Hagle Dump Cemetery

History Information (Source: CWGC)

Elverdinge was behind the Allied front line throughout the war, and Hospital Farm and Ferme-Olivier Cemeteries, both in the commune, were used in the earlier years for Commonwealth burials. The cemetery, which was begun in April 1918, during the Battles of Lys, was named after a nearby stores dump. It was used by fighting units and field ambulances until the following October and was enlarged after the Armistice when more than 200 graves were brought into Plots III and IV from the battlefields of the Ypres Salient and the following cemetery:- BRIELEN MILITARY CEMETERY, which was close to the South side of Brielen village, contained the graves of 31 French soldiers, 16 from the United Kingdom and four Canadian, and was used from April 1915 to September 1917. The graves of 26 American soldiers, who fell in July-September 1918, and two French soldiers were removed to other burials grounds.

 

Hagle Dump Cemetery contains 437 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, 139 of which are unidentified. The cemetery was designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield.

 

Served with

·         United Kingdom (282)

·         Australian (11)

·         Canadian (7)

·         German (2)

Served in

·         Army (299)

·         Air Force (3)

 

Hagle Dump
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