Aeroplane Cemetery, Ypres, Belgium

Cemetery Details

Location N332, Ieper (Ypres), Provincie West-Vlaanderen (West Flanders) - Flanders, Belgium
Co‑ordinates N50.8642353, E2.9308938
Description

Location

Aeroplane Cemetery is located 3.5 kilometres north east of Ieper town centre on the Zonnebeekseweg (N332), a road connecting Ieper to Zonnebeke. Two roads connect Ieper town centre onto the Zonnebeekseweg; the Torhoutstraat leads from the market square onto a small roundabout. At the roundabout the first right turn is Basculestraat. At the end of Basculestraat there is a crossroads and Zonnebeekseweg is the turning to the left. The cemetery itself lies 3 kilometres along the Zonnebeekseweg on the right hand side of the road, shortly after a French cemetery.

History

Named for the wreck of an aircraft that was located here when the cemetery was established. Like many others it is a concentration cemetery with burials from other locations brought here after the Armistice - see the CWGC site for full details.

From October 1914 to the summer of 1918, Ypres (now Ieper) was the centre of a salient held by Commonwealth (and for some months also by French) forces. The site of the cemetery was in No Man's Land before 31 July 1917 when the 15th (Scottish) Division, with the 55th (West Lancashire) Division on their left, took nearby Verlorenhoek and Frezenberg.

The cemetery was begun the following month (under the name of the New Cemetery, Frezenberg) by the 15th and the 16th (Irish) Divisions, but by October it had acquired its present name from the wreck of an aeroplane which lay near the present position of the Cross of Sacrifice. It was used by fighting units until March 1918, and again, after a period of occupation by the Germans, in September 1918.

Plots II to VIII, and part of Plot I, were formed after the Armistice when graves were brought in from small burial grounds and the surrounding battlefields.

The only considerable burial grounds concentrated into Aeroplane Cemetery were the following:

BEDFORD HOUSE CEMETERY (ENCLOSURE No. 5), ZILLEBEKE, a little East of the Ypres-Wytschaete Road. This enclosure, which was separate from the others now forming Bedford House Cemetery, contained the graves of 14 men of the 1st Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry and six of the 1st Devons who fell in April, 1915.

LOCK 8 CEMETERY, VOORMEZEELE, in a field about 200 metres North of Lock 8 on the Ypres-Comines Canal. It contained the graves of 19 soldiers from the United Kingdom and two from Australia and two German prisoners, who fell in July-September, 1917. There are now 1,105 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in this cemetery. 636 of the burials are unidentified but special memorials commemorate eight casualties known or believed to be buried among them.

The cemetery was designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield.

Notable Figures

Captain Ralph Ingham Moore MC DCM MID* (/explore/people/332146)

Source: CWCG

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Names

Showing 8 people of interest from cemetery

MASSEY, Edmund Godfrey Hugh

Service number 6349
Private
28th Infantry Battalion
AIF WW1
Born 27 Jul 1897

MULLEN, David

Service number 2678
Private
2nd Pioneer Battalion
AIF WW1
Born 1896

THURLOW, Roy Leslie

Service number 2493
Corporal
60th Infantry Battalion
AIF WW1
Born 1893

PADMAN, Eric George

Service number 2857
Lance Corporal
50th Infantry Battalion
AIF WW1
Born 9 Mar 1896

BATES, Roy Lester

Service number 3690
Corporal
4th Light Trench Mortar Battery
AIF WW1
Born 29 Apr 1892

KEHOE, Edward

Service number 3341
Corporal
6th Infantry Battalion
AIF WW1
Born Aug 1892

LEWIS, Roy Phillis

Service number 1705
Private
50th Infantry Battalion
AIF WW1
Born 20 Apr 1895

GILL, Lloyd Hassell

Service number 1747
Second Lieutenant
14th Infantry Battalion
AIF WW1

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