The Imperial War Museum's War Memorials' Archive defines a War Memorial as "any tangible object which has been erected or dedicated to commemorate those killed as a result of war, conflict or peacekeeping; who served in war or conflict; or who died whilst engaged in military service." This includes gravestones which commemorate a casualty buried elsewhere. There must be a clear statement on the memorial (or in a printed document such as a newspaper report from the time) that defines the commemorative purpose of the feature and reports its erection. The full wording of their definition can be found here.
Thus gravestones which include wording such as: died of wounds received in action, killed in action, fell in France, died on active service, reported missing in action, or even killed accidentally while on active service all count as War Memorials. The wording is a "clear statement" that the purpose of recording that person's name on the gravestone is as a memorial.
Graves which are situated on the site of the burial of a casualty, such as Commonwealth War Graves, are not War Memorials, however the Barnsley War Memorials Project is also collecting their details for inclusion in the Barnsley Roll of Honour.
Cawthorne Churchyard and Cemetery contains two Commonwealth War Graves.
In the list below, where the name is blue click to follow the link to a page with a larger photograph and more information.
Gravestone Location
Section Row No. |
Soldier's Name & Regiment
Date of Death | Photograph |
*
| John Geoffrey Fallas Durham Light Infantry 19 September 1918 | |
*
| Eustace E M Taylor Machine Gun Corps 1 January 1917 | |
*
| Eric Bagshaw Royal Army Service Corps 29 September 1945 |
BWMP #CWN02
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