CASTRICUM PROTESTANT CHURCHYARD
Noord-Holland
Netherlands
Location Information
Castricum is 21 kilometres north of Haarlem and 28 kilometres north-west of Amsterdam, on the main Haarlem-Den Helder road. The churchyard surrounds the church, which is in the south-eastern part of Castricum close to the town hall in Dorpstraat, the main road through the town. In its north-eastern part are the Commonwealth war graves.
History Information
Commonwealth forces suffered some casualties when the Netherlands fell to the Germans on 14 May 1940, and many more when the Allies returned between September 1944 and April 1945. In the intervening years, many airmen were shot down or crashed in raids on strategic objectives in the Netherlands, or while returning from missions over Germany. They now lie buried in cemeteries and churchyards all over the country. Castricum Protestant Churchyard contains 34 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, half of them unidentified. There is also one Dutch and one Polish war grave.
Pictures © Frits Leenders
Castricum is 21 kilometres north of Haarlem and 28 kilometres north-west of Amsterdam, on the main Haarlem-Den Helder road. The churchyard surrounds the church, which is in the south-eastern part of Castricum close to the town hall in Dorpstraat, the main road through the town. In its north-eastern part are the Commonwealth war graves.
History Information
Commonwealth forces suffered some casualties when the Netherlands fell to the Germans on 14 May 1940, and many more when the Allies returned between September 1944 and April 1945. In the intervening years, many airmen were shot down or crashed in raids on strategic objectives in the Netherlands, or while returning from missions over Germany. They now lie buried in cemeteries and churchyards all over the country. Castricum Protestant Churchyard contains 34 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, half of them unidentified. There is also one Dutch and one Polish war grave.
Pictures © Frits Leenders