Niederzwehren Cemetery, Kassel
- Country Germany
- Total identified casualties 1800 Find these casualties
- Region Hessen
- Identified casualties from First & Second World War
- GPS Coordinates Latitude: 51.26399, Longitude: 9.46544
Location information
The city of Kassel lies in the centre of Germany approx 165kms south of Hannover. From the A49 Kassel to Gudensberg motorway take exit 6 (Ausfahrt 6) KASSEL-NIEDERZWEHREN. This merges onto the FRANKFURTERSTRASSE. Continue for approx 1km, then turn right (CWGC sign) onto the DITTERHAUSERSTRASSE. Continue for approx 400m and turn right (CWGC sign). Continue for a further 800m (back under the motorway) and then turn left (CWGC sign) onto AM KEILSBERG. Continue up the hill for approx 1km and the cemetery can be found on the right. The cemetery address is:- Am Keilsberg 34134 Kassel Germany GPS Location is:- N 51 15 49 E 09 27 56
Visiting information
Wheelchair access possible via main entrance. For further information regarding wheelchair access, please contact our Enquiries Section on telephone number 01628 507200.
History information
The cemetery was begun by the Germans in 1915 for the burial of prisoners of war who died at the local camp. During the war almost 3,000 Allied soldiers and civilians, including French, Russian and Commonwealth, were buried there.
In 1922-23 it was decided that the graves of Commonwealth servicemen who had died all over Germany should be brought together into four permanent cemeteries. Niederzwehren was one of those chosen and in the following four years, more than 1,500 graves were brought into the cemetery from 190 burial grounds in Baden, Bavaria, Hanover, Hesse and Saxony.
There are now 1,796 First World War servicemen buried or commemorated in the Commonwealth plot at Niederzwehren. This total includes special memorials to 13 casualties buried in other cemeteries in Germany whose graves could not be found.
The following cemeteries are among those from which graves were brought to Niederzwehren:
BAYREUTH TOWN CEMETERY, Bavaria. 24 burials of 1918.
DARMSTADT FOREST CEMETERY, Hesse. In use from 1915. 102 burials.
DIETKIRCHEN PRISONERS OF WAR CEMETERY, Hesse-Nassau. 45 burials (28 of Irish regiments) of 1914-18.
FREIBURG IN BREISGAU MAIN CEMETERY, Baden, 43 burials of 1918.
GERMERSHEIM CEMETERY, Palatinate. 26 burials of 1915-1918.
GIESSEN MILITARY CEMETERY, Hesse. 99 burials of 1914-1919.
GOTTINGEN MILITARY CEMETERY, Hanover. 88 burials of 1914-1919.
HAMELN PRISONERS OF WAR CEMETERY, Hanover. 70 burials of 1915-1918.
INGOLSTADT CEMETERY, Bavaria. 23 burials of 1917-1918.
LANGENSALZA PRISONERS OF WAR CEMETERIES No. 1 and No. 2, Prussian Saxony. 225 burials of 1915-1918.
MAINZ MILITARY CEMETERY, Rhein-Hessen. 23 burials of 1915-1919.
MANNHEIM MAIN CEMETERY, Baden. 21 burials of 1916-1918.
MESCHEDE PRISONERS OF WAR CEMETERY, Westphalia. 49 burials of 1917-1918.
OHRDRUF PRISONERS OF WAR CEMETERY, Thuringia. 107 burials of 1915-1918.
PADERBORN CEMETERY, Westphalia. 29 soldiers burials of 1914-18.
QUEDLINBURG CENTRAL CEMETERY, Prussian Saxony. 102 burials of 1914-1918.
SENNELAGER PRISONERS OF WAR CEMETERY, Westphalia. 32 burials of 1914-1918.
In addition, in June 2018, five special memorial headstones were erected to five Second World War airmen who were known to have been buried in Ohrdruf Cemetery, but whose graves were later lost.