| Historical
Information: |
The
eight month campaign in Gallipoli was fought by Commonwealth and French
forces in an attempt to force Turkey out of the war, to relieve the
deadlock of the Western Front in France and Belgium, and to open a
supply route to Russia through the Dardanelles and the Black Sea. The
Allies landed on the peninsula on 25-26 April 1915; the 29th Division at
Cape Helles in the south and the Australian and New Zealand Corps north
of Gaba Tepe on the west coast, an area soon known as Anzac.
On 6 August, further landings were
made at Suvla, just north of Anzac, and the climax of the campaign came
in early August when simultaneous assaults were launched on all three
fronts. Shell Green was captured, and passed, by the 8th Australian
Infantry Battalion on the morning of 25 April, but it remained close to
the Turkish line throughout the campaign and was subject to frequent
shelling. The cemetery was used from May to December 1915, largely by
the Australian Light Horse and the 9th and 11th Infantry
Battalions.
It was originally two cemeteries a
short distance apart, but after the Armistice the two were combined and
enlarged when graves were brought in from the battlefields and from
Artillery Road and Artillery Road East Cemeteries, Wright's Gully
Cemetery and Eighth Battery Cemetery. In 1927, the graves of a number of
servicemen who died in 1922 and 1923 were also brought to Shell Green
from the latter cemetery. The cemetery now contains 409 First World War
burials, 11 of them unidentified.
|