Country: France
Locality:
Nord
Identified
Casualties: 1040
Google Earth Link:
Cemetery
Location
Dunkirk Town Cemetery
is at the south-eastern corner of the town of Dunkirk,
immediately south of the canal and on the road to
Veurne (Furnes) in Belgium. On entering the cemetery
through the columns of the Dunkirk Memorial, two
Commonwealth war graves sections will be seen: Plots
IV and V from the First World War and Plots I and II
from the Second World War. There is also a further
First World War section (Plots I, II and III) in the
main part of the cemetery to the right of the main
entrance.
Cemetery
Information
Dunkirk witnessed
the landing of the British Expeditionary Force in
September and October 1914. Throughout the First World
War it was a seaplane base and later an American Naval
Air Service base. The town was also a French hospital
centre and the 8th Canadian Stationary Hospital was
there from November 1918 to April 1919. Although an
estimated 7,500 shells and bombs fell on the town
during the war, ship building and other port
activities continued. During the Second World War,
Dunkirk was the scene of the historic evacuation of
the British Expeditionary Force from France in May
1940.
Dunkirk Town
Cemetery contains 460 Commonwealth burials of the
First World War, ten of them unidentified. The graves
are situated in Plots 1 to 3 in the public part of the
cemetery to the right of the main entrance, and in
Plots 4 and 5 of the Commonwealth War Graves section
adjacent to the Dunkirk Memorial. Of the 793 Second
World War burials, 213 are unidentified and special
memorials are erected to 58 soldiers known to be
buried among them. These graves are in Plots 1 and 2
of the section by the Dunkirk Memorial. There are also
Czech, Norwegian and Polish war graves within the
Commonwealth section, and war graves of other
nationalities will be found elsewhere within the
cemetery. The DUNKIRK MEMORIAL stands a the entrance
to the Commonwealth War Graves section of Dunkirk Town
Cemetery. It commemorates more than 4,500 casualties
of the British Expeditionary Force who died in the
campaign of 1939-40 and who have no known grave. The
memorial was designed by Philip Hepworth. The engraved
glass panel depicting the evacuation was by John
Hutton.
WW2
Graves
The major of
the men buried here died in the operations around
Dunkirk in May and June 1940.
Photo
Archive