Cambes-en-Plaine War Cemetery explained

Cambes-en-Plaine War Cemetery
Body:Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Commemorates:Operation Overlord
Use Dates:1944
Established:1944
Designer:Philip D. Hepworth
Coordinates:49.2362°N -0.3855°W
Nearest Town:Cambes-en-Plaine, Calvados, France
Total:224
Unknowns:1
By Country:United Kingdom

224

By War:World War II

Cambes-en-Plaine War Cemetery is a Second World War cemetery of Commonwealth soldiers in France, located seven km northwest of Caen, Normandy. The cemetery contains 224 graves of which one is unidentified.[1]

History

Following the Allied landings on D-Day, elements of the East Riding Yeomanry, supporting the British 3rd Infantry Division pushed through to the northern outskirts of Cambes-en-Plaine on 9 June 1944. A defensive German line here stopped the advance on Caen. A large number of burials date to between the 8 and 12 July 1944, during Operation Charnwood, the final attack on Caen. Over half of the burials in the graveyard are from soldiers in the 59th (Staffordshire) Infantry Division.

Location

The cemetery is located in the commune of Cambes-en-Plaine, in the Calvados department of Normandy, on the Rue du Mesnil Ricard (D.79B).

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cambes-En-Plaine War Cemetery | Cemetery Details | CWGC.