Sir Henry Thompson, baronet, FRCS (1820-1904) was born in Framlingham, Suffolk - he became Surgeon to Queen Victoria.
Sir Henry was also founder of the Cremation Society in London 1874.
He donated the clock on St. Michael's church tower Framlingham in memory of his parents.
Prof Brunetti of Padua, Italy exhibited his 'cremation apparatus' at the Vienna Exhibition in 1873.
Thompson attended the exhibition and returned home to England convinced that cremation was 'a necessary sanitary precaution against the propagation of disease'.
A number of Sir Henry's friends gathered at his home in Wimpole Street in January 1874 to form The Cremation Society and among the signatures are many distinguished people of that age - Shirley Brooks, Frederick Lehmann, John Everett Millais, John Tenniel, Anthony Trollope and Sir T. Spencer Wells, representing the realms of art, science, literature and medicine.
Although there was initial opposition to the Crematorium being built at Woking, it went ahead and on 26th March, 1885 (?) the first official cremation at Woking took place, of Mrs. Pickersgill, a well-known figure in literary and scientific circles, who became the first of three cremations that year.
So the first official cremation did take place at Woking as stated by Nick29.
Sir Henry was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium and a staute to him is also found there. He is remembered in Framlingham too.
Pat ...