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CWGC: Chunuk Bair New Zealand Memorial, Turkey

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Profiles

  • Auckland Weekly News 1915.
    Sgt. Walter Cecil Riley (1887 - 1915)
    Walter Cecil Riley was born in Collingwood, Nelson, the son of William Calverly Riley and Susan Riley (née Trist) who had married in 1858. During World War I Walter served with the Auckland Infantry Ba...
  • Auckland Weekly News 1915.
    LSgt. Arthur Casement Bernard (1891 - 1915)
    Arthur Casement Bernard was the son of John Stanhope Bernard and Lucy Ann Bernard (Morey). He was serving during World War I when he was killed in action at Gallipoli. Arthur is remembered on the Chunu...
  • New Zealand War Graves Project.
    Pte. Frank Gilderoy Batters (1896 - 1915)
    Frank Gilderoy Batters was born at Heswall in Cheshire, England, on 9 February 1896. His parents were Frank Harry Batters and Isabella Eleanor Batters (née Gilderoy) who had married at Prestatyn in Den...
  • Auckland Weekly News.
    Pte. Charles Lappan (1880 - 1915)
    Charles Lappan was born at Invercargill, New Zealand, on 9 December 1880 (reg. 1881/1846). He was the son of Frances Margaret Lappan and Michael Lappan of Dunedin. Charles was mining at Waipori when he...
  • Cenotaph.
    Pte. William Watts Mansfield (1889 - 1915)
    William Watts Mansfield was the son of William White Mansfield and Alice Mansfield, of 14, Hautana St., Lower Hutt, Wellington. Private in WIR, file number 10/427. Killed in action, Gallipoli. Source...
  • Cemetery Name: Chunuk Bair New Zealand Memorial
  • Cemetery Location: Turkey
  • NZ Casualties: 850
  • Total Known Casualties: 850

Location Information:

The Anzac and Suvla cemeteries are first signposted from the left hand junction of the Eceabat- Bigali road. From this junction travel into the main Anzac area where you will encounter a right hand turn at 7.6kms. Follow this road for a further 6.1 kms. when you will arrive at the cemetery and memorial. The cemetery is in the lower point of the ridge and the memorial obelisk is located to the North West of the cemetery. Chunuk Bair (New Zealand) Memorial is on the north-west side of Chunuk Bair Cemetery,

Historical Information:

The eight month campaign in Gallipoli was fought by Commonwealth and French forces in an attempt to force Turkey out of the war, to relieve the deadlock of the Western Front in France and Belgium, and to open a supply route to Russia through the Dardanelles and the Black Sea. The Allies landed on the peninsula on 25-26 April 1915; the 29th Division at Cape Helles in the south and the Australian and New Zealand Corps north of Gaba Tepe on the west coast, an area soon known as Anzac. On 6 August, further landings were made at Suvla, just north of Anzac, and the climax of the campaign came in early August when simultaneous assaults were launched on all three fronts. Chunuk Bair was one of the main objectives in the Battle of Sari Bair, fought 6-10 August 1915. The attack was to be carried out by two columns of the New Zealand Infantry Brigade, starting from the outposts on the shore and proceeding up the Sazli Belt Dere and the Chailak Dere. Meanwhile the New Zealand Mounted Rifles were to clear the foothills. The New Zealand Infantry reached Rhododendron Spur, where they were joined by the 10th Gurkha Rifles, from further north, and reinforced by the 8th Welsh, the 7th Gloucesters, the Auckland Mounted Rifles, and the Maori Contingent. The Wellington Infantry and some of the Gloucesters and Welsh reached the summit, and were later joined by men of the Auckland Infantry and Mounted Rifles. These troops, after repulsing incessant Turkish attacks, were reinforced by the Otago Battalion and the Wellington Mounted Rifles. The 6th Gurkhas and the 6th South Lancashire Regiment came in on the left. The 6th Loyal North Lancashire Regiment relieved the force at Chunuk Bair on the evening of 9 August, supported later by part of the 5th Wilts, but on the morning of the 10th, the position was taken by a determined and overwhelming counter-attack, carried out by a Turkish Army Corps led by Mustapha Kemal Pasha. The loss of Chunuk Bair marked the end of the effort to reach the central foothills of the peninsula and on this sector of the front, the line remained unaltered until the evacuation in December 1915. The CHUNUK BAIR (NEW ZEALAND) MEMORIAL is one of four memorials erected to commemorate New Zealand soldiers who died on the Gallipoli peninsula and whose graves are not known. This memorial relates to the Battle of Sari Bair and in other operations in this sector. It bears more than 850 names. CHUNUK BAIR CEMETERY was made after the Armistice on the site where the Turks had buried some of those Commonwealth soldiers who were killed on 6-8 August. It contains 632 Commonwealth burials, only ten of which are identified.

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