Gwalia Cemetery

History Information (Source: CWGC)

The cemetery was opened at the beginning of July 1917, in the period between the Battle of Messines and the Third Battle of Ypres. It lay among the camps in flat, wet country and was used by infantry units, artillery and field ambulances until September, 1918. In Plot I, Row H, are buried 14 men of the 9th Lancashire Fusiliers who were killed in the early morning of 4 September 1917, in a German air raid over "Dirty Bucket Camp."

 

The cemetery contains 467 Commonwealth burials of the First World War. The cemetery was designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield.

 

Served with

·         United Kingdom (453)

·         Canadian (5)

·         New Zealand (5)

·         German (3)

·         Australian (2)

·         South African (1)

Served in

·         Army (458)

·         Navy (9)

·         Air Force (2)

 

Gwalia Cemetery
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