Krakow Rakowicki Cemetery

Discussion in 'War Grave Photographs' started by englandphil, Sep 27, 2009.

  1. Owen

    Owen -- --- -.. MOD

  2. Buteman

    Buteman 336/102 LAA Regiment (7 Lincolns), RA

    Ah Ha. So I was not going mad.

    Rather disrespectful of CWGC to do that.

    Thanks Owen.
     
  3. JHind

    JHind Junior Member

    HOPKINS, CHARLES FREDERICK

    This was my grandfather. They men died by a stray American bomb as they sheltered in a concrete bunker. Most died of major head wounds (taken from an account:- Stalag 344 and Stalag 344 and Stalag 344). My grandmother received compensation from the US Airforce.
     
  4. Tullybrone

    Tullybrone Senior Member

    Hi,

    I'm a relatively new member and have just dropped on this thread whilst surfing the site......

    My mothers cousin Guardsman 2695279 Patrick Francis Devlin (1917-1974), Scots Guards (1935/46), was a POW at Lamsdorf 1940/1945 having been wounded in action and captured at Mo I Rana, Norway 17/18th May 1940 as part of 1st Scots Guards rearguard action. POW number 34910 I think.

    I have about 8 or 9 photographs of his showing a large POW military funeral which I assume was at Lamsdorf. The coffins are covered in various national flags - British/French/Dutch. There is a German army band and loads of German senior officers on view. Season wise it looks like autumn/winter.

    Having read this article I was wondering if it relates to the same incident? Were other nationalities killed?

    Is anyone aware of any other large deaths of personnel at Lamsdorf?

    I don't have access to the photo's today but I will try and upload them to this thread next Monday.

    Diane - Or should I create a new thread re the photo's?

    Steve Y.
     
  5. dbf

    dbf Moderatrix MOD

    Steve, ref the photos, you can certainly upload them here on this thread - maybe ascertain relevance and the mods would take it from there if deserving of a separate thread - and you could also start a thread with what you know about your mother's cousin under Scots gds :) http://www.ww2talk.com/forum/scots-guards/
     
  6. Tullybrone

    Tullybrone Senior Member

    Hi,

    I wil try and upload the photo's I mentioned on Friday. They originated with Guardsman 2695279 Patrick Francis Devlin, Left Flank Company, 1st Scots Guards who was wounded in action and captured at Mo I Rana, Norway 17th May 1940 and was POW at Lamsdorf.

    Hope someone out there can interpret them and perhaps confirm when/where they were taken.

    Appears to be a formal event as there are German stills/film cameramen in some of the shots.

    Hope I have done the IT OK?

    Steve Y.
     

    Attached Files:

  7. donohue100

    donohue100 Junior Member

    England Phil, could you do me a favour, it says michael grant headstone but the image is incorrect and is a different person from Durham light infantry any chance you still have the photo of Michael Grants headstone.
     
  8. Mr Jinks

    Mr Jinks Bit of a Cad

    Pte Grant
    [​IMG]

    Kyle
     
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  9. donohue100

    donohue100 Junior Member

    Thanks very much, much appreciated.
     
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  10. Paul, thanks for your help on this and thanks to Mr Jinks for posting the correct headstone.
     
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  11. Mr C Smith

    Mr C Smith New Member

    That's my great grandfather. My grandfather, his son and your uncle, went to visit his headstone in Poland a few years ago. Here is a photo
     

    Attached Files:

    ecalpald likes this.
  12. John West

    John West Active Member

    Although this is an old post- apologies- only just come across it- I have told the back-story of Guardsman David Blythin's death in 1943 at the hands of the E72 Camp Commandant Unterfeldwebel Englekircher in this website dedicated to the 140th Regiment RA. Captivity- Stalag VIIIB and E72, 1940-45 – 140th (5th London) Army Field Regiment, Royal Artillery
    It was investigated as a war crime post war, but Englekircher was never found to face justice.
     

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