Records for the War Dead of WW1

Names on the Rugeley War Memorial, Staffordshire

War Grave Agency Records

If you think a relative may have died in the First World War it should be possible to confirm this by looking at the records held by one of the war grave agencies responsible for the care and maintenance of graves and official memorials for the war dead of the First World War. In most cases the records are available to view for free online. Where they are not, enquiries can be made by letter or telephone and advice will be given to help you locate your relative.

If you can find your relative as a named casualty in the records, you will be able to see the date of death, the location of the grave or place of commemoration together with details about that cemetery or memorial and where to find it. Depending on the type of records held by the relevant war grave agency you may also be able to find details for next of kin if they were recorded and, in the case of British and Commonwealth casualties, find additional invaluable detail such as the age of the casualty, the Service number and the military unit.

Roll of Honour & Other Records

In addition to the war grave agencies there may be other records confirming the death of a person whilst serving in the military. These may take the form of official and private rolls of honour compiled after the First World War. These may be national or local. These might be a war memorial for a town or village or lists of names as rolls of honour dedicated to the men of a particular workplace, church, sports club, school or and so on. There may also be other ways to follow up a Serviceman or woman's death by looking for a death certificate, local newspaper report, a will, a Service Record, and a record of medals awarded.

Information about the war grave agencies and other records for war dead available for you to search is given below.

Records for British & Commonwealth WW1 Dead

Headstone for British soldier S/6529 Private H H Dilks MM, serving with The Queens, who died 26th March 1918 aged 19. He is buried in Tyne Cot Military Cemetery on the Ypres Salient battlefield.
Headstone for British soldier S/6529 Private H H Dilks MM, serving with The Queens, who died 26 March 1918 aged 19.

If you think a relative may have died in the First World War whilst serving with the British & Commonwealth forces it should be straightforward to find a record of their death.

Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC)

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) holds a register of the death of every member of the Armed Forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, Merchant Navy) and Civilians from the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand and South Africa who died in the Great War of 1914-1918. For information about the CWGC, to search the Debt of Honour register and to find out more about its work caring for the graves and memorials of British and Commonwealth Forces around the world visit the CWGC website:

Website: www.cwgc.org

Royal, Indian & Dominion Navy Casualties (pre WW1-2008)

A full list online of Royal Navy casualties by name and date or ship. The list is the result of some 20 years co-operation between Don Kindell, a US-based researcher and the Naval Historical Department at the United Kingdom's Ministry of Defence.

Website: www.naval-history.net Casualties Index

Royal Navy and Royal Marines War Graves Roll 1914-1919

War memorial for ranks and ratings of the Royal Navy from the city of Plymouth and Australia, South Africa, Newfoundland, India, Pakistan, Ceylon, Fiji, Gold Coast, Hong Kong, Kenya, Malaya, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Burma who were lost at sea in 1914-1918 and in 1939-1945.
War memorial for ranks and ratings of the Royal Navy of Plymouth who were lost at sea.

The names of Royal Navy and Royal Marine officers and ratings who died in the First World War are listed in the War Graves Roll. The information includes:

Registers of Royal Navy and Royal Marine personnel killed and wounded between August 1914 and 1929 are recorded.

The original card index of the naval officers (commissioned and warrant) who died in service between 1914 and 1920 is available.

The War Graves Roll, the registers of killed and wounded and the card index of officers killed are available to view free at the National Archives, Kew, Surrey. For the catalogue references go to:

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

The Roll is also available to view on the following website (records can be viewed by subscription or pay as you go credits):

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk Royal Navy and Royal Marine War Graves Roll 1914-1919

Royal Naval Division Casualties of The Great War 1914-1924

The Roll is available to view on the following family history website (records can be viewed by subscription). This particular compilation has been corrected and revised from previous listings of Royal Naval Division casualties.

