Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery Explained

Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery
Body:Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Commemorates:soldiers who were killed during World War II
Established:February 1945
Coordinates:51.7978°N 5.9308°W
Nearest Town:Groesbeek, Netherlands
Unveiled:4 November 1946
Total:2,619
Unknowns:20
By Country:Allied Forces
By War:World War II

2,617

Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery and Memorial (French:Le Cimetière de Guerre Canadien Groesbeek, Dutch:Canadese Oorlogsbegraafplaats Groesbeek) is a Second World War Commonwealth War Graves Commission military war grave cemetery, located in the village of Groesbeek, 8km (05miles) southeast of Nijmegen in the Netherlands. Of the total 2,619 burials, the cemetery contains 2,338 Canadian soldiers. It was built to a design by Commission architect Philip Hepworth.

History

The cemetery is unique in that many of the dead were brought here from nearby Germany. It is one of the few cases where bodies were moved across international frontiers. It is believed that all fallen Canadian soldiers of the Rhineland battles, who were buried in German battlefields, were re-interred here (except for one who is buried in Reichswald Forest War Cemetery).[1] General Crerar, who commanded Canadian land forces in Europe, ordered that Canadian dead were not to be buried in German soil.

The cemetery also has a Cross of Sacrifice within it.[2]

Thousands of Dutch children tend the graves of the soldiers buried here as they do throughout the Netherlands.

Commemoration

Within the cemetery stands the Groesbeek Memorial, which commemorates members of the Commonwealth land forces who died during the campaign in north-west Europe between the time of crossing the Seine River at the end of August 1944 and the end of the war in Europe. There are 1,016 names on the memorial; although since the date of completion of the name-panels, graves have been found for four men commemorated by it. The Bayeux Memorial in Normandy, France honours 103 Canadian servicemen and women.[3]

The memorial consists of twin colonnaded buildings which face each other across the grass forecourt of the cemetery, between the entrance and the "Stone of Remembrance." The names of the men whose graves are unknown are inscribed in panels of Portland stone built into the rear walls.

International Four Days Marches Nijmegen

On the third day of the International Four Days Marches Nijmegen, the route leads along the Canadian military cemetery, and the military participants commemorate their colleagues from the Second World War during an impressive ceremonial gathering.

Notable graves

Nearby Commonwealth War Graves

External links

Notes and References

  1. see Commonwealth War Graves Commission
  2. Web site: 'File:Cross of Sacrifice.jpg' . 26 July 2008 . wikimedia.org. 18 March 2013.
  3. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/monuments-of-the-first-and-second-world-wars Canadian Encyclopedia: Monuments, World Wars I and II
  4. https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/detail/2662995 Canadian Virtual War Memorial
  5. https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/2658753 Commonwealth War Graves Commission
  6. WO 373/67 Pt.2 and London Gazette dated 10 July 1942
  7. Web site: Squadron Leader William Thomas Klersy . Canadian Virtual War Memorial . 20 February 2019 . 4 May 2023.