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    • Dickens: his final chapter - Westminster Guides
      • Poets’ Corner would seem to the perfect place for the renowned author’s last resting place, but Dickens himself had requested an ‘unostentatious’ and ‘private’ funeral. So why were his wishes disregarded? June marked 150 years since Charles Dickens was laid to rest in Poets’ Corner in Westminster Abbey.
      westminsterguides.org.uk/dickens-his-final-chapter/
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  2. Feb 7, 2012 · Thousands of people from all walks of life came to pay their respects at the grave and throw in flowers. The grave was closed on June 16th and Stanley preached a memorial sermon on the Sunday following the burial. Each year on the anniversary of Dickens' birth a wreath is laid on the grave.

  3. Dickens's Life and Legacy Commemorated 150 Years On. Share: “From these garish lights I vanish now for evermore, with a heartfelt, grateful, respectful, and affectionate farewell”. These were Dickens’s parting words at his last public reading. He died three months later on 9th June 1870.

  4. Abbey honours 150th anniversary of Charles Dickens. Tuesday, 9th June 2020. The life and work of one of the nation’s greatest authors, Charles Dickens, is celebrated today, Tuesday 9th June, with a private wreath laying behind closed doors and the release of a stunning new film of a sound and light installation which was projected onto the ...

  5. Dickens was commemorated on the Series E £10 note issued by the Bank of England that circulated between 1992 and 2003. His portrait appeared on the reverse of the note accompanied by a scene from The Pickwick Papers. The Charles Dickens School is a high school in Broadstairs, Kent.

  6. When Charles Dickens died at his home in Kent on 9th June 1870, it was presumed that he would be buried in Rochester Cathedral or in one of the nearby parish churches at Cobham or Shorne. This, after all, was what the author of some of the greatest novels in the English language had wanted.

  7. On this spot was situated Cobley's Farm, where Charles Dickens lived in 1843 while writing 'Martin Chuzzlewit'. It is recorded that during his walks with Forster in the Finchley lanes hard by he conceived the immortal character of Mrs. Gamp.