| On the 18th August
the Aabenraa Town Clerk (Herr Heydenreich) received a message
from the German authorities that the bodies of seven English
fliers were to be buried on Saturday 21st August 1943. At the
same time, four coffins from the Ustrup crash and one body from
the Als crash would be buried. |
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| The handwritten
note on the left hand side of the document is that of Herr Heydenreich,
the Town Clerk, ordering a wreath from Frau Kraft who owned the
flower shop across the road from the cemetery. |
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| During the period
1940-1943 allied airmen were given a military funeral arranged
by the local German authorities. These took place with the services
of a German Chaplain, a salute fired by a platoon of German soldiers
and the laying of a wreath. |
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| The practice
of the salute and wreath laying stopped at the end of 1943 and
in August 1944 orders were received to bury crews where they
crashed. After the war 65 such bodies were recovered in Denmark. |
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| The Danish/German
burial records show that only 5 of the 7 crew members were indentified.
Information received after the war helped identify the remaining
two. During re-burial, the crew of JA691 were split up and Sgt
Buchanan was placed in a different row. |
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| The flower shop
(seen here as it would have looked in 1943) later sent the Town
Clerk a bill for Kr15 for the wreath they provided for the burials. |
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| Kraft's flower
shop now has new owners and a new front. The present owners call
the business "Juhl's Blomster". |
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