Southampton (Hollybrook) Cemetery
- Country United Kingdom
- Total identified casualties 377 Find these casualties
- Region Hampshire
- Identified casualties from First & Second World War
- GPS Coordinates Latitude: 50.93401, Longitude: -1.43139
PLEASE NOTE
Areas of the WW2 plot will be inaccessible to allow renovation work to be carried out on the headstone borders and turf. We apologise for any inconvenience caused.
Location information
This cemetery is located off Tremona Road, opposite the general Accident and Emergency Hospital. From Junction 5 of the M27, take the A35 (Burgess Road/Winchester Road) and follow signs for general hospital.
Visiting information
Visitor Information Panels have recently been installed at Southampton (Hollybrook) Cemetery to provide information about the war casualties buried here. Panels are being erected to help raise awareness of First and Second World War graves in the UK (Feb 2013).
History information
Southampton was No 1 Port during the First World War and military hospitals were established in the University buildings, in the Highfield Institution and at Shirley Warren. During the Second World War, 4.5 million tons of military equipment passed through Southampton docks and parts of the prefabricated harbours used at Arromanches during the Normandy invasion were made there. For a while, Southampton was also base to the 14th Major Port Transportation Corps of the United States Army.
Southampton (Hollybrook) Cemetery contains burials of both wars and a memorial to the missing.
The cemetery has a First World War plot near the main entrance containing most of the 125 graves from this period. Behind this plot is the Hollybrook Memorial which commemorates by name almost 1,900 servicemen and women of the Commonwealth land and air forces whose graves are not known, many of whom were lost in transports or other vessels torpedoed or mined in home waters. It also bears the names of those who were lost or buried at sea, or who died at home but whose bodies could not be recovered for burial.
Most of the 186 Second World War burials are in a separate war graves plot. 3 of these burials are unidentified seaman of the Merchant Navy.
In addition to the Commonwealth war graves, the cemetery contains 67 war graves of other nationalities, many of them German, of which 2 are unidentified.