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk Royal Naval Division Casualties of The Great War 1914-1924

Soldiers and Officers Died in the Great War 1914-1919

A list of over 660,000 British soldiers (Other Ranks) who died during the Great War was compiled by the War Office and published by His Majesty's Stationery Office (HMSO) in 1921. The list is contained within 80 volumes. The dates covered for casualties are from and including 4 August 1914 to 11 November 1918. Casualties killed after the end of the war until 25 March 1921 are also included in the listing.

A list of over 41,000 officers who died in the Great War was published in one volume in 1919. The dates covered for casualties are from and including 4 August 1914 to 11 November 1918. Casualties killed after the end of the war until 26 September 1919 are also included in the listing.

The record for an individual contained in this listing does not include the location of a grave. The record does usually contain the following information:

The listings for “Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914-1918” can be consulted in person for free at the Imperial War Museum London (Department of Printed Books) or The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. The websites are given here to make appointments for visits and viewing:

Website: www.iwm.org.uk

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

The following family history websites have this data listing to search (viewing is by subscription or pay as you go credits):

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914-1919

Website: www.findmypast.co.uk Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914-1919

Website: www.forces-war-records.co.uk Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914-1919

The listing of “Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914-1918” is available to buy on CD Rom. The 80 volumes have been captured as a digital database and can be purchased from the Naval & Military Press. (The CD Rom may be available on loan from a library.)

Website: www.naval-military-press.org

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“Cross of Sacrifice” Volumes

Cross of Sacrifice is a record of all officers of all services who died during the First World War whilst serving with the British, Commonwealth and Colonial regiments and corps. It has been compiled as an alphabetical record by S D and D B Jarvis and was published in 1993. Volumes may be available to see from a library loan or can be seen at the Imperial War Museum London and the National Archives at Kew.

Copies can also be purchased. See Related Reading below.

Website: www.iwm.org.uk

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force Casualties

Headstone for British airman Second Lieutenant L C J Barlow, serving with The Royal Air Force, who died 18 June 1918 aged 20. He is buried in Villers Bretonneux Military Cemetery on the Somme battlefield.
Headstone for British airman Second Lieutenant L C J Barlow serving with Royal Air Force, who died 18 June 1918 aged 20.

Casualty cards, giving details of the casualty, the aircraft involved and sometimes the next of kin details are available. These are held at the R.A.F. Museum Hendon in north London.

Website: www.rafmuseum.org.uk

There are also records held at the National Archives at Kew which relate to R.F.C. and R.A.F. casualties, records of squadrons, officers reported missing and messages from the Germans about missing pilots. For catalogue references go to:

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

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Merchant Navy

The National Archives hold Registers of Deceased Seamen for each year of 1914 to 1918. These provide information for:

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour 1914-1924

Five volumes and a sixth volume index containing a biographical record of about 26,000 members of His Majesty's naval and military forces who fell in the First World War. The volumes were compiled by the 9th Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval and were published by the Standard Art Book Co. of London. Some entries include a photograph and may include detail. This is not a complete list of casualties who died, and most of the recorded names in the volumes date from deaths in the early years of the war.

Volumes 1 and 2 are available to search and dowload for free on the California Digital Library website (terms and conditions apply):

Website: www.archive.org Volume 1

Website: www.archive.org Volume 2

Volumes 1-5 are available to search on the following family history websites (access to viewing and downloads is chargeable as a subscription or pay as you go credits):

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk

Website: www.findmypast.co.uk De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour

Website: www.forces-war-records.co.uk De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour

National Roll of the Great War

This is a Roll of those who fought in the Great War and who did not necessarily die. The idea was to compile a biographical list of the participants. 14 volumes were produced by the National Publishing Company, listing approximately 100,000 participants in the war. Of these under 20% of those listed were participants who died. The volumes are arranged into regions as follows:

The National Roll is available to view on the following websites (records can be viewed by subscription or pay as you go credits):

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk

Website: www.findmypast.co.uk The National Roll of the Great War

Other Rolls of Honour

A Roll of Honour may exist for a particular military unit and might have been published in a unit history. There may be a mention of the individual you are searching for in a locally, privately produced Roll of Honour for the company he worked for, the school he went to, the football or cricket team he played for, the town he lived in or the church where attended.

