Aldershot Military Cemetery
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Aldershot Military Cemetery, is a burial ground for Military personal, or ex military personnel. Located in Aldershot Military Town, Hampshire. The Cemetery is also open for the internment of wives and families of all ranks, and for some civilians who have spent their life with the army.
The Cemetery, which lies between Thorn Hill and Peaked Hill, and is bordered to the south by Ordnance Road. Entrance from Gallwey Road, near where the old time-gun stood.
Unlike any other military cemetery in the united kingdom, for not only is it set on hills and small valleys in natural surrounds, but here, at rest, lie fighting men of nine nations, who have served and died in Aldershot.
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[edit] Early history
The Cemetery was first enclosed in 1856. and although a number of soldiers were buried on the site prior to that year, Soldiers and their families were interned in the churchyard of the village parish church of St Michel's prior to then.
In 1870 the cemetery became the responsibility of the senior R. E. (Royal Engineers) Officer in "The Camp." the Protestant portion of the cemetery was consecrated by Samuel Wilberforce, the then bishop of Winchester on the 1st of November 1870.
The Mortuary Chapel was built in 1879 on newly acquired ground that had been used as a signal post, to replace a wooden chapel built lower down the slope, at the time the cemetery was opened.
[edit] Present Day
The graves are set in beautifully tendered steep rolling grounds of 15 acres, traversed by many tarmacadam paths. The area is well wooded with oaks, pines, firs and chestnut trees, interspersed with Yew topiary and Rhododendrons.
Some parts are of bracken and heather, that are typical of the Aldershot countryside nearby, and possibly this was how this land was in the days before "The Camp" was built and before the cemetery was opened in 1865. The graves themselves are mostly set amid the fine textured close-cut turf. The cemetery being bordered as a whole, by holly hedging. The Most western part of the grounds, where some of the earliest headstones are to be found, has been intentionally allowed to become overgrown. The loftier parts of the ground offer pleasant views of the Surrey heathlands, that form some of the nearby Army training grounds.
Here, in surroundings familiar during their soldering days are the graves of the fighting men of all ranks and many nations, who have served, lived and died in Aldershot. Some of service personnel having passed away in the nearby Cambridge Military Hospital, from wounds or disease contracted while on active service overseas.
[edit] Notable graves
- Samuel Cody, the early pioneer of manned flight, and often said - incorecty, to be the only civilian grave in the cemetery.
- Keith Lucas, British scientist, who died in an aircraft collision in the First World War
- Michael Murphy (VC). Irish born recipient of the Victoria Cross. He was one of only eight men who forfeited their Victoria Crosses.
- Field Marshal Sir Henry Evelyn Wood VC GCB GCMG. Recipient of the Victoria Cross, awarded for his part in putting down the Sinwaho & Sindhora Indian Mutiny of 19 October 1858
- The headstone of Major William Davidson Bissett VC. posthumous recipient of the Victoria Cross in the latter part of the First World War. He was cremated in Pentyrebychan Crematorium, Wrexham .
- Sergeant Ian John McKay VC who died at Mt Longdon, East Falklands, an important objective in the battle for Stanley in the Falkland Islands.
[edit] External links
- Rushmoor Borough Council
- Grave Location for Holders of the Victoria Cross in the County of Hampshire
- The British War Memorial Project
[edit] Sources
- The Story of Aldershot (a history and Guide to town and camp), Cole, Ltnt Col Howard N, OBE TD, 1951, Gale & Polden