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.

Portrait Ferdinand Chasemore Gates

Major Arthur Alison Barnes (buried 1937)

William Starkey (buried 1924)

Eliza Elliott (buried 1958)

Charles Harris (buried 1934)

William Lawson (buried 1922)

Frederick James Aldridge (buried 1933)

Charles Lucie Bean Smith Photograph

Marion Caley (buried 1953)

Frederick McLaughlin (buried 1911)

Annie Scarce (buried 1937)

Acton Havelock

William Wenban Smith (buried 1901)

Katherine Wight (buried 1912)

Frederick Evans (buried 1920)

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.

The Common Malachite Beetle appears between April and July/August.

This insect is around 3.5 centimetres in length and has a wingspan of just under 5 centimetres. It's a regular visitor to gardens.

Platycheirus scutatus (hoverfly), Heene Cemetery in Worthing

Cinnabar Moths with their grey wings with red spots and edges are unmistakeable.

The Peasgood's Nonsuch apple variety is a dessert and cooking cultivar developed in 1858.

The name Mistle Thrush comes from the bird's fondness for mistletoe berries, which plant it helps spread.

Herb Robert is a plant that belongs to the Geranium family.

The Tapered Drone Fly, Eristalis pertinax is one of our commonest and easiest to identify hoverflies.

The Speckled Bush-cricket is generally secretive, but may be found from April to November.

The Stripe-faced Dronefly (Eristalis nemorum) favours woodland, hedgerows and flower meadows.

The Ivy Planthopper is common throughout southeastern England, and is found on a range of woody plants and deciduous trees.

The Lesser Marsh Grasshopper is a brown or green species that has straight keels.

The Hogweed is a tough native that is beginning to dominate areas of the cemetery.

The flower of the Wall Lettuce has five yellow petals with flat ends serrated into five miniature triangles.

Orange Hawkweed gives off a honey-like odour in the sunshine. Hawkweed extracts are used to treat lung disorders and asthma.

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.