Introduction
This site is a 30 acre (12 hectare) cemetery laid out in 1944 and dedicated in 1956. It was created on land donated by the University of Cambridge. The cemetery was the only American World War 2 cemetery in the British Isles. The cemetery contains nearly 4,000 gravestones arranged in curved plots flanked by box hedging. The cemetery includes a long reflective pool, rose garden, box hedging and a wide variety of trees.
Terrain
On the north slope of a hill.The cemetery is situated on a hill to the west of Cambridge with a north facing slope from which, on a clear day, Ely Cathedral can be seen. The cemetery is framed by woodland to the south and west. Before the Chapel is a long reflecting pool bordered with polyanthus roses, edged with box. The Great Mall features reflecting pools, which are bordered by roses and stretches east towards the memorial. The memorial is inscribed with the names of some 5,126 servicemen missing or lost at sea.
A line of double flowering pink hawthorn trees acts as a screen to the sloping cemetery where 3,912 gravestones are arranged in seven curved plots. Each is enclosed by box hedging. Beech, oak, tulip trees, sweetgums and Indian bean trees complement the design.
The architects for the cemetery were Perry, Shaw, Hepburn and Dean from Boston and landscape architects were the Olmstead Brothers from Brookline, Massachusetts.
The following is from the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest. For the most up-to-date Register entry, please visit The National Heritage List for England (NHLE):
The only permanent American Second World War cemetery in Britain, designed by Perry, Shaw, Hepburn and Dean, Architects and Olmsted Brothers, landscape architects and dedicated in 1956.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING
The American Cemetery is situated c 8km to the west of Cambridge, on the north side of the A1303 St Neots Road. The c 12.5ha site is bounded to the north by Cambridge Road, which links the villages of Coton and Madingley, to the west by a track beside Madingley Wood, to the east by farmland, and to the south by the A1303. The cemetery occupies a rural position on the north slope of a hill which gives extensive views northwards over the surrounding countryside and towards Ely cathedral, some 22km away, which can be seen on clear days.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES
The main entrance to the cemetery lies in the south-west corner, beside the Visitors' Centre which is set back off the A1303. Beside the main gates, a vehicular access drive leads into the boundary woodland to a parking area. In the north-west corner of the site stand the lower gates to the cemetery, reached from Cambridge Road. From these gates, steps lead up to the north end of the West Mall.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING
The main building on the site is the tall, rectangular Memorial chapel and museum room (listed grade II*) situated towards the south-east corner of the site. It is constructed of Portland stone of extremely high quality and has simple lines. The tall, teakwood doorway faces west over the reflective pool gardens (also listed grade II*) and has a gable above with a commemorative inscription. The north wall has five projecting stone piers the full height of the wall, each inscribed with one of the years from 1941 to 1945, while the south wall carries an inscription and map of the United Kingdom. The Memorial and its facing garden were designed by Perry, Shaw, Hepburn and Dean between 1952 and 1954, using Hughes and Bicknell of Cambridge as the local architects executing the project.
OTHER LAND
The main entrance beside the Visitors' Centre in the south-west corner gives onto a wide gravel walk leading to the c 30m tall flagpole, surrounded by clipped hedges. The flagpole stands on a raised platform with an inscription around its base and forms the termination of the Mall and Memorial to the east, and the West Mall to the north. From the platform there are good views north-east over the field of headstones. The West Mall is a wide tarmac walk connecting the flagpole to a curved viewing bastion in the north- west corner of the site. It is lined by an avenue of Sophora japonica, the Japanese pagoda tree, and is bordered to the west by an oak grove which runs along the western boundary of the cemetery, screening service buildings and offices.
On the main axis to the east of the flagpole lies the Court of Honour. This area is reached by wide steps which descend from the platform into a garden area enclosed by low Portland stone walls to the north and the high Wall of the Missing to the south, which is inscribed with the names of those lost while serving in Britain during the Second World War. Between the south side of the Wall and the south boundary is an oak grove which contains areas for parking. Within the garden itself are three long rectangular reflection pools, bordered by rose beds, which stretch between the flagpole area and the Memorial at the eastern end; along the low northern boundary wall is a line of hawthorns. The Memorial chapel looks west and behind it, below its eastern facade, is a small enclosed garden area.
