A Tour of Zillebeke Part Seven – Woods Cemetery

Now Baldrick and I rarely do things the easy way, so no real surprise when we find ourselves failing dismally to find the entrance to Woods Cemetery.  Luckily for us the logs to the right of the photograph give us an alternative route.  Correction.  Give me an alternative route.  Baldrick, you will be unsurprised to hear, is rather less successful, and finds himself floundering around in a marsh.  Still, we get across, and after a traipse across the sodden field beyond, and a respectful clamber over the cemetery wall (I know, I’m sorry, but there really was no alternative by this time), we finally make it.  Woods Cemetery.

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A Tour of Zillebeke Part Six – 1st D.C.L.I. Cemetery, The Bluff

1st D.C.L.I. Cemetery, The Bluff.  The spires of Ypres on the horizon show not only how close the front lines here were to the city in 1915, but also how strategically important this slightly higher ground was to whoever could claim it, and why it was so hotly contested by both sides for much of the war.

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A Tour of Zillebeke Part Five – Hedge Row Trench Cemetery

Our journey continues east until we reach the little village of Verbrande Molen.  Here, our road turns south beneath the low range of wooded hills, known as the Bluff and fought over almost continuously for much of the war due to the close proximity of the front line trenches, that we saw in the distance way back at Bedford House Cemetery.  After little more than, a mile a left turn brings us to a conveniently situated car park, from where a ten minute stroll through the trees reveals a clearing, and the first of the three cemeteries located in these woods; Hedge Row Trench Cemetery.

Hedge Row Trench Cemetery is unusual in that every headstone here is actually a special memorial.  Being so close to the front lines, and, as its name implies, being the site of a British trench that undoubtedly the Germans were well aware of, the cemetery was so devastated by shellfire that after the war it proved impossible to identify the individual burials that lay here.  The names of the dead, however, were known, and special memorial headstones were erected bearing the inscription ‘known to be buried in this cemetery’ and placed around the Cross of Sacrifice in the manner you can see in these photographs.

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A Tour of Zillebeke Part Three – Blauwepoort Farm Cemetery

Just a couple of minutes drive east from Railway Dugouts, a CWGC signpost points us away from the road down a short track towards Blauwepoort Farm Cemetery.

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A Tour of Zillebeke Part Two – Railway Dugouts Burial Ground (Transport Farm) – Updated 2024

A short distance north east of Bedford House, just south of Zillebeke lake and about a mile and a half west of the village of Zillebeke itself, lies Railway Dugouts Burial Ground (Transport Farm).  This cemetery is another large one, containing nearly 2,500 burials, of which 430 are unidentified.  Bounded to the north east by the Ieper-Zillebeke road, and to the south west by the Ieper-Comines railway, the cemetery is sited in a position slightly sheltered by the marginally higher ground towards the east, and during the war the railway embankment provided cover for the numerous dugouts that were constructed in its side.  A small farm also stood on this site; the British, it seems, referred to the place as either Railway Dugouts or Transport Farm (this was the final stopping point for supplies being transported up to the front lines around Hill 60), hence the cemetery’s name.

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A Tour of Zillebeke Part One – Bedford House Cemetery – Updated 2024

A mile and a half south east of Ypres the village of Zillebeke, and the area surrounding it, saw heavy fighting throughout much of the Great War.  Although the village itself remained in British hands for most of the war, the front lines were never far away to the east, and as a consequence the commune of Zillebeke contains more than a dozen CWGC cemeteries. On this tour we shall begin by visiting the eight cemeteries in the commune to the south and west of the village, in the triangular area bounded by the Ieper-Comines railway to the north and east, and the Ieper–Wijtschate–Mesen (Messines) road to the west.  Our tour begins at Bedford House Cemetery, one of the largest Commonwealth cemeteries in Flanders, situated just a few minutes drive south from the Lille Gate at Ieper.

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Wieltje Farm Cemetery

Wieltje Farm Cemetery, about a mile north east of Ypres, one of a number of tiny cemeteries to be found in the fields surrounding the city.

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