Edward Leslie Kissack (1921 - 1 Jun 1941)

Name: KISSACK, EDWARD LESLIE
Initials: E L
Nationality: United Kingdom
Rank: Second Lieutenant
Regiment: Royal Artillery
Unit Text: 106 (The Lancashire Hussars) Lt A.A. Regt.
Age: 20
Date of Death: 01/06/1941
Service No: 109149
Additional information: Son of Edward Kissack and of Ethel Jane Kissack, of Braddan, Isle of Man.
Casualty Type: Commonwealth War Dead
Grave/Memorial Reference: Face 3.
Cemetery: ATHENS MEMORIAL

Cemetery: ATHENS MEMORIAL
Country: Greece
Locality: unspecified
Location Information: The Athens Memorial stands within Phaleron War Cemetery, which lies a few kilometres to the South-East of Athens, at the boundary between Old Phaleron District and Kalamaki district. It is on the coast road from Athens to Vouliaghmen, 5 kilometres west of the old international airport.
Historical Information: The ATHENS MEMORIAL stands within Phaleron War Cemetery and commemorates nearly 3,000 members of the land forces of the Commonwealth who lost their lives during the campaigns in Greece and Crete in 1941 and 1944-1945, in the Dodecanese Islands in 1943-1945 and in Yugoslavia in 1943-1945, and who have no known grave. The site of what is now PHALERON WAR CEMETERY was chosen originally by the 4th Division as a burial ground for Commonwealth casualties of the Greek Civil War (December 1944-February 1945). Subsequently, the military authorities, in conjunction with the Greek Government and the Army Graves Service, decided that it would be the most suitable site for a Second World War cemetery for the whole mainland of Greece. The 23rd and 24th Graves Registration Units and the 21st and 22nd Australian War Graves Units worked together to bring in graves of the 1941 campaign from the battlefields, temporary military cemeteries and from various civil cemeteries. There are now 2,028 Commonwealth servicemen of the Second World War buried or commemorated in this cemetery. 596 of the burials are unidentified. Special memorials commemorate casualties known to have been interred in certain groups of graves in the cemetery, but whose individual graves cannot be precisely located within these groups. Other special memorials commemorate casualties re-buried in the cemetery from original graves which, owing to the destruction of local records, could not be identified. Also within the cemetery is the PHALERON CREMATION MEMORIAL, commemorating 74 men of the army of undivided India who died during the campaigns in Greece and Crete during the Second World War and who were accorded the last rite required by their religion - committal to fire. In the north-east corner of the cemetery, a plot contains the graves of servicemen and civilians who after serving in the Crimean War, died in Greece, and were buried in the Anglo-French Crimean Cemetery, New Phaleron. The graves were moved in 1966 when that cemetery could no longer be maintained.
No. of Identified Casualties: 2872

(c) http://www.cwgc.org/

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