On 21 July 1858, at the
Princess's Theatre, London, there was a well-attended meeting, chaired by the actor
Charles Kean, to discuss the feasibility of providing
almshouses for retired actors.
Charles Dickens and
William Makepeace Thackeray were among those present. As a result of the meeting a trust was formed, and a suitable site for the proposed building was found, in
Woking where a ten-acre site in Maybury Common was purchased from the
London Necropolis Company for £750. This followed the inauguration, in June 1858, of a burial ground for actors, in an acre purchased from the London Necropolis Company in Woking. This site was selected by
John W. Anson, Secretary of the Dramatic, Equestrian and Musical Sick Fund, which provided members with financial help when ill and a decent burial. Actors could not otherwise rely on such things: a report of the inauguration of the burial ground commented "Before this was obtained, a parish funeral, or cast among strangers, too frequently in from 6-16 inches of water, was the fate of many." Anson later became Secretary of the college. In the autumn of 1858,
Prince Albert became patron. On 9 June 1860 he travelled to Woking on a special train and laid the foundation stone of the building. ==Opening==