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Commonwealth War Cemetery Leopoldsburg
(Belgium - Limburg - Leopoldsburg)
The British Expeditionary Force was involved in the later stages of the defence of Belgium following the German invasion in May 1940, and suffered many casualties in covering the withdrawal to Dunkirk. Commonwealth forces did not return until September 1944, but in the intervening years, many airmen were shot down or crashed in raids on strategic objectives in Belgium, or while returning from missions over Germany. There are about 35 original burials in Leopoldsburg War Cemetery associated with isolated engagements in or near the town in May 1940. Of the remainder, some are burials from a military hospital which was established at Leopoldsburg during the latter part of 1944 and others were brought into the cemetery from the surrounding district. There are now 767 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War in the cemetery, 16 of them unidentified, and a number of Polish and Dutch war graves.
Source
- Text:
- Christiaen Callens
- Photos:
- Christiaen Callens (1,2) en Fedor de Vries (3)
Address and contactinformation
- Address:
- Koning Leopold II-laan
3970 Leopoldsburg - WWII grade:
- 100%
- Rating:
- 60%
Where is it?
Nearby (help)
Museum
Point of interest
Monument
- Memorial Belgian Piron Brigade
- Plaque "Splendid" Cinema
- Memorial at the Farming Estate “Mangelschots”
Cemetery
Amongst others, the following persons are buried here (Overview)
| Name | Date of death |
|---|---|
| Harper, John William | september 29th, 1944 |
| Swales, Edwin | februari 23rd, 1945 |
Visitor reactions
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Reactions
- Sad, but very beautiful. It is evident that much work, loving care, and kindness goes into keeping this cemetery.
My search for F/O G.R.G. Kite (RCAF) has led me here - he has a beautiful and peaceful resting place. Thankyou. - By: Richard Parker
- City: Spruce Grove, Alberta, Canada
- Date and time: 11-05-2009 19:36:50
- Ranking: 5 out of 5 stars






