On Wednesday morning 10 December, 16 new Japanese cherries were planted by Red Squirrel in the cemetery. The trees are a gift from the people of Japan, thanks to the Sakura Project. The Sakura Project started in the 2019-20 Japan-UK Season of Culture and celebrates continuing collaboration and friendship between the two nations. We applied for this back in February 2024, and almost 2 years later, here they are!
Fulham Cemetery has been known for its Japanese cherries since the 1950s (read our article), and the Friends have sought since our inception to preserve this legacy, starting with the 23 cherries planted in winter 2023.
The trees were planted exactly where we intended:
An avenue of white blossoms right in the middle of the cemetery, sure to become a major attraction in years to come (7 trees)
All gaps filled along the Munster Road avenue (4 trees)
5 trees informally planted in the southeast section along Fulham Palace Road, visible to passers-by and neighbouring houses
All but 2 of the trees are Tai Haku, the 'great white' cherry, the favourite of Collingwood Ingram, who popularised Japanese cherries in the UK in the 1950s. The other 2 are pink Beni-yutaka.
See our tree map for planting locations
We have added an additional 20 information labels to trees, to help visitors to the cemetery learn more about our trees.
We have also added information labels to some notable graves. The markers are in the same style as the tree labels, affixed to a metal support, placed just outside the grave perimeter. They have a one-line biography, and a QR code that links to a short biography on our website. There are 14 so far. We'll see how durable these are before adding more.
If any other Friends groups are curious about how these labels are produced, see our tree label article.