Dar Es Salaam War Cemetery
- Country Tanzania
- Total identified casualties 1844 Find these casualties
- Identified casualties from First & Second World War
- GPS Coordinates Latitude: -6.77467, Longitude: 39.24463
Historical Note
Within this cemetery are screen walls erected in 1968 to commemorate by name 404 casualties originally buried within the African Christian, non-Christian and Muslim plots of Dar es Salaam Seaview (or Ocean Road) Cemetery. Although buried in Seaview Cemetery, the graves of these casualties had not been marked individually. When Seaview Cemetery was closed in the 1960s owing to the construction of a new road, these casualties were exhumed from their plots and reburied together in Dar es Salaam War Cemetery, where new memorials list their names.
You can find more information about historical inequalities in commemoration in our Special Committee’s report.
Location information
Dar es Salaam War Cemetery is located on the right (eastern/coastal) side of Bagamoyo Road, which heads north-west along the coast from the centre of Dar-es-Salaam and is clearly marked. It is about 5 kilometres from the city centre, and a roadside direction sign indicates the turn off for Bagamoyo Road into the lane leading to the cemetery.
Visiting information
ARRIVAL
The route to the cemetery is signposted.
PARKING
Layby parking close to the cemetery entrance. From the main road a track 150 – 200 metres runs through trees up to the main entrance.
The ground surface of the parking area is firm, a mixture of loose gravel on a scrubland, dirt track.
ACCESS, LAYOUT AND MAIN ENTRANCE
The cemetery is rectangular shaped.
The main entrance gate is metal, low level (mid-thigh height) and approximately 4 metres wide. The opening section is 2 metres wide. Each section rotates on a post to create openings into the cemetery.
There is a small lip step approximately 10 centimetres in depth from the ground level path, up to paving slabs close to the gate at the main entrance. The paving slabs at the junction of the entrance feature and grass are uneven and slightly lower than the grass.
The main burial plots are on the left side and towards the centre of the cemetery with 6 Memorial Gardens on the right-hand side, along with more burial plots.
The Cross of Sacrifice is in the centre of the cemetery.
There are stone bench seating areas in the cemetery.
The internal cemetery paths are grass, the ground surface is firm and flat.
The Register Box is built into the wall at the main entrance.
ALTERNATIVE ACCESS
The alternative entrance is through the cemetery service entrance. The service entrance has two 2- metre wide gates which open inwards. There is a small concrete lip at the gates. The route to the service entrance is signposted from the main entrance.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The cemetery is open every day from 0600 hrs to 1800 hrs.
Among the Memorial Gardens are two large memorial walls:
Dar Es Salaam Hindu Cremation Memorial
Dar Es Salaam British and Indian Memorial.
History information
At the outbreak of the First World War Tanzania was the core of German East Africa. From the invasion of April 1915, Commonwealth forces fought a protracted and difficult campaign against a relatively small but highly skilled German force under the command of General von Lettow-Vorbeck. When the Germans finally surrendered on 23 November 1918, twelve days after the European armistice, their numbers had been reduced to 155 European and 1,168 African troops.
Dar es Salaam was the capital of German East Africa. On 8 August 1914, the first recorded British action of the war took place here, when HMS Astraea shelled the German wireless station and boarded and disabled two merchant ships - the "Konig" and the "Feldmarschall".
The Royal Navy systematically shelled the city from mid August 1916, and at 8 am on 4 September the deputy burgomaster was received aboard H.M.S. "Echo" to accept the terms of surrender. Troops, headed by the 129th Baluchis, then entered the city.
On 12 September 1916, Divisional GHQ moved to Dar es Salaam, and later No.3 East African Stationary Hospital was stationed there. The town became the chief sea base for movement of supplies and for the evacuation of the sick and wounded.
During the Second World War, Tanzania saw the creation of several transit camps within its borders for Commonwealth forces moving to and from the Middle East and India.
DAR ES SALAAM WAR CEMETERY was created in 1968 when the 660 First World War graves at Dar es Salaam (Ocean Road) Cemetery had to be moved to facilitate the construction of a new road. As the burials in the three former plots had not been marked individually, they were reburied in collective graves, each marked by a screen wall memorial. (Memorial Gardens "B", "C" and "D"). During the early 1970s, a further 1,000 graves were brought into this site from cemeteries all over Tanzania, where maintenance could no longer be assured.
Dar es Salaam War Cemetery now contains 1,764 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, 60 of them unidentified, and 41 from the Second World War, 7 of them unidentified. The 112 war graves of other nationalities, the majority of them Belgian and German, all date from the First World War.
The cemetery also contains the DAR ES SALAAM HINDU CREMATION MEMORIAL which commemorates 14 Indian servicemen whose remains were cremated in accordance with their faith.
The DAR ES SALAAM BRITISH AND INDIAN MEMORIAL which stands within Dar es Salaam War Cemetery, commemorates by name more than 1,500 officers and men who died in East Africa during and after January 1917 (the advance to the Rufiji river) who have no known grave. The memorial was moved from a site elsewhere in the township and re-sited in Memorial Garden A. The earlier casualties are commemorated by a similar memorial at Nairobi, Kenya.