Between the West Mall and the Memorial chapel are the plots of headstones, which stretch between the two in a wide arc. From the northern end of the West Mall a gravel path runs east and south-east to the Memorial. It follows the curve of the boundary wall, along which is planted a deep shrub border. Below the boundary wall, to the north and north-east is a plot of land at a lower level, currently (2001) laid to grass with some shrub areas, which is used for additional parking. The grave plots are arranged in parallel, curved lines interspersed by gravel paths lined with box hedges occupying the sector between the two.
REFERENCES
Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial, Visitors' handbook, (American Battle Monuments Commission nd)
N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Cambridgeshire (1970), p 437
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION
The American Military Cemetery is designated at Grade I for the following principal reasons:
* A unique example of a Post-War Military Cemetery (mid-1950s) of the highest design quality and social importance.
* It commemorates the lives of all US servicemen who perished in Britain in World War II and contains the remains of over 3800 war dead.
* The landscape design was by Olmsted Brothers, an internationally renowned landscape firm which created a striking and moving formal design applied to a commemorative landscape, dominated by monumental architecture including a chapel, wall of remembrance and flagpole.
* The uniformity of the individual headstones and their formal arrangement in a regular pattern across a large area set on lawn contributes an exceptional character, equalled in England by the military cemetery at Brookwood.
* The cemetery survives in excellent condition with components including a variety of high quality structures and a memorial chapel.
Description written: October 2001
Amended: March 2002
Edited: September 2002
Upgraded: November 2009
- Visitor Access, Directions & Contacts
Access contact details
This site is a cemetery. It is open daily from 9am to 5pm, except for 25 December and 1 January. Please visit the website for more information.http://www.abmc.gov/cemeteries/cemeteries/ca.php
- History
This 12 hectare cemetery was laid out on the site of a temporary cemetery established in 1944 on land donated by the University of Cambridge. It was selected as the only American Second World War cemetery in the British Isles.
The following is from the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest. For the most up-to-date Register entry, please visit the The National Heritage List for England (NHLE):
The American Cemetery is one of twenty four permanent American Second World War cemeteries erected on foreign soil by the American Battle Monuments Commission. It was established as a temporary military cemetery in 1943 on land donated in perpetuity by the University of Cambridge and was later selected as the only permanent American Second World War military cemetery in the British Isles. Following this decision, the architects Perry, Shaw, Hepburn and Dean of Boston, Massachusetts, were commissioned to design the built elements of the cemetery, which were set within a landscape laid out by Olmsted Brothers, landscape architects of Brookline, Massachusetts. The site was dedicated in July 1956 and some forty-two per cent of those temporarily interred in England and Northern Ireland were reinterred at Cambridge. The cemetery holds many of the American servicemen and women who were crew members of American aircraft during the Second World War, together with those who died in the invasions of North Africa and France, the remains of in all 3812 individuals. The site remains (2001) in the ownership and management of the American Battle Monuments Commission.
- Associated People
- Features & Designations
Designations
The National Heritage List for England: Register of Parks and Gardens
- Grade: I
Features
- Pool
- Description: Reflective pool flanked by roses.
- Earliest Date:
- Latest Date:
- Statue
- Description: Four statues depicting an airman, a soldier, a sailor and a Coast Guardsman run along the wall of remembrance which features the names of 5,126 servicemen who were missing in action or were lost at sea.
- Earliest Date:
- Latest Date:
- Memorial Chapel (featured building)
- Description: The memorial chapel built of Portland stone is flanked by pylons which denote the 5 years of American involvement in the Second World War.
- Earliest Date:
- Latest Date:
- Hedge
- Description: The grave plots are flanked by box hedging.
- Building
- Description: Visitors' centre.
- Walk
- Description: Wide gravel walk.
- Garden Feature
- Description: 30m tall flagpole, surrounded by clipped hedges.
- Avenue
- Description: The West Mall is lined by an avenue of Sophora japonica, the Japanese pagoda tree.
- Grove
- Description: An oak grove runs along the western boundary of the cemetery.
- Border
- Description: A deep shrub border.
- Border
- Description: A deep shrub border.
- Key Information
Type
Funerary Site
Purpose
Sacred / Ritual / Funerary
Principal Building
Religious Ritual And Funerary
Survival
Extant
Hectares
12
Open to the public
Yes
Civil Parish
Coton
- References
References
- Cambridgeshire Gardens Trust {The Gardens of Cambridgeshire} (Huntingdon: Cambridgeshire Gardens Trust, 2000) The Gardens of Cambridgeshire
- Pevsner, N {The Buildings of England: Cambridgeshire} (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1970) p437 The Buildings of England: Cambridgeshire
Contributors
Cambridgeshire Gardens Trust