Puneet Varma (Editor)

R.E. Farm Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery

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Established
  
1914

Total burials
  
179

Designer
  
Wilfred Clement Von Berg

Address
  
8953 Heuvelland, Belgium

Unknown burials
  
11

R.E. Farm Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery

Location
  
near Wytschaete, Heuvelland, Belgium

Designed by
  
Wilfred Clement Von Berg

Similar
  
French Cemetery & Ossuar, Bayernw, Pool of Peace, Ration Farm (La Plus Dou, Vleesdisc Rijselpoort

R.E. Farm Cemetery is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) burial ground for the dead of the First World War located in the Ypres Salient on the Western Front in Belgium.

The cemetery grounds were assigned to the United Kingdom in perpetuity by King Albert I of Belgium in recognition of the sacrifices made by the British Empire in the defence and liberation of Belgium during the war.

Foundation

The area around R.E. Farm Cemetery was much fought over during the Great War. The invading German armies took Wytschaete on 1 November 1914; it was retaken in June 1917 but lost during the Spring Offensive in April 1918; the Allies finally retook the area in September 1918 as the fighting swept out of the Salient with the crumbling of German forces in the face of the Hundred Days Offensive. The site of the cemetery itself remained in Allied hands until the Spring Offensive. The site originally held a farm building, known officially as Ferme des douze Bonniers. British troops called this R.E. Farm.

The cemetery was established by the 1st Dorsets in December 1914. A second cemetery was established nearby, also by the Dorsets, which was concentrated into R.E. Farm Cemetery after the Armistice.

The cemetery was designed by WC Von Berg.

References

R.E. Farm Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery Wikipedia