Town War Memorials

The First World War Roll of Honour in St Michael & St Mary Magdalen Church, Easthampstead, Bracknell, Berkshire.
Roll of Honour, Easthampstead, Bracknell.

Most towns and villages in the United Kingdom have a war memorial or plaque listing the names of those who died serving their country in the First World War. In many cases names of those men from the locality who were killed during the Second World War have been added to the memorials of 1914-1918.

Those villages whose men all returned safely and which do not, therefore, have a memorial are known as the “Thankful Villages”.

War memorials vary in shape and size, they may be official or privately funded, some have fallen into disrepair, but many are carefully looked after.

The UK National Inventory of War Memorials (UKNIWM) was established in 1989 as a project to locate all the war memorials in the United Kingdom and to record the names on them. A television programme on Channel 4 called “Lost Generation” started collecting a nationwide database of the names on war memorials and this data was passed to the UKNIWM. The work to build up the database was taken on by the Imperial War Museum London. The UKNIWM has been renamed as the War Memorials Register and is available to search online via the Imperial War Museum website. For more information visit website at:

Website: www.iwm.org.uk War Memorials

The War Memorials Trust is also compiling an online project to record, conserve and remember war memorials across the United Kingdom. For information see:

Website: www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk

Newspapers

The Times national newspaper included lists of those killed in action or who died of wounds. Local newspapers often included lists and photographs of local men killed or who died of wounds.

The British Library Newspaper Library at Colindale in north London has an archive to view. Local libraries may also hold archive copies of regional newspapers dating back to the 1914-1918 period.

Website: www.bl.uk

Death Certificates

The Death Certificates for British war dead are held by the General Register Office. Enquiries can be made to:

Certificate Services Section, General Register Office, PO Box 2, Southport, Merseyside PR8 2JD

Telephone: 0300 123 1837

Fax: 01704 55 00 13

Email: [email protected]

Website: www.directgov.uk

French and Belgian Death Certificates

British soldiers who died between 1914 and 1920 in a hospital or outside of the battle zone in France or Belgium were issued with a French or Belgian death certificate. These records will be in French or Flemish.

They are available to view at the National Archives in Kew, Surrey and are archived with the catalogue reference of RG 35/45-69.

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

They are also available online on the official website for Births, Marriages and Deaths. These certificates can be searched for on this website and select the reference RG35-NEW on the index in the right hand margin:

Website: www.bmdregisters.co.uk

British Soldiers' Wills

In August 2013 Her Majesty’s Court and Tribunal Service (HMCTS) announced the publication online of thousands of wills written by British soldiers who had lost their lives in the First World War. The collection does, in fact, consist of the wills of soldiers dating from 1850-1986.

In many cases the will comprises a simple, formalized statement by the soldier on a form to pass on his property and effects to his next of kin. However, in some cases there is a final letter or a more detailed will. There may be omissions in availability of a will, as a search by name and date of death does reveal that some deceased soldiers do not appear on the online list. If you find a will for your ancestor it is available to download for a small fee. To search the government website go to:

Website: www.gov.uk/probate-search

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Records for Belgian Military Dead in WW1

Gravestone for Belgian soldier Alphonse Martens, who served with 28th Regiment. He was born in Antwerp on 12 June 1892 and died on 28 September 1918. The grave is in Houthulst Belgian Military Cemetery north of Ieper (Ypres) in Belgium.
Gravestone for Belgian soldier Alphonse Martens, who served with 28th Regiment and who died on 28 September 1918.

