Maps showing the location of all CWGC cemeteries, worldwide, are not on the CWGC website. They may be found via
http://ww1centenary.oucs.ox.ac.uk/space-into-place/commonwealth-cemeteries-of-world-war-one/.
This will be helpful if you know where the deceased’s battalion was fighting but the body was not recovered and identified. Chances are burial would be in a nearby cemetery, if the body was recovered.
Sometimes a body was recovered with the regiment known but otherwise unidentified. For each cemetery in France and Belgium, the number of unidentified burials is given in closing paragraphs of the ‘History Section.’ The website has no details on the unidentified casualties as the website search facility operates on a name search.
Thanks to the CWGC for this information.


The November issue is already out. Here are the contents.
You can’t miss “Find Your London Family” on the cover of the issue.
If your heritage lies in Essex new records for Chingford, Leytonstone, South Chingford and Walthamstow in Findmypast’s Essex Marriages and Banns 1537-1935 collection are likely to be of interest. Those parishes are now in the London Borough of Waltham Forest.
Looking for a deceased relative in East London? Chadwell Heath Cemetery (now known as Mark’s Gate) from 1934 comprising 16,681 records, and Eastbrookend Cemetery from 1914 containing 23,066 records,
Gloucestershire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1813 now has 4,858,358 records. In January 2019 the collection had 4,855,897 records, so the update is an increase of 2,461 records. No indication if the additions are for a particular parish or parishes.