SALERNO WAR CEMETERY
Campania
Italy
Location Information
Coming from Rome, proceed along the A30 following the signs for Salerno-Reggio Calabria; then take the A3, exiting at Pontecagnano or Battipaglia. Turn back towards Salerno on the SS18 coast road. Signs for the cemetery, which is on the north side of the road, should be seen after passing through Bellizzi.
Cemetery address: Via G. Leopardi, 1 - Bivio Pratole - 84090 Montecorvino Pugliano (SA) Campania.
GPS Co-ordinates: Latitude: 40.625511, Longitude: 14.922513.
Visiting Information
The cemetery is permanently open and may be visited anytime.
Wheelchair access IS possible via THE main entrance.
A Visitor Information Panel has been installed at this site. The panel features information about the cemetery and a QR (Quick Response) code. When scanned with a smartphone, the QR Code provides access to further information, including the personal stories of some of the casualties buried or commemorated at Salerno War Cemetery.
Historical Information
On 3 September 1943 the Allies invaded the Italian mainland, the invasion coinciding with an armistice made with the Italians who then re-entered the war on the Allied side. Allied objectives were to draw German troops from the Russian front and more particularly from France, where an offensive was planned for the following year.
Commonwealth and American forces landed near Salerno on 8-9 September 1943 and there was fierce fighting for some days in the bridgehead that they established. The site for the cemetery was chosen in November 1943 and it contains many burials resulting from the landings and the fighting that followed, but graves were also brought in later from a wide area of south-western Italy. The 59th General Hospital was in the vicinity of Salerno at the end of 1943 and early in 1944.
Salerno War Cemetery contains 1,846 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 107 of them unidentified. One casualty of the First World War is also commemorated in the cemetery by special memorial, his grave in a local civil cemetery having been lost. The cemetery was designed by Louis de Soissons.
Cemetery pictures used with the permission of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Coming from Rome, proceed along the A30 following the signs for Salerno-Reggio Calabria; then take the A3, exiting at Pontecagnano or Battipaglia. Turn back towards Salerno on the SS18 coast road. Signs for the cemetery, which is on the north side of the road, should be seen after passing through Bellizzi.
Cemetery address: Via G. Leopardi, 1 - Bivio Pratole - 84090 Montecorvino Pugliano (SA) Campania.
GPS Co-ordinates: Latitude: 40.625511, Longitude: 14.922513.
Visiting Information
The cemetery is permanently open and may be visited anytime.
Wheelchair access IS possible via THE main entrance.
A Visitor Information Panel has been installed at this site. The panel features information about the cemetery and a QR (Quick Response) code. When scanned with a smartphone, the QR Code provides access to further information, including the personal stories of some of the casualties buried or commemorated at Salerno War Cemetery.
Historical Information
On 3 September 1943 the Allies invaded the Italian mainland, the invasion coinciding with an armistice made with the Italians who then re-entered the war on the Allied side. Allied objectives were to draw German troops from the Russian front and more particularly from France, where an offensive was planned for the following year.
Commonwealth and American forces landed near Salerno on 8-9 September 1943 and there was fierce fighting for some days in the bridgehead that they established. The site for the cemetery was chosen in November 1943 and it contains many burials resulting from the landings and the fighting that followed, but graves were also brought in later from a wide area of south-western Italy. The 59th General Hospital was in the vicinity of Salerno at the end of 1943 and early in 1944.
Salerno War Cemetery contains 1,846 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 107 of them unidentified. One casualty of the First World War is also commemorated in the cemetery by special memorial, his grave in a local civil cemetery having been lost. The cemetery was designed by Louis de Soissons.
Cemetery pictures used with the permission of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission
6106172 Private
William (Billy) Thomas Maidment
2nd/6th Bn. The Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey)
9th September 1943, aged 20.
Plot I. A. 33.
Son of William Thomas Maidment and Alice Maud Maidment, of Walham Green, London.
Still sadly missed by your sister Doreen
Picture courtesy of Anne Garrett
William (Billy) Thomas Maidment
2nd/6th Bn. The Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey)
9th September 1943, aged 20.
Plot I. A. 33.
Son of William Thomas Maidment and Alice Maud Maidment, of Walham Green, London.
Still sadly missed by your sister Doreen
Picture courtesy of Anne Garrett