THE PROJECT

THE HISTORY

THE SURVEY

LOCATIONS

Update

Hello all, this project is still open but is currently hibernating. We would love to complete it, but this is very dependent on time and whether we can secure additional funding to pursue it.

Thanks to everyone who has been involved, including those who still are, and all those who visit and comment or share, it has so far been a terrific success, we hope to extend that in the future.

In the meantime we fully intend to keep the site live in its current form, and are still taking any info you have with a view to one day finishing the database as time allows.

Nick & Tim. April 2023.

Recent marker reports

Bromham – St Nicholas, Wiltshire

Bromham – St Nicholas, Wiltshire

P. E. KING Location: Bromham, St Nicholas, Wiltshire SN15 2EU Details on cross: GRU 1-A-? Pte P. E. KING 6/ WILTS REGT 11/6/17 Text type (e.g. hand written, GRU tags, carved):  GRU Tags Cross dimensions (millimetres please) Shaft Height: 790...

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Pockley – St John the Baptist Church, North Yorkshire

Pockley – St John the Baptist Church, North Yorkshire

Lt. Col. The EARL OF FEVERSHAM. Location address: St John the Baptist Church, Pockley, Helmsley, YORK, YO62 7TQ,North Yorkshire. Details on cross (Text content of cross): IN MEMORY OF Lt. Col. The EARL OF FEVERSHAM. 21st KINGS ROYAL RIFLES. KILLED WHEN LEADING HIS...

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Cuddington  – St Nicholas Church, Bucks

Cuddington – St Nicholas Church, Bucks

Unknown British Soldier Location address: St Nicholas Church, Cuddington, Bucks HP18 0AP Details on cross (Text content of cross): Three metal tags. 1. GRU 2. 58 E 47 3. Unknown British Soldier Text type (e.g. hand-written, GRU tags, carved):...

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Easby – St Hilda’s Church, North Yorkshire

Easby – St Hilda’s Church, North Yorkshire

Robert Percy Pulleine Location:  Parish Church of St Hilda, Easby, Near Richmond, North Yorkshire  DL10 7EU Details on cross : GRU On cross beam -  2 LT.  R. P. PULLEINE R.F.A. 4-9-16 Text type (e.g. hand-written, GRU tags, carved): Pressed metal plaques, named to...

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Killamarsh – St. Giles’ Church, Derbyshire

Killamarsh – St. Giles’ Church, Derbyshire

Athal Frederick Swindell Location address: St. Giles' Church, Church Lane, Killamarsh, Derbyshire S21 1JY Details on cross: Regimental badge (at top of shaft) ORIGINAL CROSS (below badge characters embossed on alloy tape nailed to wood) R.I.P. (on shaft just above...

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Strensall – St. Mary’s, North Yorkshire

Strensall – St. Mary’s, North Yorkshire

GEOFFREY FAIRBANK Location address:  St. Mary's, Church Lane, Strensall, North Yorkshire YO32 5XU Details on cross (Text content of cross): I.W.G.C. 2 PS/8274  L/C G FAIRBANK 20/ ROYAL FUSRS 16.4.17   Text type (e.g. hand-written, GRU tags, carved): Tags Cross...

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Newark – National Civil War Centre, Notts

Newark – National Civil War Centre, Notts

Walter Henry Guy Location address:  National Civil War Centre, 14 Appletongate, Newark, Notts, NG24 1JY. Details on cross Brass mounting, rectangular in shape going to a point on top side(making it 5 sided) with a circular hole for mounting purposes. Reads 1st...

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On the blog

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About the project

Wooden Battlefield Crosses and grave markers exist all across Great Britain and indeed across the world. You can find them in churches, memorial halls, chapels, museums and private dwellings. Although various lists exist there is no definitive study of them; the available information is often buried in collections of other memorials. These are deeply personal connections with the people involved in the conflict and form a direct link to the families, loved ones and communities who were left behind.

The aim of this project is to try and provide an online resource which creates a place to find the information about these curious objects, where they exist, how to access them and what they meant a century ago, how they continue to be part of the communities they still exist in and how people continue to engage and respond to them as a link the link to First World War.

Ultimately the intention is to list every single battlefield cross or wooden grave marker returned from the lines in Europe to Great Britain after the war ended. The website will hopefully provide a resource that will give everyone access to information on as many of the locations and as much detail as possible about the stories surrounding the people whose graves they marked in France and their symbolic return to the people they left behind.

We need your help…

You can send us information on your local wooden crosses and battlefield markers, whether it be your own photos, photos you have permission to use from a local archive, details of the building and how the marker has become part of the story of it. We also need your research on the soldiers, their life and service, their families, the incidents surrounding their death and the eventual return of the grave marker to Britain and back to the community where the person came from.

We have provided an easy guide to help you to survey, photograph and research these sites and a rough but growing list of locations which we will hopefully be building on as more information comes to light. We will also be putting together an online guide looking at how and where to research the stories of the men these crosses are named for and how you might be able to look into the story behind them to build an online collection which everyone can use to explore these fascinating memorials.

Contact us

Have you done a survey or do you fancy having a go at one? Maybe you aren’t sure what to do or maybe you have already completed some research on a battlefield cross you’d like to add to the project or share via the website.

Perhaps you think you may have something nobody has seen in nearly a century in your loft or shed? Let us know.

Please send us an email to info@thereturned.co.uk

British Airman’s Graves Plot 9, Poperighe “Remy’ Kerkhof Cemetery 1920 OOC.