William Archibald Carrick McCAREY
| Unit | 67 Field Regiment, Royal Artillery | ||||||
| Service Number | 830675 | ||||||
| Rank | Lance Sergeant | ||||||
| Nature of Death | Died home 3/6/1940 | ||||||
| Age | 18 | ||||||
| Burial/Commemoration | Dover (St James's) Cemetery, Kent: F 5 | ||||||
|
Malvern Commemoration
|
Christchurch, Great Malvern and St Andrews, Poolbrook | ||||||
| Next of Kin | Husband of Minnie McCarey, of Christchurch. | ||||||
| Education | - | ||||||
| Previous Employment | - | ||||||
| For a glossary of terms click here |
During the First World War, Dover was a port of embarkation for troops bound for the Western Front and between August 1914 and August 1919 some 1,300,000 Commonwealth sick and wounded were landed there. The port was bombed in 1915 and again in August 1916. Dover (St James's) Cemetery contains 392 First World War burials (ten of them unidentified) in several plots in various parts of the burial ground. One of these plots contains the graves of seamen and Marines killed during the raid on Zeebruge in Belgium, and important German submarine base, in 1918. In 1940, Dover was the headquarters for the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk and nearly 200,000 of the 366,000 British and Allied troops brought back during the operation were landed there.Throughout the war Dover was a particular target for the long range guns on the French coast and between September 1939 and May 1945 there were no less than 742 attacks by air raid and shelling. Most of the 353 Second World War burials are contained in a special war graves plot at the far end of the cemetery. The plot, know as the Dunkirk plot, contains many graves from the Dunkirk operation.
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