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  • Kingston Museum secures prestigious funding for Muybridge project

    After spending much of his life in the United States, he returned home to Kingston in later years and died in the borough in 1904.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/37/kingston-museum-secures-prestigious-funding-for-muybridge-project
  • Kingston Safeguarding Adults Board

    The SAR Sub Group was developed to oversee the Board's response to the Section 44 of the Care Act (2014) requirement to hold a Safeguarding Adults Review when an adult dies where abuse or neglect may have occurred.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/adult-safeguarding/safeguarding-adults-board/2
  • Council owned trees

    Whilst this does not look good, it does not automatically mean that the tree has died or failed to establish.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/trees-hedges/trees-streets/2
  • Our Mayoral history and key facts

    The seventh link from the left on the lower chain (worn across the Mayor’s back) has been enamelled as a sign of respect for several Mayors who have died whilst in office.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/mayor/mayoral-history-key-facts
  • Club premises certificates

    A club premises certificate will only cease to have effect if it is surrendered by the licence holder, revoked by the Licensing Authority, or if the holder dies, becomes insolvent, or becomes mentally incapable.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/premises-licences/club-premises-certificates
  • Kingston Suffragettes

    She joined the Women’s Voluntary Service in the Second World War, and died in Kent in 1978.

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/homepage/63/kingston-suffragettes
  • Storing or scattering cremated remains

    Another option is to scatter them in a place favoured by the person who has died – a favourite walk, a football ground or at sea.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/deaths-1/storing-scattering-cremated-remains
  • Https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/royal-jubilee

    We know from 16th century Borough Archives that the church bells were rung for royal occasions, for example when Jane Seymour, wife of Henry VIII, died, and when Queen Elizabeth I passed by on the river on her way to Hampton Court.... The Borough Archives record that a great The stool was used to punish scolds who were paraded around the Market Place to the river where they were ducked. 10 The memorial in front of the Market House is dedicated to Henry Shrubsole, three-times Mayor of Kingston who died in office in 1880 (17).

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/downloads/file/20/royal-jubilee