Enfidaville War Cemetery, Tunisia

Enfidaville  War Cemetery Tunisia
Enfidaville  War Cemetery Tunisia

Within the Enfidaville Cemetery, 1551 Commonwealth Servicemen are buried. The majority are from the United Kingdom (1315), followed by New Zealanders (172), Canadians (38), Australians (11), South Africans (9), Indians (2) and four men from the High Commission Territories.1

Enfidaville  War Cemetery Tunisia

Walking along the lines of headstones, I found four of the Australians. Their headstones had been placed together, as is the custom with aircrew laid to rest in Commonwealth War Graves Cemeteries. Flight Sergeants Dawson, McIlroy, Sinclair and Turner.

Australian headstones Enfidaville  War Cemetery Tunisia
Donald Norman Dawson

Donald Norman Dawson was born in Brisbane, Queensland in 1921, and enlisted in the RAAF in June, 1941.2

Ronald Bruce McIlroy

Born in Kogerah, New South Wales in 1922, Ronald Bruce McIlroy enlisted in the RAAF in August 1941.3,4

Walter Samuel Sinclair

Walter Samuel Sinclair was born in Northam, Western Australia, and enlisted in the RAAF in July 1941.5 He trained at the No. 1 Wireless Air Gunners School in Ballarat, Victoria, completing his course in May 1942.6

Anthony St Clair Turner

Born in Cambridge, England in 1920, Anthony St Clair Turner enlisted in the RAAF in Sydney in 1941.7,8

Wellington bomber
Wellington HE109, 40 Squadron RAF, circa 1943. Photo Australian War Memorial P04404.002

Wellington bombers in North Africa targeted Axis troop positions, infrastructure and shipping to support Allied ground operations. In an interview with Imperial War Museum historians, Roy Hartwell, a Wellington bomber pilot who flew in North Africa with 108 Squadron RAF, described such an operation against an Axis airfield in Libya.10

Wellington Bomber
Bombs ready to be loaded into Wellington bombers in Libya, 1943. Photo from the Australian War Memorial MED1107
Enfidaville War Cemetery Tunsia

Turning from the four headstones, I spent some time walking through the rest of the cemetery as the afternoon shadows lengthened. Amongst the 1551 buried at Enfidaville, who had come from across the Commonwealth to fight in North Africa, I found the other Australians. I like to think that the tall eucalypts that line the front boundary of the cemetery are a comfort to them.

Enfidaville War Cemetery Tunsia

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Comments

2 responses to “Enfidaville War Cemetery, Tunisia”

  1. Jill Glover Avatar
    Jill Glover

    It disappeared so try 3? Perhaps not. But I’m on board with your travels and the stories you generate taking me with you

    1. Jim Clayton Avatar
      Jim Clayton

      Hello Jill! Your last comment arrived safe and sound and you’ll find it underneath the It’s Midnight and I’m Lost in Tunis post

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