The Dunkirk Memorial is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission memorial to the missing that commemorates 4,505 missing dead of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), most of whom fell prior to and during the Battle of Dunkirk in 1939 and 1940, in the fall of France during the Second World War.
Located in the town cemetery of Dunkirk, France, the design by Commission architect Philip Hepworth features memorial panels, a shrine in the form of a shelter, and an engraved glass pane by John Hutton. Those commemorated include soldiers lost on ships sunk during the evacuation, as well as a recipient of the Victoria Cross.
The memorial was completed some 17 years after the events it marks. It was unveiled by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother in 1957, in front of visiting dignitaries, and hundreds of veterans and relatives of those who died. Later commemorations held here include the 75th anniversary in 2015. (Wikipedia)
- Names on this memorial
- Photographs
- James Bates
- George William Thomas Brealey
- James William Brothwell
- Frederick Butler
- Roy Clark
- George Edward Clarke
- Wilfred Clarke
- Albert Clay
- William Crockett
- Robert Crudgington
- William Arthur Day
- George Dean
- William Kenneth Don
- George Thomas Feveryear
- George Footitt
- Hugh Stanley Hancock
- Mark Hargreaves
- Thomas Harrison
- Frederick Hartshorn
- Reginald George Hollis
- Fred Hulme
- Charles Ince
- Harold Edward Johnson
- James John Jones
- Stanley Jones
- William Jones
- Ronald Kirkby
- William Edward Lea
- Francis George Lea
- Jack Leverton
- George William Litchfield
- John Marston
- Alfred Miller
- Kenneth William Newcombe
- George Henry Peat
- Joseph Harry Preston
- Frank Robinson
- Raymond Arnold Salloway
- Joseph Lambley Saxton
- Charles Albert Sear
- Cornelius Searson
- Clarence Skinner
- George Edward Smith
- Henry Radford Spencer
- Roy Spendlove
- William Tapp
- James Edward Turner
- Thomas Dennis Voce
- John Wain
- Arthur Ivor Walters
- Joseph White
- William Eric Whittaker
- Cyril Wyatt