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Welcome to the Ypres Salient
This site presents the story of the First World War in the West Flanders region. The various categories provide a wealth of information about a range of subjects.
The Roll of Honour category is where you will find the details of all the men from Falkirk District who are buried or commemorated in the Immortal Salient.
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Somer Farm Cemetery
Somer Farm Cemetery. Authors image Wytschaete (now Wijtschate) was taken by the Germans early in November 1914. It was recovered by...
Jun 5, 20212 min read


Seaforth Cemetery, Cheddar Villa
Cheddar Villa was the name given by the Army to a farm on the west side of the road from Wieltje to St. Julien. On 25 and 26 April 1915,...
Jun 5, 20213 min read


Sanctuary Wood Cemetery
Sanctuary Wood is one of the larger woods in the commune of Zillebeke. It was named in November 1914, when it was used to screen troops...
Jun 5, 20218 min read


Ruisseau Farm Cemetery
Ruisseau Farm was taken during August 1917. The cemetery was begun by the Guards Division burial officer in October 1917. Later burials...
May 31, 20212 min read


Rifle House Cemetery
Rifle House Cemetery, CWGC, Ploegsteert, was named from a strong point, of which no trace now exists. Deep in the heart of the Ploegsteert Wood with its tall tree surround Rifle House cemetery is one of the loveliest in the Salient. Rifle House was a wooden hut constructed by the 1st Battalion, Rifle Brigade as their headquarters. The earliest graves are those of the 1st Battalion Rifle Brigade in Plot IV, Rows E to J, beginning in November 1914.
May 30, 20216 min read


Ridge Wood Military Cemetery
Ridge Wood was the name given to a wood standing on high ground between the Kemmel road and Dickebusch Lake. The Ridge Wood Military Cemetery lies in a hollow on the western side of the ridge and the position was chosen for a front line cemetery as early as May 1915. The first graves were from the 2nd Royal Irish Rifles and similar groups were made by the 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st Canadian Battalions and the 9th Durham Light Infantry at the times when they occupied this secto
May 27, 20212 min read


Railway Dugouts Burial Ground (Transport Farm)
Railway Dugouts Burial Ground (Transport Farm), CWGC, Zillebeke, Ypres, is 2 Kms west of Zillebeke village, where the railway runs on an embankment overlooking a small farmstead, which was known to the troops as Transport Farm. It is an unplanned cemetery and this reflects the nature of its use during the War. The site of the cemetery was screened by slightly rising ground to the east, and burials began there in April 1915. They continued until the Armistice, especially in 19
May 24, 20219 min read


Prowse Point Military Cemetery
Prowse Point Military Cemetery, CWGC, Ploegsteert, Ypres, is unique in the Ypres Salient for being named after an individual. The Prowse Point Military Cemetery was begun by the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers, 19th Brigade, 4th Division and the 1st Royal Warwickshires, 10th Brigade, 4th Division and was used from November 1914 to April 1918. There are two men from Falkirk District buried here. The Prowse Point Military Cemetery, and the line along the eastern edge of the wood, ma
May 21, 20215 min read


Potijze Chateau Wood Cemetery
For information about the fighting here see the entry for Potijze Chateau Grounds Cemetery. The old chateau grounds at Potijze are the...
May 13, 20211 min read


Potijze Chateau Grounds Cemetery
The old chateau grounds at Potijze are the site of three Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemeteries containing over 850 Commonwealth...
May 13, 20214 min read


Poperinghe New Military Cemetery
The Poperinghe New Military Cemetery, CWGC, was established by the French at the end of April 1915 and in June 1915 it was taken over by the British and is located 200 yards down the road opposite the site of the old Chateau Elizabeth. Between July 1915 and March 1916, eight Belgians, all serving in the 7th Belgian Field Artillery Regiment were buried here.
May 12, 202112 min read


Poperinghe Old Military Cemetery
The town of Poperinghe (now Poperinge) was of great importance during the First World War because, although occasionally bombed or...
May 6, 20217 min read


Poelcapelle British Cemetery
Poelcapelle (now Poelkapelle) was taken by the Germans from the French on 20 October 1914, entered by the 11th Division on 4 October...
Apr 26, 20213 min read


Ploegsteert Wood Military Cemetery
Ploegsteert Wood Military Cemetery, CWGC, Ypres, was made by the enclosure of a number of small regimental cemeteries. Plot II was originally the SOMERSET LIGHT INFANTRY CEMETERY, made by the 1st Battalion in December 1914. The 32 graves it contains, as well as ten in Plot I, are from that battalion. Plot IV, the BUCKS CEMETERY, was made by the 1st/1st Buckinghamshire Battalion, Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry, in April 1915 and 11 of the 20 graves it contains are from that b
Apr 24, 20216 min read


Perth Cemetery (China Wall)
The cemetery was begun by French troops in November 1914 (the French graves were removed after the Armistice) and adopted by the 2nd...
Apr 21, 20218 min read


Oxford Road Cemetery
Oxford Road was the name given to a road running behind the support trenches, from a point west of the village of Wieltje south-eastwards...
Apr 19, 20213 min read


No Man's Cottage Cemetery
No Man's Cottage Cemetery, CWGC, Ypres, was named from a building on the south side of Admiral's Road, a little more than halfway from Boesinghe to Wieltje. It was used from the end of July 1917 to March 1918. On the 19 December 1915, the Germans attacked the trenches held here by the 1/6th Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment, 146th Brigade, 49th (West Riding) Division. They used phosgene gas for the first time with so much gas being released that it left crystals on the groun
Apr 19, 20212 min read


Nine Elms British Cemetery
There are six men from Falkirk District buried here The cemetery was begun and used by the 3rd Australian and 44th Casualty Clearing...
Apr 19, 20217 min read


New Irish Farm Cemetery
New Irish Farm Cemetery was first used from August to November 1917 and was named after a nearby farm, known to the troops as 'Irish...
Apr 16, 20217 min read


Menin Road South Military Cemetery
Menin Road South Military Cemetery. Authors image The Menin Road ran east and a little south from Ypres (now Ieper) to a front line...
Apr 14, 20214 min read

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