https://www.eastsuffolk.gov.uk Located on the corner of Rotterdam Road and Normanston Drive, Lowestoft Cemetery received its first burial in 1885.
The fine mock Tudor cemetery lodge and its accompanying lychgate were designed by Irish architect William Doubleday.
Lowestoft Cemetery also holds 11 German war burials including an unidentified airman whose body was washed up at Gunton in 1943 and two non-war service burials, giving it the largest group of World War II German graves in Suffolk.
After a violent dispute with the children's father, Miss Anderson became increasingly disturbed and drowned her three children in the bath at their London Road South home in Lowestoft before jumping to her death from a multi-storey car park in the town centre on 15 April 2013, at the same time killing her unborn daughter.
When police officers visited Miss Anderson's home, they found the bodies of her three children in her double bed and messages that she had written on the walls using a green marker pen.