Casualty Details
| Name: | BRADSHAW, SAMUEL |
|---|---|
| Initials: | S |
| Nationality: | United Kingdom |
| Rank: | Private |
| Regiment/Service: | Cheshire Regiment |
| Unit Text: | 1st Bn. |
| Date of Death: | 05/10/1917 |
| Service No: | 35353 |
| Casualty Type: | Commonwealth War Dead |
| Grave/Memorial Reference: | Panel 61 to 63. |
| Memorial: | TYNE COT MEMORIAL |
Certificate
|
Private SAMUEL BRADSHAW 35353, 1st Bn., Cheshire Regiment who died on 05 October 1917 Remembered with honour TYNE COT MEMORIAL
|
As the fighting moved towards Passchendaele village, the pillboxes were
used as advanced dressing stations, and it was around these that the
original battlefield cemetery of 300 burials grew. Tyne Cot lies less than
1 kilometre from Passchendaele and it took the Allies another month to
cover the distance. The site grew steadily in the 1920's as small
battlefield cemeteries were closed down and the burials moved here, and as
bodies were recovered from the battlefields as they were cleared. This
latter point explains the unusually high proportion of unidentified
burials.
Tyne Cot Memorial, Zonnebeke, Near Ypres, West Vlaanderen, Belgium
The name is said to have been given
by men of the Northumbrian Fusiliers who fought here in 1917, who saw a
similarity between a nearby ruined barn and cottages in Tyneside. A
cluster of five German pillboxes stood here - just below the crest of the
Passchendaele ridge. Immediately in front of the pillboxes was a low lying
area that contained some of the worst and deepest mud in the Saiient. The
position fell to Australian troops on 4th October 1917.
Today Tyne Cot is the biggest
British military cemetery in the world, with 11,956 burials. The panels in
the back wall hold the names of 34,888 missing. The two forward (fighting)
pillboxes can be seen to the left and right of the entrance. The central
(command) box was incorporated into the Cross of Sacrifice, at the
suggestion of King George V who visited the site in 1992. The two rear
(rest) boxes form the foundations of classical pavilions on either side of
the rear wall. The original burials are the less regularly arranged rows
above the Cross of Sacrifice. The cemetery was designed by Sir Herbert
Baker.
Tyne Cot is located north of Zonnebeke (No.1)
Tyne Cot Memorial Wall to the Missing
Cheshire Regiment Panel
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