I happened upon the local cemetery today and noticed a number of war graves maintained there by the CWGC. Many were RAF from both wars and there are also a handful of German graves from both wars too which is unusual.
Amongst the Germans I noticed some lads died the same day so guessed, rightly it turns out, that they were aircraft crew.
Digging about this evening I found these stories -

On 1st June 1941, a squadron of German bombers flew over Dorset on their way to bomb Liverpool. A Heinkel 111 P-2 (Werk # 1421 _ "1G + DS") was attacked by a Bristol Beaufighter of No.604 Squadron (night fighter) and broke up, crashing at Birches Wood, near Cranborne. All the crew were killed.
A Heinkel usually had a crew of 5 (pilot, navigator/bombardier/nose gunner, ventral gunner, dorsal gunner/radio operator, side gunner) but there appears to have been 4 on this occasion. Obltn Joachim Kleinfeldt was the Observer. Oberfeldwebel August Wilhelm Lindemann was the Pilot. Unteroffizier Hellmut Konrad Häring was the Radio Operator. Feldwebel Georg Karl Emig was the Flight Engineer.

A second Heinkel 111 H-5 (Werk # 3958 _ "1G + CH") was also shot down by a Beaufighter of No. 604 Squadron piloted by F/Lt Gomm. The aircraft crashed at Hancock’s Bottom, Tarrant Gunville. It also only had a crew of four. Lieutnant Herbert Tscheplak & Gefreiter (Aircraftman) Fritz Faust bailed out safely and were captured.
The remaining crew, Obergefreiter Walter Mergner (Observer) and Unteroffizier Friedrich Georg Weber (Radio Operator), were killed.

All casualties are interred at the Blandford cemetery.

On 16 October 1959, the British and German governments agreed that the remains of all German military personnel and German civilian internees of both world wars who at the time were interred in various cemeteries not already maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), be transferred to a single central German Military Cemetery established on Cannock Chase for this purpose. The site is supposed to have been chosen because it resembles Luneburg Heath in Germany. The cemetery contains nearly 5,000 burials from both the First and Second World Wars.

By the end of the Second World War, the number of Germans buried in and around Blandford must have been well into three figures. (It should be noted here that there was a POW camp in the town and the 'Spanish flu' ravaged the inmates in WW1.) They were all moved to Cannock Chase in 1966. Exhumation records are kept at The National Archives, Catalogue References: HO 282/21 and 284/84.
Those in Blandford Cemetery were not moved because they were already being maintained by the CWGC. (The one grave missing is Grave 39. The family of the deceased may have exercised their right to have these remains re-patriated or re-interred.)
http://branches.britishlegion.org.uk...dford-cemetary

So, there you go - A bit of local history that may be of interest.