Records for Belgian war dead of the First World War are held in the archive at the In Flanders Fields Museum in Ieper (Ypres). For information you can enquire via the Research Centre of the In Flanders Fields Museum. The email and website links are at:

Email: [email protected]

Website: www.inflandersfields.be Knowledge Centre

Records for Canadian Military Dead in WW1

Canadian Virtual War Memorial (CVWM)

The Virtual Memorial is an online register of over 118,000 Canadians and Newfoundlanders who have given their lives while serving in uniform. The names are also inscribed in seven Books of Remembrance. You can find out more and search the online register at this website:

Website: www.veterans.gc.ca Canadian Virtual War Memorial

Circumstances of Death Registers, First World War

Records are held by the Library and Archives Canada. They are grouped into one series for First and Second World War deaths as Accession RG 150, 1992-93/314. They can be searched for free at the Library and Archives Canada website:

Website: www.bac-lac.gc.ca Circumstances of Death Registers

Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC)

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) holds a register of the death of every member of the Armed Forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, Merchant Navy) and Civilians from the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand and South Africa who died in the Great War of 1914-1918. To search the Debt of Honour register visit the CWGC website:

Website: www.cwgc.org

Records for French Military Dead in WW1

Le Ministère des Pensions

Cross for French soldier Jean Henri Buthod, serving with the 62nd B.C.A. (Battalion de Chasseurs Alpins) who died on 9th June 1918. This burial is in the British Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery.
Cross for French soldier Jean Henri Buthod, serving with the 62nd B.C.A. (Battalion de Chasseurs Alpins) who died on 9th June 1918.

The French war graves agency, Le Ministère des Pensions, was founded during the First World War and cares for French military graves from WW1 to the present day.

For our information page about tracing French military graves go to:

Le Ministère des Pensions

Mémoire des Hommes Website

In memory of the many thousands of French servicemen who have served their country at times of conflict since 1914 the French Ministry of Defence has provided a website (in French, English, German and Spanish) providing thousands of digitalized biographical records. Visit the website at:

Website: www.memoiredeshommes.sga.defense.gouv.fr

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Records for German Military Dead in WW1

Cross for German soldiers Musketier Ernst Creuzburg who died on 6 November 1916 and Musketier August Schmidt who died on 9 November 1916. The burials are in the Neuville Vitasse German Cemetery near Arras in France.
Cross for German soldiers Musketier Ernst Creuzburg who died on 6 November 1916 and Musketier August Schmidt who died on 9 November 1916.

Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge (VDK)

The German war graves agency, the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge (VDK), was formally established after the First World War. Individuals can be traced online via the VDK's website. For a history of the organisation and how to contact the VDK go to our page at:

Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge

Records for Ireland Military Dead in WW1

Ireland, Casualties of World War 1, 1914-1922 Roll of Honour

Eight volumes containing the name, rank and regimental number (information may vary) of over 49,000 personnel, compiled by the Irish National War Memorial.

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk Ireland, Casualties of World War 1

Website: www.findmypast.ie Ireland's Memorial Record of World War 1

Records for Italian War Dead in WW1

Cross for an Italian soldier named Zilio Battista who is buried in the Belgian Military Cemetery at Houthulst north of Ieper (Ypres) in Belgium.
Cross for an Italian soldier named Zilio Battista who is buried in the Belgian Military Cemetery at Houthulst north of Ieper (Ypres) in Belgium.
Commissariato generale per le onoranze ai Caduti di guerra

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Russian WW1 Graves in France

Russian military cemetery St. Hilaire le Grand on the Marne battlefield in France.
Russian military cemetery St. Hilaire le Grand, Marne, France.

There are almost 1,000 Russian WW1 military graves on the Marne battlefield. They are cared for by the French war graves agency Le Ministère des Pensions. See our page for information about the French war graves agency:

Le Ministère des Pensions

Records for United States of America WW1 War Dead

Cross for American soldier Philip J Fay, Private 1st Class, serving with the 310th Infantry in the 78th Division. He was from Rhode Island and he died 22nd September 1918. This burial is in the American military cemetery at St. Mihiel in France.
Cross for American soldier Philip J Fay, Private 1st Class, serving with the 310th Infantry in the 78th Division and who died on 22 September 1918.

