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Perth War Cemetery: Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery

Author

City of Nedlands

Place Number

13626
There no heritage location found in the Google fusion table.

Location

Smyth Rd Karrakatta

Location Details

Karrakatta cemetery is being assessed April 2005

Other Name(s)

Garden of Remembrance

Local Government

Nedlands

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1942

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents More information
Commonwealth List YES Heritage Council

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
RHP - To be assessed Current

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management More information
Category Description
Municipal Inventory Adopted 27 Apr 1999 Category A

Category A

Worthy of the highest level of protection: recommended for entry into the State Register of Heritage Places which gives legal protection; (some places in this category are already on the State Register of Heritage places); development requires consultation with the Heritage Council of WA and the local government; provide maximum encouragement to the owner under the City of Nedlands Town Planning Scheme to conserve the significance of the place. Incentives to promote heritage conservation should be considered.

Municipal Inventory Adopted 23 Oct 2018 Category A

Category A

Worthy of the highest level of protection: recommended for entry into the State Register of Heritage Places which gives legal protection; (some places in this category are already on the State Register of Heritage places); development requires consultation with the Heritage Council of WA and the local government; provide maximum encouragement to the owner under the City of Nedlands Town Planning Scheme to conserve the significance of the place. Incentives to promote heritage conservation should be considered.

Municipal Inventory Adopted 15 Apr 1999

Heritage Council
Register of the National Estate Indicative Place

Heritage Council

Statement of Significance

The Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery has aesthetic, historic and social cultural heritage significance.
It demonstrates tangible evidence, in the form of war graves, principally of Australia's involvement with
World War II and its immediate aftermath (the relevant time period being 1939-47). lt also reflects World
War I and Vietnam, and the toll in human lives of Australian servicemen and servicewomen. There is also
tangible evidence of Allied involvement with Western Australia. It is part of the Commonwealth War
Graves Commission's world-wide network of cemeteries and plots. Of particular significance is the plan of
the graves which were arranged to form a Maltese Cross.

Physical Description

The Commonwealth War Grave Cemetery has 513 war graves in a landscaped lawn setting, featuring a
stone Cross of Sacrifice in the centre.

History

The War Graves Organisation in Australia.

This background account is taken from Chinn (1996). All war cemeteries, war graves and other
commemorations in Australia and neighbouring areas, as well as the official post-war commemorations of
veterans who meet certain eligibility criteria, are administered by the Office of Australian War Graves.
Although the Office has the War Graves Act 1980 (Commonwealth) it functions as an element of the
Department of Veterans' Affairs (Chinn 1996, p.5). It was created in December 1974 when the Anzac
Agency of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (formerly the Imperial War Graves Commission,
created by Royal Charter ·in 1917 with a Supplemental Charter of 1964) was wound up. The Office now has
a dual role:

a.) as an agent of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to mark and maintain the graves
and Memorials to the Missing for members of Commonwealth Forces who died during the periods
4 August 1914 to 31 August 1921 (World War I) and 3 September 1939 to 31 December 1947
(World War II) (Chinn 1996, p.11).

b.) The offical commemoration of eligible veterans who have died post-war or whose deaths are
accepted by the Repatriation Commission as being caused by war service (Chinn 1996, p.25).

A pertinent discussion of World War II war cemeteries and war memorials in Western Australia is given in
Richards (1996).

According to notes prepared locally in 1998, there are three main focal points at the Perth War Cemetery.
These are described separately below as Places K3(a), K3(b), and K3(c).

COMMONWEALTH WAR GRAVES CEMETERY (Place K3(a))

Unless otherwise indicated, the information in this section is taken from The Commonwealth War Graves
Commission (1962, pp. 24-53) which includes a 'Register of names of those who fell in the 1939-1945 war
and are buried in Cemeteries in Western Australia'with 'particulars ... compiled from information furnished
by the Records Offices concerned and by the next-of-kin' (p. ii), hereinafter termed 'the 1962 Register'.
Information from the set of notes prepared locally in 1998 has also been used.

Originally known as the Perth War Cemetery it was established in the south-east corner of the Karrakatta
Cemetery by the Australian Army's Graves Registration Service in 1942, the first burial taking place on
16 November 1942 (West Australian, 16 November 1942). The cemetery was laid out in the form of a
Maltese Cross and continued to be used in its intended sense 'War of 1939-45' until late December 1947.
One of only two permanent war cemeteries in Western Australia (the other being at Geraldton), this
Cemetery was taken over by Commonwealth War Graves Commission in February 1949 and has the Index
Number of AUS.530. ).

About that time the Anzac Agency of that Commission was formed to care for war graves in Australia.
Commencing in January 1975 it became the responsibility of the newly created Office of Australian War
Graves (as an agent for the Commonwealth War Graves Commission), that arrangement continues today,
with maintenance being carried out 'to the standards laid down by the Commission' (Chinn 1996, p.7).

