Country: France
Locality: Loire-Atlantique
Identified
Casualties: 255
Google Earth Link:
Cemetery
Location
Escoublac-la-Baule is
13 kilometres west of St Nazaire and the Cemetery is
south-east of Escoublac and east of La Baule, and will
be located behind the small airport. The cemetery is
well signposted.
Cemetery
Information
The cemetery was
begun with the burial of 17 British soldiers killed in
the area during 1940, 21 others who died in local
hospitals, and a number of British servicemen whose
bodies were washed ashore after the sinking of the
troopship "Lancastria" in the Bay of Biscay
on 17 June 1940. Subsequent burials include men killed
in the St. Nazaire raid in 1942, and airmen shot down
in the area. The cemetery now contains 325
Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 74 of
which are unidentified. Three Polish servicemen are
also buried here and one man of the Merchant Navy
whose death was not due to war service. Throughout the
German occupation, Louise Jaouen, a resident of La
Baule, dedicated all her time and energy to
maintaining the graves. With money collected secretly
from the generous local people she provided a cross
for every grave and a small monument, had hedges
planted, and employed a permanent gardener to tend the
cemetery. Her devotion to this work was later honoured
by the award of the King's Medal for Service in the
Cause of Freedom.
WW2
Graves
The cemetery
contains graves from the famous St Nazaire raid.
Photo
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