1 poppy laid on this site
In memory of:

Private Daniel Alexander Gillis

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Maple leaf on headstone

Military service

Service number: 910916
Age: 22
Rank: Private
Force: Army
Unit/Regiment: Canadian Machine Gun Corps
Division: 4th Coy.
Birth: January 15, 1895 Clermont, Prince Edward Island
Enlistment: March 21, 1916 Saskatchewan
Death: November 9, 1917

Burial/memorial information

Grave reference: XVI. B. 12.
Additional information
Son of Murdoch and Mary Gillis.

In the Books of Remembrance

Commemorated on:

Page 243 of the First World War Book of Remembrance.
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TYNE COT CEMETERY Belgium

Tyne Cot Cemetery is located 9 Km north east of Ieper town centre on the Tynecotstraat, a road leading from the Zonnebeekseweg (N332). The cemetery itself lies 700 meters along the Tynecotstraat on the right hand side of the road.

Tyne Cot or Tyne Cottage was the name given by the Northumberland Fusiliers to a barn which stood near the level crossing on the Passchendaele-Broodseinde road. Three of these blockhouses still stand in the cemetery; the largest, which was captured on 4 October 1917 by the 3rd Australian Division, was chosen as the site for the Cross of Sacrifice by King George V during his pilgrimage to the cemeteries of the Western Front in Belgium and France in 1922.

The Tyne Cot Cemetery is now the resting-place of nearly 12,000 soldiers of the Commonwealth Forces, the largest number of burials of any Commonwealth cemetery of either world war.

For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

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