Eiganes Churchyard lies about half a kilometre west of the town centre, and the Commonwealth War Graves Plot occupies a prominent position at the head of the main avenue leading to the Crematorium. From the town follow route 509 in the direction of Bergen to a large junction with traffic lights and the football stadium on the right. Turn right here into Wesselsgate and then first right again into Alexander Kiellandsgate. The cemetery is along here on the left.
During the Second World War, Norway was of strategic importance to the Germans. Their invasion on 9 April 1940 was sudden and widespread and despite Allied intervention, the entire country was under German occupation by early June. Thereafter, Allied activity in Norway was confined to raids and special operations, with the Commonwealth air forces providing support to Norwegian resistance groups until the German capitulation in May 1945. There are no Commonwealth war cemeteries in Norway, those who died there being buried in civil cemeteries and churchyards. In November 1942, an attempt was made to destroy the hydroelectric power station at Vermork, in Telemark, where heavy water was produced for German atomic research. Two gliders and an aircraft engaged in the raid crashed in southern Norway. All those aboard, Royal Engineers of the 1st Airborne Division and members of the Commonwealth air forces, were either killed in the crash or died later, at the hands of their German captors. The heavy water plant was eventually destroyed by a party of six Norwegians dropped by parachute in 1943. Stavanger (Eiganes) Churchyard contains the graves of 25 servicemen who died in the raid, the rest are buried at Helleland Churchyard. In all, the cemetery contains 44 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War.
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