May 7, 2012 at 7:37 pm
Heading off to The Beaches on Thursday
If you had to choose one Normandy CWGC site, which would you visit?
Moggy
By: Foray - 9th May 2012 at 23:22
Moggy
If you make Bayeux, look up at the latin inscription on the memorial which translates (wikipedia’s version) to, “We, whom William once conquered, have now set free the conqueror’s native land”. What a profound statement and one which adds an extra dimension to the impact of those graves laid out before it.
By: Foray - 9th May 2012 at 23:22
Moggy
If you make Bayeux, look up at the latin inscription on the memorial which translates (wikipedia’s version) to, “We, whom William once conquered, have now set free the conqueror’s native land”. What a profound statement and one which adds an extra dimension to the impact of those graves laid out before it.
By: Moggy C - 9th May 2012 at 14:38
Delighted to if I ever get there!
At the moment just sitting out the weather
Moggy
By: Moggy C - 9th May 2012 at 14:38
Delighted to if I ever get there!
At the moment just sitting out the weather
Moggy
By: allan125 - 9th May 2012 at 13:50
Hi Moggy
Will you please complete this piece upon your return and give us chapter and verse on your visit.
Hope the weather is better than we are getting in Cornwall right now 🙁
Allan
By: allan125 - 9th May 2012 at 13:50
Hi Moggy
Will you please complete this piece upon your return and give us chapter and verse on your visit.
Hope the weather is better than we are getting in Cornwall right now 🙁
Allan
By: roadracer - 8th May 2012 at 23:24
Thanks Allan. That sounds like it might also be the one referred to by Roadracer above.
I have located it, well south of Bayeux, that might be a little too much of a diversion in the time available. But it will be retained. Using Google Street View it is possible to see what a beautiful site it is.
Moggy
Think thats the one okay,but cant find the photos to make sure. On that trip we visited every cemetary in or around Normandy so its hard to remember.
But I do seem to remember that there was a young lad who was under 16, lied about his age or something? Died around d-day?
Edit, just did a google search and found this;
http://www.cottontown.org/page.cfm?pageid=4341&language=eng
Remarkable courage.
By: Pilot Officer Prune - 8th May 2012 at 22:02
There’s a 16 year old buried at Ranville as well.

By: Quinny - 8th May 2012 at 21:42
Bizarrely for me, when I made the visit to Bayeux with the wife and 2 extremely boisterous 14 and 9 year old daughters 7 years ago, I have never seen kids so quiet.
Very moving even for them.
Perhaps I should have gone more often. 😀
By: |RLWP - 8th May 2012 at 20:55
Hi Richard
The saddest ones to me are the tank crews where the gravestones are joined together as they cannot distinguish the individual person.
Allan
I find those quite touching too, yet somehow right – they served together as a tight crew, died together and remain together. I seem to remember that there are aircrew buried in a similar way.
Richard
By: Arabella-Cox - 8th May 2012 at 20:09
Here are photos of the CWGC cemetries at Ranville and the small one at Jeruselem.[ATTACH]205285[/ATTACH]
Ranville cemetry and church
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memorial window Ranville church
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Jeruselem
By: robdd1 - 8th May 2012 at 19:23
For me, it’s those tiny wayside cemeteries that are the most moving. IIRC, outside Viller-Bocage is a beautifully tended cemetery with a single British officer’s grave. Clearly local people think an awful lot of him
Richard
I agree, when staying in France you come across many of these smaller cemeteries and I make a point of stopping and paying my respects.
Found a small one near houlle that was a small group of WWI headstones with a couple from May 1940.
I hang my head in shame though as there is a CWGC just down the road in Harrogate and I have yet to go, time to change that.
By: allan125 - 8th May 2012 at 13:35
Hi Richard
In cases like this you will generally find that the villagers requested that his body remains where he died instead of being “concentrated” into a larger cemetery post-war.
The saddest ones to me are the tank crews where the gravestones are joined together as they cannot distinguish the individual person.
Allan
By: Arabella-Cox - 8th May 2012 at 10:53
The Ranville cemetry was the first CWGC site I visited and the only one I went to with my father. It was a moving experience for a 12 year old to listen to his father saying “he had red hair” or “I met his fiance.” which were memories that came back when on a coach tour I revisted the cemetry several years after my father had died and realised it was the one he had taken me to.
Ranville CWGC cemetry joins on to Ranville church yard and that is where Den Brotheridge is buried rather than in the main CWGC cemetry.
By: |RLWP - 8th May 2012 at 10:51
For me, it’s those tiny wayside cemeteries that are the most moving. IIRC, outside Viller-Bocage is a beautifully tended cemetery with a single British officer’s grave. Clearly local people think an awful lot of him
Richard
By: Arabella-Cox - 8th May 2012 at 10:26
Jerusalem is the one I was thinking of. Pity you won’t have time to visit!
I am sure you will have a fascinating and worthwhile visit, wherever you go.
By: Andy in Beds - 8th May 2012 at 10:21
All I seek is the best Allied cemetery to take them to. Doesn’t have to be the biggest, it could contain somebody notable (Den Brotherton is already a possibility)
Mogs.
Sorry to be a pedant but it’s Den Brotheridge, and Ranville Churchyard is the one I’d suggest.
If you’re not moved there–you’re either dead yourself of made of asbestos.
Andy.
By: allan125 - 8th May 2012 at 08:53
Thanks Allan. That sounds like it might also be the one referred to by Roadracer above.
I have located it, well south of Bayeux, that might be a little too much of a diversion in the time available. But it will be retained. Using Google Street View it is possible to see what a beautiful site it is.
Moggy
Hi Moggy
Ranville is well worth a visit, not only for the 6th Airborne in June but for the later battles – have a family member, from a previous marriage, buried there – who was caught up in a VC battle:
Lieutenant Tasker Watkins
“On 16 August 1944 at Barfour, Normandy, France, Lieutenant Watkins’ company came under murderous machine-gun fire while advancing through corn fields set with booby traps. The only officer left, Lieutenant Watkins led a bayonet charge with his 30 remaining men against 50 enemy infantry, practically wiping them out. Finally, at dusk, separated from the rest of the battalion, he ordered his men to scatter and after he had personally charged and silenced an enemy machine-gun post, he brought them back to safety. His superb leadership not only saved his men, but decisively influenced the course of the battle.”
SHARP, AUBREY CHARLES Private 3957972 16/08/1944 30 Welch Regiment United Kingdom IX. D. 19. RANVILLE WAR CEMETERY
Allan
By: Moggy C - 8th May 2012 at 07:25
hi Moggy
Found this one in 1991 whilst visiting the ALG locations of 125 Wing, one of the smallest in the area and right beside the road – the JERUSALEM WAR CEMETERY, CHOUAIN which contains the grave of a 16 year old DLI soldier
Thanks Allan. That sounds like it might also be the one referred to by Roadracer above.
I have located it, well south of Bayeux, that might be a little too much of a diversion in the time available. But it will be retained. Using Google Street View it is possible to see what a beautiful site it is.
Moggy
By: roadracer - 8th May 2012 at 01:41
Unfortunatly there is plenty of choice.
But there was one, a very small one, cant think of its name, maybe only a couple of dozen graves? The all gave me a lump in the throat but this one even more so.
It is the last resting place of the youngest serving member of the armed forces to die in WW2.
Must have photos or details here somewhere, will get back to you asap.