The American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC) is the war graves agency responsible for the care and maintenance of WW1 graves of soldiers serving with the United States Armed Forces during the First World War. For information about the agency and its work see our page at:

American Battle Monuments Commission

Records of the International Red Cross (Prisoners of War)

The Red Cross was used as a “go-between” between the warring nations, whereby the locations of the burials of military dead and captured prisoners by an enemy were recorded and were passed to the enemy nation via the Red Cross. The Red Cross made copies of this information and the archive where this information has been stored since 1918 was “discovered” by British military historian Peter Barton. The records have been safely stored in a basement of the Red Cross Museum in Geneva but were an unknown source of such information to military historians until now. The original records which had been passed to the United Kingdom, France and Germany are believed to have been destroyed by enemy action in the Second World War.

The International Committee of the Red Cross has digitized the archive so that families may be able to access the records and possibly trace the original burial location of a relative who has been recorded as missing.

For free online access to the digitized archive visit the website:

Website: www.grandeguerre.icrc.org Prisoners of the First World War

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Related Reading

Cover of Cross of Sacrifice Vol 1

Cross of Sacrifice, Vol. 1: Officers Who Died in the Service of British, Indian and East African Regiments and Corps, 1914-1919 Vol. 1 (paperback)

by D B Jarvis

Published by Naval & Military Press Ltd (2 Jun 2011), 404 pages. ISBN-10: 1845748867; ISBN-13: 978-1845748869

Cover of Cross of Sacrifice Vol 2

The Cross of Sacrifice: Officers Who Died in Service of the Royal Navy, Royal Navy Reserve, Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, Royal Marines, Royal Naval Service and Royal Air Force, 1914-1919 Vol. 2 (hardback)

by S D Jarvis and D B Jarvis

Published by Naval & Military Press Ltd (second revised edition 1 May 2000), 170 pages. ISBN-10: 1897632878; ISBN-13: 978-1897632871

Cover of Cross of Sacrifice Vol 5

Cross Of Sacrifice: The Officers, Men And Women Of The Merchant Navy And Mercantile Fleet Auxiliary 1914-1919: Vol. 5 (paperback)

by S D Jarvis

Published by Naval & Military Press Ltd (13 Feb 2009), 226 pages. ISBN-10: 1843426897; ISBN-13: 978-1843426899

Related Topics

WW1 Remembrance Projects: Photographic & Virtual Memorials

See also our page listing a number of projects carried out in recent years to compile virtual Rolls of Honour of the men and women who served in the military during the First World War.

WW1 Remembrance Projects

Tracing World War 1 Family History

Cpl Thomas Parker, 2nd Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers, killed on the Somme battlefield 6 November 1916.
Cpl T H Parker

For advice and information on how to start tracing an ancestor who served in the military in the First World War 1914-1918 see our page at:

Tracing World War 1 Family History

WW1 Research and Sources of Information

Part of a British Army Trench Map 28NE3 Edition 7B (German trenches corrected to 24.10.17) showing Fitzclarence Farm to the north east of Inverness Copse on the Ypres Salient battlefield.
Trench Map 28NE3 Edition 7B with trenches corrected to 24.10.17 showing Fitzclarence Farm.

For more information about where to find archives, military records, official publications, maps, War Diaries, medal records and a variety of research material for tracing family history in the First World War period go to our section on research at:

WW1 Research and Sources of Information

Useful Links

The National Archives, Kew, Surrey

Website: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Ancestry.co.uk

Website: www.ancestry.co.uk

Findmypast.co.uk

Website: www.findmypast.co.uk

Forces War Records

Website: www.forces-war-records.co.uk

Photographs Forever: Photo Restoration and Photograph Retouching

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Website: www.photographsforever.co.uk