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Dalston Jewish cemetery to be restored following National Lottery grant

Historic Reform burial ground, described as a ‘vital community asset’, to be transformed

January 26, 2025 12:59
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Balls Pond Road, the oldest Reform cemetery in Britain, is set to benefit from major improvements thanks to a £190k grant from the National Lottery Heritage Fund (Photo: Islington Council)
2 min read

One of Britain’s oldest Jewish cemeteries is set to undergo a major restoration thanks to a £190k grant from the National Lottery Heritage Fund.

The nearly 200-year-old Balls Pond Cemetery in Dalston, east London, is the oldest Reform burial ground in the UK.

Built in 1843 and owned by the West London Synagogue of British Jews (WLS), for nearly 200 years the Victorian cemetery saw over 1,000 people buried in its grounds.

Notable graves include Amy Levy, a poet and novelist and the first Jewish woman at Cambridge University, Sir Isaac Lyon Goldsmid, the co-founder of University College London (UCL), and James Joseph Sylvester, a mathematician famed for his work on the matrix theory.