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The Great War (1914-1918) Forum

Remembered Today:

Who started Le Cateau cemetery


Kathie

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Eric Dold was in the South African Infantry and was wounded in the leg at Marrieres Wood in March 1918. He was captured ( as were virtually all the SAs) and then died of wounds while a prisoner of war. he is buried at Le Cateau Cemetery. Did the Germans start the cemetery. What sort of cemeremony would have been held for a wounded/dead POW. Were the German hosptials close by - it seemed to take Eric some days to die? Was there some mechanism for informing families via UK military authorities - did the Germans liaise through the Swiss? In short, how did the capture, medical treatment, death and notification work when a POW in this particular place at that particular time. Any ideas??

Thanks.

Kathie

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Kathie

Here is the brief history of Le Cateau Military Cemetery from the CWGC site.

Le Cateau and the country to the west were the scene of the battle fought by II Corps on 26 August 1914 against a greatly superior German force. The town remained in German hands from that date until the evening of 10 October 1918, when it was rushed by the 5th Connaught Rangers, but not cleared until a week later. Le Cateau had been a German railhead and an important hospital centre, and the military cemetery was laid out in February 1916, with separate plots for the Commonwealth and German dead. It contains the graves of over 5,000 German soldiers, in part burials made during the occupation, the rest brought in from other German cemeteries after the Armistice. A separate plot contains the graves of 34 Russian prisoners of war. The Commonwealth plots contain 698 burials and commemorations of the First World War. 187 of the burials are unidentified but there are special memorials to 20 casualties known or believed to be buried among them. The majority of the graves in Plots I, III, IV and V are those of Commonwealth dead buried by the Germans, mainly from the battleground of 1914. All of the graves in Plot II, eight of which were brought in after the Armistice, date from October and November 1918. Plot III also contains two German graves. The Commonwealth plots were designed by Charles Holden.

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