Commonwealth War Graves Commission
In Memory of
CHARLES JAMES ASHMAN
Bombardier
85727
154th Siege Bty., Royal Garrison Artillery
who died on
Friday, 22nd February 1918. Age 30.
| Additional Information:
|
Son of Charles and Elizabeth Ashman,
of Six Mile Bottom, Newmarket; husband of A. L. Ashman, of 12,
Chetwode Rd., Upper Tooting, London. |
Commemorative Information
| Cemetery: |
ETAPLES MILITARY CEMETERY, Pas de Calais,
France |
Grave Reference/
Panel Number: |
XXXI. G. 32.
|
| Location: |
Etaples is a town about 27 kilometres
south of Boulogne. The Military Cemetery is to the north of the
town, on the west side of the road to Boulogne.
|
| Historical Information:
|
During the 1914-18 war, the neighbourhood
of the Cemetery became the scene of immense concentrations of
British reinforcement camps and of British hospitals. It was remote
from attack, except from aircraft, and it was accessible by railway
from either the northern or the southern battlefields. In 1917,
100,000 troops were camped among the sand dunes, and the hospitals
(which included eleven General, one Stationary and four Red Cross
Hospitals and a Convalescent Depot) could deal with 22,000 wounded
or sick. In September 1919, ten months after the Armistice, three
hospitals and the Q.M.A.A.C. Convalescent Depot remained. The
earliest burial in the Cemetery dates from May 1915. There are
now nearly 11,000, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this
site and over 100 from the 1939-45 War. The cemetery covers an
area of 59,049 square metres. The graves lie below three terraces,
the midmost of which carries the War Stone and two pylons, and
the highest is dominated by the Cross. |
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