Champigny-Saint-André is a German World War II cemetery in Normandy, France. It is located on the northern edge of the village of Saint-André-de-l'Eure, about south east of Évreux. The burials come from the summer of 1944, as the Allies pushed out of Normandy towards Paris. It is the second largest of the six German war cemeteries in Normandy with a nearly 20,000 burials. The cemetery is maintained and managed by the voluntary German War Graves Commission.
History
Champigny-Saint-André was originally the site of a battlefield cemetery, established by the United States ArmyGraves Registration Service in August 1944 during the push towards Paris across the Seine. Fallen American and German soldiers and airmen were buried in two adjacent grave sites. Following the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, the American Battle Monuments Commission began exhuming the remains of American servicemen and transferring them in accordance with the wishes of their families. Beginning in 1945, the Americans transferred two-thirds of their fallen from this site back to the United States while the remainder were re-interred at the new permanent American Cemetery and Memorial at Colleville-sur-Mer, which overlooks the Omaha Beach landing site. The French authorities collected additional German casualties for a wide area who were in field graves and small local cemeteries. This includes all German burials that had been interred in the civilian cemetery in Paris during the German occupation. With agreement between the French and German authorities after the war, fallen German soldiers buried in the departments Eure, Orne, Seine-Maritime, Eure-et-Loire and Seine-et-Oise were moved to Champigny-Saint-André.
Layout
Behind the main entrance is a memorial courtyard that includes columns of travertine detailing the locations from where German casualties were brought to the cemetery. Headstones are made from light-coloured limestone and bear the name, rank and date of birth and death of two servicemen resting next to one another. There are 17 burial areas of varying size containing a total of 19,836 fallen German servicemen. A central path leads to a high steel cross. There is a mass grave containing 816 bodies of which 303 are identified and recorded on stone markers. The Champigny-Saint-André war cemetery was inaugurated on 12 September 1964.
Personal fates
The majority of the Germans killed during the Allied push towards Paris in August 1944 were buried at Champigny-Saint-André. Buried at the cemetery: