Showing posts with label Tonbridge Cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tonbridge Cemetery. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Tea Room Opening Soon



For those of you who shop at the butcher and baker at York Parade there will soon be a new tea room for you to enjoy. Michelle who ran the florist on the corner of Tonbridge cemetery and Shipbourne Road has moved the business to the North End of the town, and has decided a place to stop off and relax will benefit those who come to shop at the parade. 



Michelle plans to offer cakes and goodies that are sourced locally which can only be good news, and she's really enthusiastic about the future venture.

Personally I'm looking forward to visiting - I'm sure this will become a little local gem.


Friday, 9 November 2012

Tonbridge Military Graves


Foreign Military Graves

On Remembrance Sunday last year I visited the military war graves at Tonbridge Cemetery. The grass had been freshly mown, and a single poppy tribute placed at the foot of each memorial where British, German and Italian soldiers lay at rest, side by side.  Each inscribed stone stood in silent and peaceful dignity in the low November sunshine. 

I first visited this quiet place with my German mother who made sure someone remembered these fallen soldiers each year.  She affectionally called them 'Die Einsamen Jungen', the Lonely Boys, as she was convinced there would be nobody to visit these young men, all who had been laid to rest so far from their homes and families.

Heinrich Bischoff - German Grenadier- aged 27 years

Equally poignant is the row of twelve memorials to local men who were never to return to their loved ones ... lost to graves on foreign soil.  Amongst them an inscription to 'Husband and Father', a local man, Alfred Edward Barnes of the Royal Artillery who died a POW, at the young age of 34, buried in Kanchanaburi, Siam, and another to a 'Dear Son', Peter Terry, pilot in the RAF interred at Bari, Italy whose parents at least had a tribute to their son who didn't come home to them.

Other burial places of fallen local boys and men inscribed on the lines of memorial stones are the Cassino Military Cemetery, and Assisi in Italy.  Dreiborn and Dusseldorf in Germany. Also mentioned are four service men lost at sea, and two young soldiers whose resting place became the foreign soil of France ... one of whom was 22 year old Gerald Alfred Bathurst, a Tank Wireless Operator, killed in action in Normandy.

Every name represents a family torn apart, fatherless children, a mother's son, a wife's husband, or lover never to return home.

On Sunday I will carry on my mother's tradition, and take a stroll through the headstones at Tonbridge Cemetery to remember those she called the 'Die Einsamen Jungen' ...  the Lonely Boys



English Military Memorials for Servicemen buried abroad

Friday, 30 March 2012

Tonbridge Daily Snippet

Tonbridge cemetery was opened and consecrated by the Archbishop of Canterbury on August 17th in 1857 

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Tonbridge Cemetery War Graves

Foreign Military Graves

On Remembrance Sunday I visited the war graves at Tonbridge Cemetery. The grass had been freshly mown, and a single poppy tribute had been placed at the foot of each memorial where British, German and Italian soldiers lay in rest side by side.  Each inscribed stone stood in silent and peaceful dignity in the sunshine. 

I first visited this quiet place with my German mother who made sure someone remembered these fallen soldiers each year.  She affectionally called them the 'Lonely Boys' as she was convinced nobody else would visit these young men who had been laid to rest so far from their home and families.

Heinrich Bischoff - German Grenadier- aged 27 years

Equally poignant is the row of twelve memorials to local men who are buried in graves on foreign soil.  Amongst them an inscription to 'Husband and Father', Alfred Edward Barnes of the Royal Artillery who died a POW, aged 34, buried in Kanchanaburi, Siam, and 'Dear Son', Peter Terry, pilot in the RAF interred at Bari, Italy.

Other burial places are Cassino Military Cemetery and Assisi Italy, Dreiborn and Dusseldorf in Germany, four service men lost at sea and two in France including Gerald Alfred Bathurst, a Tank Wireless Operator who was killed in action in Normandy, aged 22.

Every name represents a family torn apart, fatherless children, a mother's son, a wife's husband, or lover never to return home.

English Military Memorials for Servicemen buried abroad