Arnos Vale Cemetery

Early in the 21st century, following a public campaign, the site was subject to a compulsory purchase order by Bristol City Council.

A previously missing (and unknown) miniature ivory portrait bust of Raja Ram Mohan Roy was unveiled at the annual commemoration of the death of the Indian religious, social, and educational reformer, and humanitarian, at Arnos Vale cemetery in Bristol, on 22 September 2013.

Ram Mohan Roy challenged traditional Hindu culture and indicated the lines of progress for Indian society under British rule.

The process employed by Cheverton to make the copy means that it is identical with Clarke's bust, save that it is on a reduced scale.

There are 149 servicemen and women from World War II buried here, all in scattered graves apart from a group in a plot in the upper part of the cemetery who were from the Naval Hospital in Barrow Gurney.

[20] The memorial, designed by W H Watkins, commissioned by the British Red Cross Society and paid for by public subscription, was unveiled by Emily, Duchess of Beaufort and dedicated by the Bishop of Bristol, the Right Rev George Nickson on 21 October 1921.

Part of the cemetery in 2005
Broken gravestones awaiting restoration
Epitaph for Raja Rammohun Roy
A Celtic Cross from Arnos Vale Cemetery with a Lily carved into the stone. This exceptional example of carving has led to its Grade II listed status.