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Recent Posts
- French Flanders: Richebourg Part One – Richebourg War Memorial March 25, 2024
- Wytschaete War Memorial, the London Scottish Memorial & the First Battle of Messines (1914) March 16, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The American Memorial Chapel February 24, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The Royal Hospital Burial Ground February 12, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The Canadian Second World War Plot February 8, 2024
- Brookwood Cemetery – The Nurses of Brookwood February 3, 2024
- Brookwood Cemetery – The Victoria Cross Holders January 28, 2024
- Brookwood Cemetery – The Turkish Air Cemetery January 22, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The Muslim Burials January 16, 2024
- Brookwood Military Cemetery – The Non-Commonwealth Nations January 11, 2024
Recent Comments
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- Magicfingers on The Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing
- Magicfingers on Memories of Spoilbank
- Magicfingers on The Forgotten Men of Wittenberg
- Magicfingers on The Dead Donkeys: The Myth of the ‘Château Generals’ Part Four – 1916
- Magicfingers on Wytschaete War Memorial, the London Scottish Memorial & the First Battle of Messines (1914)
- Magicfingers on Wytschaete War Memorial, the London Scottish Memorial & the First Battle of Messines (1914)
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Ninfield (St. Mary) Churchyard Extension
This entry was posted in Sussex East, U.K. Churches, Memorials & Cemeteries - Back in Blighty. Bookmark the permalink.
Almost certainly one of the Dunkirk evacuees. Possibly already mortally wounded. The 5th saw little more than a weeks combat during the first half of WW2, but it must have been one helluva week! Sounds like they took a pasting right from the off.
The red granite vase is noted on his grave registration document, and interestingly the document states that ‘relatives’ are responsible for maintaining the grave, not the Commission. That strikes me as a little odd, I thought the CWGC were responsible for maintaining all allied war graves
Good shout Nick! Wounded and died a little later. Makes sense to me. I too checked the GRRF and thought the same thing as you about the relatives.
My first instinct, given that the red granite vase is listed on the GRRF, is that perhaps the CWGC agreed to pay for that in exchange for the relatives agreeing to look after the grave. But I’m not sure if that’s something the CWGC would have done. Also possible that he was killed in some random accident not related to his service. The CWGC gave him a headstone because he was a serving soldier, but asked the family to maintain it because his death wasn’t from a battle related injury? Dunno.
Another curiosity. You do have a habit of turning them up! 😉
I do rather, don’t I? Heh heh.