Heene Cemetery – West Worthing’s hidden graveyard

Heene Cemetery is a one-acre town-centre site in West Worthing that was open for burials between 1873 and 1977. It is now a ‘closed cemetery’ and a Sussex Local Wildlife Site cared for by a volunteer group, the Friends of Heene Cemetery, who also built and maintain this website.

Nearly 2,000 individuals are buried here, and a group of the Friends is researching their history and documenting their stories. Another group of the Friends volunteers throughout the year to care for this space, documenting and encouraging the biodiversity of what was originally old meadowland.

Bringing the past to life

Heene Cemetery is an often-overlooked window into the past. (The history of the cemetery and of the Heene area of Worthing is summarised in a timeline on the About page of the website.)

Our heritage research team has accumulated a wealth of detail about the nearly 2,000 people who have Heene Cemetery as their final resting place. These individual records are available on this website. They tell stories that range from the humdrum to the vivid and extraordinary, sometimes blighted by epidemic or war, sometimes exemplifying valour, scientific brilliance or business acumen. Whether you are looking for an ancestor or browsing with an interest in social history, you will find them worth exploring.

Benjamin Jones (buried 1924)

Edward McLaughlin (buried 1912)

Robert Tucker (buried 1905)

James Puttick (buried 1934) portrait

William Strange

Arthur Caley (buried 1934)

Rowland Walkey

Jane Paine (buried 1913) portrait

Katherine Wight (buried 1912)

Sydney Nevile (buried 1969)

Thomas Mathews (buried 1927) portrait

Philip Smurthwaite (buried 1931) and his father

George Truefitt (buried 1902)

Frederick McLaughlin (buried 1911)

Acton Havelock

The ecology of an ‘old meadow’ community

Surrounded today by the residential neighbourhood of West Worthing, this closed cemetery and Sussex Local Wildlife Site hides its meadowland origins behind its Victorian brick and flint walls. The cemetery is the focus of an ongoing citizen-science project to identify species and record them all on this website. Over 700 species have been identified to date, and nearly all have been photographed in situ.

Varied carpet beetles are about 3 millimetres long and are usually found indoors feeding off carpets, furniture and fabrics.

 Capillary Thread-moss grows in a wide range of habitats; in the Cemetery it is found on the rough gravel of graves.

Purple Toadflax's name comes from the alleged resemblance between the flower's wide mouth and the wide mouth of the toad.

Quaking Grass is classed as having a Red List GB Post 2001 NT (near-threatened) conservation status.

The bright yellow elytra (wing cases) with black spots of the are Twenty-two-spot Ladybird unmistakeable.

The tiny grey-blue flowers of the Field Forget-me-not appear in March or April.  There are native and cultivated forms of this plant.

Ragged-Robin is a native, damp-loving plant, flowering from May.

Flowering later than the primrose, the Cowslip is also a useful addition to the early season list of culinary ingredients.

The Ivy Bee is a mining bee, meaning that it is ground-nesting. They tend to be solitary, building underground nests.

The white, erect fruiting body of the Candlesnuff Fungus typically forks into an antler-like shape.

Yellow Scales is a lichen that is tolerant of pollution and heavy metal contamination.

This hoverfly is sometimes also called 'The Footballer' - for obvious reasons.

Male and female flowers of the Goat Willow are specific to individual trees. Male catkins ripen with a yellow pollen.

White Stonecrop is a creeping, perennial herb that forms mat-like stands.

This Root Maggot Fly will be either Anthomyia procellaris or Anthomyia pluvialis.

Various blog posts that help explain Heene Cemetery

Separate from burials and species records, there are many posts that detail Heene Cemetery’s special appeal. Richly illustrated, these posts often say more than any single story. Here are some of our most recent blog posts:

All this website's content—including its creation and maintenance—is the collective work of unpaid volunteers from within the local community.