South Africa War Graves Project
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Russian Federation

List updated May 13, 2008

Country Total = 4

3 names on 2 memorials and 1 grave in 1 cemetery

Completed = 0 (or 0.0%)

Cemetery
SA War Dead #
SA serving in Non-SA units War Dead #
Rhodesia War Dead (includes Non-Rhodesia Units) #
Total
Status - Complete, Underway, Part Done
Volunteer
Archangel Allied Cemetery
0
1
0
1
.
.
Archangel Memorial
0
1
0
1
.
.
Vladivostok Memorial
0
1
1
2
Complete
Pavel Vancata

ARCHANGEL ALLIED CEMETERY

The cemetery is within an enclosed area but the entrance gates are unlocked. There may however be limited mobility inside the cemetery for some in a wheelchair, as the ground is mainly covered in grass. Archangel, in the north of the Russian Federation, is a town on the eastern side of the Divina Estuary on the White Sea. From the railway station, travel along the main road towards the River Dvina. Halfway along this road take the turning on the right hand side called Obvodnyi Kanal Avenue. The cemetery will be found on the right hand side of this road. During both world wars, Archangel was one of the ports through which the Allies assisted Russia with supplies and munitions. The cemetery was begun immediately after the occupation of the town in August 1918 by the Allied force sent to support the Soviet Russian Government against potential threat from German occupied Finland and other local sources. It was used by No 85 General Hospital, No 53 Stationary Hospital, No 82 Casualty Clearing Station, HM Hospital Ship 'Kalyan' and other Allied hospitals. During the Second World War, after the German attack on Russia in June 1941, Archangel became an Allied airbase and a naval base from which minesweepers met and escorted the convoys. ARCHANGEL ALLIED CEMETERY contains 224 burials and commemorations of the First World War, including special memorials to 140 officers and men with known burials in cemeteries elsewhere in northern Russia. Two of the burials are unidentified. The cemetery also contains seven Second World War burials and the graves of three merchant seamen not classified as war burials. The ARCHANGEL MEMORIAL, which consists of panels fixed into the east wall of the cemetery, commemorates 219 British officers and men who died during the north Russian campaign and whose graves are not known.

BLAND, Lieutenant, CECIL FRANCIS R., 3rd Bn. Royal Berkshire Regiment. 7th July 1919. Age 21. Croix de Guerre with Palms (France). Son of John and Adelaide Sophie Ramsden Bland Bland. Born at Durban, Natal. (buried Semenovka (Bereznik) Cem. Extension). Sp. Mem. B9.

ARCHANGEL MEMORIAL

The cemetery is within an enclosed area but the entrance gates are unlocked. There may however be limited mobility inside the cemetery for some in a wheelchair, as the ground is mainly covered in grass. Archangel, in the north of the Russian Federation, is a town on the eastern side of the Divina Estuary on the White Sea. The Archangel Memorial is at the far end of Archangel Allied Cemetery, which is on the north-west outskirts of the town of Archangel, adjoining the Lutheran and Russian cemeteries and memorials to those who died in more recent actions. From the railway station, travel along the main road towards the River Dvina. Halfway along this road take the turning on the right hand side called Obvodnyi Kanal Avenue. The cemetery will be found on the right hand side of this road. The cemetery was begun immediately after the occupation of the town in August 1918 and was used by No 85 General Hospital, No 53 Stationary Hospital, No 82 Casualty Clearing Station, HM Hospital Ship 'Kalyan' and other Allied hospitals. ARCHANGEL ALLIED CEMETERY contains 224 burials and commemorations of the First World War, including special memorials to 140 officers and men with known burials in cemeteries elsewhere in northern Russia. Two of the burials are unidentified. The cemetery also contains seven Second World War burials and the graves of three merchant seamen not classified as war burials. The ARCHANGEL MEMORIAL, which consists of panels fixed into the east wall of the cemetery, commemorates 219 British officers and men who died during the north Russian campaign and whose graves are not known.

Name: PINE-COFFIN, TRISTRAM JAMES
Initials: T J
Nationality: United Kingdom
Rank: Lieutenant
Regiment: Devonshire Regiment
Unit Text: 3rd Bn.
Age: 33
Date of Death: 23/09/1919
Additional information: Son of Matilda Pine-Coffin, of Portledge, Fairy Cross, Devon, and the late John Richard Pine-Coffin; husband of Sybil Mary Pine-Coffin, of 14, Cousin Grove, Southsea, Hants.

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