives
Nathan Marcus Adler, first Chief Rabbi of the British Empire, was a founder of the United Synagogue in 1870 and of a form of orthodox Jewish practice which lasts to this day.
Henrietta Adler, known as “Nettie”, was one of the first two women on the London County Council, the body that governed London from 1889 to 1965.
Possibly the most famous of all people buried at Willesden, chemist Rosalind Franklin played a key part in the discovery of the structure of the human genetic code.
Jane Joseph was a promising musician and arranger whom composer Gustav Holst called “possibly the best pupil I ever had”. Much of her work is lost.
Samuel Moses ran a shipping fleet that plied between Australia and Britain, trading wool for consumer goods. He was the first person to be buried at Willesden Cemetery.
A beautician and blackmailer whose exploits were the sensation of mid-19th century crime reporting. She was prosecuted twice for fraud.
Descended from the Rothschild banking family of Frankfurt, Hannah became the richest woman in England and married a future prime minister.
Walter much preferred zoology to the family business of finance. He created a national scientific collection and was recipient of the “Balfour Declaration”, a milestone in the history of Zionism.
If you ever stopped to think who was H. Samuel, the person behind the name on the high street jewellery stores, you would possibly not conclude it was a Victorian Jewish lady from Liverpool.
Marcus Samuel was co-founder of the Shell oil company, invented the bulk oil tanker and was Lord Mayor of London.
Simeon Solomon was a leading light in the popular group of Victorian artists known as the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
Arnold Weinstock took electrical engineering giant GEC through the “white heat of technology” and became Britain’s premier industrialist.
Solomon Joseph Solomon was an artist, member of the Royal Academy, who helped design camouflage during the First World War
Do you have a story you’d like to share with us?
The House of Life is on a constant quest to uncover more about Willesden’s “residents”.
Our research has found its way into new exhibits. Our volunteer guides add it to their walking tours. Families have shared photographs, letters, family trees, eulogies and reminiscences with us. Do tell us about someone you would like to remember.