According to Richards (1996, p.277) 'it is the third largest war cemetery in Australia'. The statistics in Chinn
(1996, pp.103-4) confirm this if the Japanese War Cemetery at Cowra NSW is excluded. From research
carried out in connection with the preparation of these Historical Notes, it seems possible that burials (at least
16) relevant to World War II may have occurred after 1962. Further research into the post-1947 history of
this Cemetery would be needed to clarify this aspect, also as to when the sixteen World War I and the four
Vietnam War burials took place.

According to The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (1962, p.25) the burials from the World War II
period total 477, including 26 'other' (non-Australian) Commonwealth and two Dutch. The panel at the
entrance to the Cemetery as inspected in August 1998 also gives these figures.

However, a count of the headstones by the writer in August 1998 has ascertained that the World War II
burials actually total 493, which figure is confirmed by Chinn (1996, p. 104); this disparity has not yet been
explained. Whilst they are predominantly members of the Australian services (including six women per the
1962 Register), the burials include members of the forces of Britain, New Zealand, Canada, and Hong
Kong, and from the Royal Netherlands Navy. The latter comprises two personnel who are not named in the
Register by The Commonwealth War Graves Com.nllssion (1962) probably because they are not 'war dead
of the Commonwealth'. The writer has ascertained that they are Stoker P.J.H. Gereadts KM (Plot M, Row
C, No. 2; + 13-10-45) and Steward P. van den Bos KM (Plot G, Row C, No. 15; +21-12-43) - see also
Tyler (1987, p. 60The writer recollects that a number of United States service personnel (mostly US Navy
but probably including some American Red Cross women) were buried at this cemetery during the World
War II period (marked with characteristic white wooden crosses) but their remains were removed by to the
USA in 1948 by an American War Graves expedition which came to Australia by ship (Barker and Jackson
1996, pp. 250-1).

The World War II graves in this Cemetery comprise those who died locally from accident (including one
large training accident at Moora in March 1943 when at least fourteen Australian soldiers were killed},
sickness or tragic circumstances and include a number of remains which were reinterred from civil and
temporary militaJ;y burial grounds elsewhere in Western Australia. In the 1962 Register, the earliest date of
death listed is 6 November 1939 (Steward D. Gordon RANR) and the most recent date of death is 24th
December 1947 (Corporal T.W. North, Australian Corps of Signals). A number of those buried in this
Cemetery died in Hollywood Military Hospital from wounds or sickness after being returned from
operational areas. The best known person buried in this Cemetery is the famous RAAF air ace and hero,
Squadron Leader Keith W. ('Bluey') Truscott DFC and Bar, who was killed in a flying accident in Exmouth
Gulf on 28th March 1943 whilst commanding No. 76 Squadron. Another burial is Colonel W.B. Robinson
DCM ED, who, whilst he was the Commanding Officer of the Volunteer Defence Corps in Western
Australia, died on 18th May 1945. The oldest person to be buried in this Cemetery is Private A.B. Parker,
Army Catering Corps, who died aged 70 years on 12th April 1945. Richards (1996, p. 278) states that
'although the cemetery was officially closed at the end of World War II, four Vietnam servicemen are also
buried there'. The writer has conftrmed this by inspection. There are also sixteen graves from the World
War I period comprising twelve Australian Army, two Australian Flying Corps, one Australian Nurse, and
one New Zealand Army (these burials were originally at the Woodman Point Quarantine Station and seem to
be related to the worldwide influenza epidemic of 1919). These twenty graves are located in two groups and
form an extra row on the western side of the lawn area of this Cemetery. The World War I graves are not
shown on the map of the Cemetery in The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (1962, p. 26). There
are thus a total of 513 graves in this Cemetery from three Wars.

The gravestones are made from local grey granite and are uniform in shape. They are set out in over
numbered graves which are in lettered rows which have been further grouped into twelve lettered Plots. In
the middle is a stone Cross of Sacrifice. The Main Entrance (with a room for shelter from the weather,
formerly the Records Building) is located in Smyth Road on the east side of the Cemetery. This room has
the Western Australia [sic] Cremation Memorial, Perth (Index No. AUS. 530A) on its eastern internal wall
in the form of a bronze panel. It lists the names of seven Australian servicemen who died during World
War II. The panel inspected in connection with the preparation of these Notes differs slightly from the
wording given by The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (1962, p. 53) in that it relates to those
whose 'remains were cremated and the ashes scattered or rest where full commemoration cannot be given'.
It is not known at this point if this is a replacement panel.

Integrity/Authenticity

High

Condition

Good

Other Reference Numbers

Ref Number Description
K3(a) LGA Place No

Place Type

Other Built Type

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Original Use MONUMENT\CEMETERY Cemetery
Present Use MONUMENT\CEMETERY Cemetery

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Other STONE Granite

Historic Themes

General Specific
OUTSIDE INFLUENCES World Wars & other wars

Creation Date

10 Jun 1999

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

19 Sep 2022

Disclaimer

This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.