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| General Forum for general World War 2 talk. Anything about WW2 that doesn't fit in any other category |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 100
![]() ![]() | Somewhat unrelated to the topic but also along the same lines as Sappers post, due to the fluid nature of warfare and terrain often changing hands quite frequently, quite often men are buried hastily, somtimes alone, sometimes in mass graves, sometimes by civilians, and sometimes by the enemy. Their locations are never recorded, or recorded poorly, thus many are determined as MIA. It seems every few years the body of American soldiers in particular are being found in areas such as the Hurtgen Forest or the Ardennes. Google "Robert Cahow" for a recent example of this. |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| WW2 Veteran ![]() Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,512
![]() ![]() ![]() | Hi Robert..... Hope you are well mate. The thing about these missing in action casualties, is that it matters little, if we keep their memory alive. That I try to do at every opportunity, and will continue to as long as I am around. I have personal knowledge of men being blown away completely. I had been talking to them seconds before it happened. They were fine men, Two Sappers in the hand to hand battle of the "Bloodiest Square Mile in Normandy" The Chateau de la Londe vanished, and were never found. Sapper |
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| | #14 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 634
![]() ![]() | Quote:
No 428 (RCAF) Squadron Association might be able to help in addition to what is recorded in the ORB (Chorley) Write to Mr A J R Robson, 7, Camberley Close, Hucclecote, Gloucester.GL3 3PQ. There is also the Middleton St George Memorial Association Reading through the post, I feel that the four crew were intially buried by the German authorities as unidentified.Had their remains been identified but "lost" from when they were intially buried to when they were transferred to Hanover, then at one of the two Hanover military cemeteries would be a "special memorial" to them.The British Government would have been aware of these facts. If the crew were identified at initial burial then their names would have been known to the British Government via Switzerland who were acting as the Protecting Power.However some of this information, both unidentified and identified casuaties was not ascertained until after the war when RAF field teams sought to account for every casualty. There is also another source of information which may require deeper research.The German local authorities were meticulous in the maintance of records such as burials etc.Given that, I would say that within the "catchment area" for the concentrated burials for Hanover will lie the administrative area where the four airman were intially buried. I can see why the CWGC is reluctant to give information since an "unidentified casualty" does not have a NOK.But I cannot see why the information on the site of the initial burial is regarded as sensitive to any bona fide researcher.Had seven sets of remains been established from the aircraft then there is a possibiliy that the crew would have shared a common grave and the seven individuals would have been named on a common tombstone. For example in the case of an SOE duty aircraft which I was researching,the total number of remains were found and that included two French secret agents.The whole crew and the two French secret agents share a common tombstone but have individual small plaques covering the grave.Had the sets of remans been less than the known number on the aircraft (from the Squadron ORB then without postive identification they would have been categorised as "unknowns".I am speaking off the cuff on this but have a photograph to illustrate my point but this is not to hand (before the days of the "digital") Good luck with you research. Last edited by Harry Ree; 14-03-2008 at 12:50 PM. | |
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: Essex
Posts: 389
![]() ![]() | I think you will find the Freedom of Information Act does not cover the CWGC as it is not a publi body, such as a council etc, however they could argue that as they have records obtained from official government sources (army etc) then they do come under it. As for the DPA I will have to look it up and see where and which of the eight principles they feel they might be breaching! Good luck Andy
__________________ In proud memory of Lieutenant James Henry Woods 1st Airlanding Light Regiment Killed in Action at Oosterbeek Arnhem 25th September 1944 Lieutenant William Stewart Donaldson 156th Battalion, Parachute Regiment Killed in Action at Oosterbeek Arnhem 21st September 1944 Sergeant John Burge Glider Pilot Regiment Killed in Action at Oosterbeek Arnhem 25th-26th September 1944 Corporal John Walter Bentley 12th Battalion, Parachute Regiment Killed in Action on the Rhine 24th March 1945 LEST WE FORGET 'They are free-yes-but not entirely free; for they have a master, and that master is Law, which they fear much more than your subjects fear you. Whatever this master commands, they do; and his command never varies: it is never to retreat in battle, however great the odds, but always to stand firm, and to conquer or die' (from The Peloponesian War?- Herodotus 490-425BC ) |
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| | #18 (permalink) |
| Junior Member ![]() Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Kingston upon Hull
Posts: 25
![]() | Thanks to all who have contibuted so far for your comments. To add to a couple of the points: I totally agree if someone is thinking of these men and women then they will never be forgotton. I have been doing my family history for nigh on 20 years and it has always been my aim that non of my ancestors be forgotten. So with people like the members of this and many other forums " Long shall they live". It makes alot of sense that if all 7 crew had been found, the grave may have named them, this is a point i had not considered and is worth bearing in mind. my German contact is in the process of rechecking his notes and checking out official records/witnesses. As i stated it may be that the other 3 have been lost without trace or are still in the aircraft. I can imaging how far an aircraft can bury itself falling from 15,000ft. but my point still remains that i see no reason why the original burial place is a state secret. Nick |
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