in Lowestoft Cemetery During
World War I Lowestoft was a trawler base with a Port
Minesweeping Officer in command; during
World War II it was the central Depot for the
Royal Naval Patrol Service, hence the large number of burials from the
Royal Navy. The World War I burials are mainly located in Plots 12, 13 and 14 on the cemetery's west side. After the war a
Cross of Sacrifice was built near to these plots to commemorate the servicemen buried there. Most of the
World War II graves are in one or other of four War Graves Plots, three of which are in the western part of the cemetery and one to the east of the main entrance. The rest can be found throughout the cemetery. The cemetery holds 95 Commonwealth service burials from
World War I and 122 from
World War II, including 11 unknown seamen from the
Merchant Navy, most of whose bodies were washed up in the area. Lowestoft Cemetery also holds 11 German war burials including an unidentified airman whose body was washed up at Gunton in 1943 and two non-war service burials, giving it the largest group of World War II German graves in Suffolk. Many other German burials were exhumed from the cemetery in the 1960s and transferred to the
German Military Cemetery at
Cannock Chase in
Staffordshire. ==Burials==