redcoat -> RE: Mapping the dead (11/7/2018 12:32:22 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: loki100 The map below was made in 1919 by the teams who were starting to recover all the abandoned dead along the trench lines on the Western Front. Each small grid is 250m by 250m and the number is the bodies that were recovered at that stage. So it ignores those that had been removed earlier and those that couldn't be found or recovered: [image]local://upfiles/43256/62EEF147BCB540BD978B3069C940A0E6.jpg[/image] edit: should have said, its a portion of the area dominated by the 1916 Battle of the Somme The bodies of the fallen from the Great War are still being found. Three unknown soldiers – one from the Lancashire Fusiliers and two Australian -were laid to rest at Tyne Cot Cemetery, near Ypres, Belgium, with full military honours yesterday. To the sound of bagpipes playing Going Home, a lament for fallen soldiers, the three coffins draped in national flags were carried by soldiers from First Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, and members of the combined Australian armed forces. Tyne Cot Cemetery on the Commonweath War Graves Commission website: https://www.cwgc.org/find/find-cemeteries-and-memorials/53300/tyne-cot-cemetery
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