1
Bus shelter by the wall of Colchester cemetery
In Mersea Road, B1025
Image: © David Smith
Taken: 31 May 2017
0.03 miles
2
Colchester cemetery plan by the southern entrance
The southern entrance serves the crematorium as well as the main body of the vast cemetery. Many unhelpful cemeteries don't publish a plan and the only way to find out which plot is which is to ask the groundsmen who of course don't work at weekends. Colchester's 67 acre cemetery is immaculately kept and has rightly won awards.
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 23 Jan 2017
0.04 miles
3
Abbots Road leading to Old Heath
Viewed from Mersea Road
Image: © John Firth
Taken: 14 Sep 2010
0.07 miles
4
The Willows
Open space and power lines in Colchester.
Image: © Burgess Von Thunen
Taken: 3 May 2012
0.16 miles
5
Colchester cemetery on a frosty & foggy morning
There are 267 Commonwealth burials of the 1914-1918 war, one being unidentified, eleven Australian graves are together in a group nearby, the remainder being scattered. After the war a Cross of Sacrifice was erected on a site overlooking both the plot and the group of war graves, in honour of all the servicemen buried here.
There are also 114 Commonwealth burials of the 1939-1945 war here, 1 of which is unidentified.
There are also 7 Foreign National burials.
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 23 Jan 2017
0.17 miles
6
Graves of Belgian soldiers
Four Belgian soldiers died in Colchester in 1914.
Fernand Emiel Louis Juul BAUDOUR (19)
Pierre Felicien VERDOODT (19)
Camille Agustin COQUETTE (24)
Jean Baptiste Rene VAN BOSSUYT (27)
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 23 Jan 2017
0.17 miles
7
Colchester cemetery, Anglican chapel
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 23 Jan 2017
0.17 miles
8
Stalin Rd
One of only two Streets in the country left honouring “Joe Stalin”. The Barn Hall Estate in Colchester was planned and built in the immediate aftermath of WW2 before the Cold War got started or the horrific truth of Stalin’s rule of the Soviet Union became fully known. I suppose the set of Churchill Way and Roosevelt Way would not be complete without the third member of the “big three”. The other town I know of with a sense of history big enough not to edit out Stalin from their street names is Chatham in Kent.
Image: © Glyn Baker
Taken: 19 May 2007
0.17 miles
9
Memorial obelisk in Colchester cemetery
This obelisk was purchased by the Wire family and re-sited at the cemetery as a memorial to Mary Ann, beloved wife of Charles Wire.
This obelisk was originally located in the High Street to the east of St Runwalds Church.
The Essex County Standard of 8th January 1858 mentions the removal and sale of the obelisk. A further report is given on 29th January 1858. It was sold for £3 5s 0d to Mr Charles Wire of Magdalen Street.
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 13 Feb 2017
0.20 miles
10
The headstone of Yep Fook
Yep Fook was a Chinese labourer in the Chinese Labour Corps. He died in Colchester Hospital 9th November 1918.
The Chinese Labour Corps, nicknamed the Celestials, were Chinese auxiliaries sent to work for French and British troops during the First World War and do the hardest menial jobs.
He was presumably injured on the battlefield and brought to Colchester for treatment, where he ultimately died only two days before the end of the war.
Image: © Adrian S Pye
Taken: 23 Jan 2017
0.20 miles