Continuously visited by people, especially on sunny and warm spring days, the cemetery houses 13 tombs, a small altar and a pyramid-shaped parallelepiped, just over a meter high, surmounted by two juniper trunks nailed to form a cross. On the north-facing side of the pyramid there is a marble tombstone placed in 1891 by the crews of the "Navigazione Generale Italiana" (the company that then managed the Golfo Aranci - Civitavecchia shipping line under concession) to remember the five sailors who perished in the shipwreck of the Ligurian sailing ship "Generoso II", collected on the shore of the Cala Greca sea and buried here in 1887. The name "English Cemetery" comes from the fact that people believe that under those crosses rest only and exclusively the bodies of English sailors shipwrecked at Capo Figari. What misleads them is the large Celtic cross, placed on the tomb of a soldier of the navy of her Britannic Majesty, which, being the largest and the only clearly legible, stands out above all the other small and anonymous crosses of the cemetery. No one knows that the sailor who is buried there is the only Englishman buried there, the others are Italian sailors who perished in various shipwrecks that occurred over the years of the past centuries. It is said that among those tombs there are also those of some Golfoarancini whose names and precise location of the burial have unfortunately been lost.