According to the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge, just over 1,000 German
World War II casualties are buried elsewhere in the UK (
and Islands), including 111 at
Saint Peter Port (Fort George),
Guernsey, and others at
Brookwood Cemetery, Surrey. The remainder are interred in Commonwealth War Graves Commission-administered plots all over the UK, often near where their bodies were found or where they died. For example, three
Luftwaffe bomber crew, whose Dornier ditched in the sea off
Kingsdown, Kent in 1940, were buried in the military section of
Hamilton Road Cemetery, Deal, Kent, less than two miles from the crash. In the same locality as this cemetery, the Commonwealth Cannock Chase War Cemetery contains 286 German war graves, primarily of those who died in a local prisoner-of-war camp and hospital in World War I but also including graves of 58 Germans who had been reinterred here in 1963. A proposal was made to rebury in this cemetery former
Imperial German Navy officer
Carl Hans Lody (shot for espionage at the
Tower of London in 1914) in the 1960s. The VDK asked if it would be possible to disinter Lody's body from
East London Cemetery in
Plaistow and move it to Cannock Chase. By that time, the plot had been reused for further common graves, buried above Lody's body. The VDK was told that it would not be possible to disinter the other bodies without the permission of the relatives, which would have been an almost impossible task where common graves were concerned. The proposal was abandoned and Lody's body remains at Plaistow. ==See also==