Creation of the cemetery 1920 (≈ 1920)
Acquisition by asylum of aliens from Cadillac.
1994
Transfer to the municipality
Transfer to the municipality 1994 (≈ 1994)
The cemetery becomes communal property.
2000
Site closure
Site closure 2000 (≈ 2000)
Latest burials recorded.
26 avril 2010 et 14 septembre 2010
First partial registration
First partial registration 26 avril 2010 et 14 septembre 2010 (≈ 2010)
Fence wall protection.
2020
Restoration of the site
Restoration of the site 2020 (≈ 2020)
Added names on memorial walls.
23 juillet 2021
New registration
New registration 23 juillet 2021 (≈ 2021)
Repeal of the 2010 Order.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The whole Cemetery of the Forgotten (located on Parcel 1009, Parcel 1010) and all the facades and roofs of the house of the fossoyeur (located on Parcel 1600) in accordance with the plan annexed to the Order, all of these elements appearing in cadastre section A: inscription by order of 23 July 2021
Key figures
Michel Benezech - Specialist in criminal psychiatry
Author of a report on the cemetery.
François Noudelmann - Writer
Author of *Les enfants de Cadillac* (2021).
Gilles Ortlieb - Writer
Author of *Cadillac* (2022).
Origin and history
The Cemetery of the Forgotten, located in Cadillac-sur-Garonne in Gironde, is a burial place created in 1920 to house the remains of the deceased patients at the alienated asylum of the city. This project was motivated by the inadequacy of the communal cemetery, particularly because of the large number of deaths among First World War veterans, victims of psychiatric disorders called "brain mutilated". A square of 98 graves is specifically dedicated to them, marked by a commemorative plaque.
The cemetery, which has about 900 burials, was used until 2000. The majority of the graves, in the middle of the earth, were marked by iron crosses whose nameplates have often disappeared. In 1994, the site became the property of the commune. It was partially listed as a historical monument in 2010 to preserve its fence wall, threatened by a project of transformation into a parking lot. A restoration in 2020 honoured the memory of the buried, including the 160 veterans whose names and nationalities were engraved on a Corten steel wall.
Among the buried are at least 88 Senegalese tirailers, as well as German, Austrian and Hungarian prisoners of war. In 2021, a new Order of Registration for Historic Monuments repealed the 2010 order, consolidating the protection of the site. In addition, recent research has identified 3,401 civilians buried in the commune since 1922, whose names were added on a second memorial wall. The cemetery is now run by a local association, the Friends of the Cemetery of the Forgotten of Cadillac.
This place bears witness to the history of psychiatry in France, especially through the consequences of the trauma of the Great War. He inspired literary works, such as Les enfants de Cadillac (François Noudelmann, 2021) and Cadillac (Gilles Ortlieb, 2022), and was the subject of documentaries, including a report by Michel Benezech, former intern of the psychiatric hospital.
The Cemetery of the Forgotten also illustrates the diversity of buried populations, reflecting the human tragedies associated with world conflicts and living conditions in asylums in the twentieth century. Its designation as historic monuments underscores its heritage and memorial importance, both for the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region and for French medical and social history.
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