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Fallen Christ at Croisilles Cemetery

A photograph from the devastated cemetery at Croisilles.

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CONTRIBUTOR

Jens Darup

DATE

/

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

1

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Creator

europeana19141918:agent/6f99cd5356096796294b17c200bb75a0

Source

UGC

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/a0dadf0d4bd9625da46ee577b8304e7c

Date

1916
1818

Type

Photograph

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

Year

1916
1818

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1916

End

1818

Language

mul

Agent

Gottfried Darup | europeana19141918:agent/6f99cd5356096796294b17c200bb75a0
Jens Darup | europeana19141918:agent/a0dadf0d4bd9625da46ee577b8304e7c

Created

2019-09-11T08:19:39.260Z
2020-02-25T08:15:35.890Z
2014-04-03 08:08:31 UTC

Provenance

INTERNET

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_14812_attachments_152079

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Finding Grandfather’s grave in France at Croisilles British Cemetery

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My maternal grandfather, Michael Gregory, served in France, and was a member of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. He was killed in 1917 in the Cambrai Offensive, where he had fought for a whole year. Michael was married to Julia Bradshaw and they had three daughters. They lived in Dublin. A stonemason by profession, he had joined the army in defence of small nations. Michael is buried in Croisilles British Cemetery in Northern France. I visited the cemetery recently when a colleague looked him up on my behalf. I was very moved by the experience. || Greeting cards, embroidered

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Etaples Military Cemetery

16 Items

Photographs of graves and scenes in Etaples military cemetery. || The contributor visited the Etaples Military Cemetery in 2012 on a school trip. Etaples is the largest Commonwealth war cemetery in France. On a school trip to Hardelot earlier this year we visited Etaples military cemetery. We arrived by coach and were greeted by a massive expanse of perfectly white graves. As we were being shown around that area of France by PGL we were given a quick overview of what Etaples was, for those who did not already know. They then explained how we should go about looking for ancestors' graves if there were any. We were then sent off to do anything we wished throughout the cemetery. We had about half an hour to do so. I noticed a large group of students (either A-level or University) being lectured about Etaples. I only overheard the last minute of the lecture in which he mentioned that the graves were positioned with officers surrounding the lesser ranks, for example private, corporal, sergeant. He explained that this was a division of class and power, but I didn't understand the rest. Many of the members of my school party, when looking around, became very emotional, some even bursting into tears, whereas, I, on the other hand, was completely unaffected emotionally by the graves and was more interested in taking photos of graves with different ranks, divisions and countries, (they all had different regimental badges and inscriptions on them). Sadly I only had a poor quality disposable camera which didn't allow for very good photos which became over-exposed in most photos but most of the names, regimental badges and signs of religion are legible. The graves photographed include: Christian; England; Hinds; Chappell; Goldberg; Benjamin; Donohoe; Richards; Reed; Alcock; Harman; Marshall; Wright; Silcock; Gent; Lehfeldt.

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