2nd Lt
Bernard Noel Cryer

Informations sur naissance

Date de naissance:
25/12/1892
Lieu de naissance:
Ealing, Middlesex, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni

Informations service militaire

Pays:
Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
Force armée:
British Expeditionary Force
Rang:
Second Lieutenant
Numéro de service:
/
Incorporation date:
15/09/1914
Unités:
 —  London Regiment, 1/7th Bn.  (Dernière unité connue)

Informations sur décès

Date de décès:
15/09/1917
Lieu de décès:
Cryer Farm, Belgique
Cause du décès:
Killed in action (K.I.A.)
Âge:
24

Mémorial

Distinctions et médailles 3

British War Medal
Médaille
Mentioned in Despatches
Eervolle vermelding
Victory Medal
Médaille

Points d'intérêt 1

#1 Lieu de naissance

Mon histoire

Second Lieutenant Bernard Noel Cryer was part of the 7th (City of London) Battalion of the London Regiment, 47th Division, 140th Brigade. On the 14th of September 1917 the Battalion was holding the line near Clapham Junction. At 4:10 p.m. on the 15th of September, a raid party went over the top and attacked the German bunker located about 300 meters east of Clapham Junction (halfway between Glencorse Wood and Inverness Copse). The objective to capture and hold this position was successful. Second Lieutenant Bernard Noel Cryer took part in the raid and was killed by a shell in the attack. It is mentioned that he was buried there and his grave marked by a cross. After the war his body was not recovered. In his memory, the position was renamed Cryer Farm.
Before its capture the Germans used the bunker as a dressing station. It was built along the railway line and important communication trenches fort his purpose. As the British pushed the front line east during the Thrid Battle of Ypres, the bunker was transformed by the Germans into a heavily defended strongpoint.
After the war nature reclaimed the bunker, but it was put back into use in the Second World War as an air raid shelter. Thereafter the bunker was used as a cesspool for a local farm until 1985. After some interest from the landowners, an archaeological excavation was undertaken in December 2001. The site has been open for the public since Novermber 2002. Today group visits can still be made after the reservation.

Fichiers 1

Sources 7

C.Digby Planck, History of the 7th (City of London) Battalion the London Regiment, 1946, 124-127.
Sources utilisées
CWGC
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/1608689/cryer,-bernard-noel/
Sources utilisées
Franky Bostyn, Cryer Farm: Excavation and restoration of a WW1 German Dressing Station on the Ypres-Menin Road, Battlefields Annual Review, 87-94
Sources utilisées
Jan Vancoillie, Franky Bostyn and Marcel Pauwels, Halfweg Menin Road en Ypernstrasse : Gheluvelt 1914-1918, 2002; 302-303.
Sources utilisées
Naval & Military Archive
http://www.nmarchive.com/
Sources utilisées
The Long, Long Trail
https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/
Sources utilisées
Tourism Office - WWI Sites - Cryer Farm
https://www.toerismezonnebeke.be/Zien/WO_I/WO_I_sites/Cryer_Farm
Sources utilisées