Saturday 20 June 2009

Dudley Cemetery

Boar War memorial

There are 56 names listed by rank, surname, forename and manner of death. The memorial is was unveiled on 23rd September 1904 by Lieutenant-General The Hon. Sir N G Lyttleton; it was designed by Mr H Own Burgess.

War Graves plot


Grave of Duncan Edwards 'Busby Babe' how died in the Munich air crash February 1958.


Date of visit: 21st June 2009

Monday 15 June 2009

Cannock Chase - Military Cemeteries

Cannock Chase Commonwealth Cemetery


This cemetery contains at first glance a curious mixture of WWI & WWII German and Allied soldiers. There are 388 graves of men, 287 of them German serviceman. There are several WWII RAF but the majority of the Allied dead are from the New Zealand Rifle Brigade, judging by the dates, late 1918 - early 1919, I assume they were victims of the Spanish flu. There are a number of German POW graves dating from 1948.

Located a few hundred yards away, down a quiet country lane, is the Cannock Chase German Military Cemetery.

The cemetery contains the graves of 2143 servicemen of the First World War and 2786 of the WWII bought here from all parts of the UK. 5 of the dead from 1914-1918 and 90 from 1939-1945 are unidentified.

German servicemen from both wars, mainly prisoners of war, were transferred from their burial places to the Chase Military Cemetery between 1964 and 1966. German servicemen buried in British Military Cemeteries and in war grave plots in civilian cemeteries were not moved which explains why the German remains were not moved from the Commonwealth Cemetery up the road.

The remains of the crew from four airships (SL 11, L32, L31, L48) were relocated from Potters Bar, Great Burstead and Theberton to Cannock and lie in a special plot. Field Marshall Ernst Busch is buried after dying in capivity but perhaps the most notorious person to be buried here is the SS General Maximilian von Herff.

RAF Hednesford

RAF Hednesford

Main gateway memorial - looking south towards the parade ground.


Info panel showing the layout of the camp, the parade ground is the green square in the centre of the panel.


Main Parade Ground - looking north


Date of visit: 13th June 2009

Cannock Chase - WWI Military Bases

Cannock Chase was surprisingly the site of one of the largest military bases in Britain during the early half of the 20th century.