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 PlaceLocationCategoryDescription
Roclincourt Military Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Roclincourt The French troops who held this front before March 1916 made a military cemetery (now removed), on the south-west side of which the present Commonwealth cemetery was made. It was begun by the 51st (Highland) and 34th Divisions in April
Bailleul Road West Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Saint-Laurent-Blangy cemetery, First World War 1914-1918Part of the commune and the greater part of the village of St. Laurent-Blangy were included in the front taken over by British troops in March, 1916, and the remainder fell into British hands on the first day of the
Bailleul Road East Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Athies cemetery, First World War 1914-1918A greater part of the village was included in the front taken over by British troops in March, 1916, and the remainder fell into British hands on the first day of the Battles of Arras, the 9th April, 1917. Bailleul
Albuera Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Bailleul-Sir-Berthoult cemetery, First World War 1914-1918Bailleul-Sire-Berthoult was occupied by the 2nd Division on 13 April 1917 and Albuera Cemetery was made in April-November 1917 by fighting units; the origin of its current name is not known and it was often called Bailleul Military Cemetery. The
Beehive Canadian Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Willerval The cemetery owes its name to a German machine gun emplacement known to the British troops as "The Beehive". It was made by fighting units after the occupation of Willerval in the Battles of Arras, 1917, and it was used
Givenchy-En-Gohelle Canadian Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Souchez canada, cemetery, First World War 1914-1918Givenchy-en-Gohelle was taken by the 2nd Canadian Division on the 13th April, 1917 and remained in British hands during the rest of the War. The Canadian Cemetery was begun by the Canadian Corps, under the name of C.D. 20, in
Sucrerie Cemetery (Saskatchewan Cemetery)(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Ablain-Saint-Nazaire cemetery, First World War 1914-1918The village and the neighbourhood of Ablain-St. Nazaire were the scene of very severe fighting between the French and the Germans in May and June, 1915. Sucrerie Cemetery is named from a sugar factory, which was destroyed in the War
Ecoivres Military Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Mont-Saint-Eloi cemetery, First World War 1914-1918This cemetery is really the extension of the communal cemetery, where the French army had buried over 1000 men. The 46th (North Midland) Division took over the extension with this part of the line in March 1916, and their graves
Maroeuil British Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Etrun cemetery, First World War 1914-1918The cemetery was begun by the 51st (Highland) Division when Commonwealth forces took over the Arras front in March 1916 and it retained its association with that division until the summer of 1918. Almost half of the graves are those
Ste. Catherine British Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Sainte-Catherine (Arras)cemetery, First World War 1914-1918From March 1916 to the Armistice, Ste. Catherine was occupied by Commonwealth forces and for much of that time it was within the range of German artillery fire. The cemetery was started in March 1916 and used by the divisions
Louez Military Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Maroeuil cemetery, First World War 1914-1918The cemetery was begun by French troops and taken over by the 51st (Highland) Division as a "front-line cemetery" in March 1916. The 60th (London) Division followed during their short stay in France in the summer of 1916 and the
Lievin Communal Cemetery Extension(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Lievin (Льевен)Lievin was captured by the Canadian Corps on the 14th April, 1917, and remained in British hands until the end of the War. The Extension was made after the Armistice by the concentration of graves from certain smaller cemeteries and
Dury Crucifix Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Dury cemetery, First World War 1914-1918The cemetery was begun by Canadian units (mainly the 46th and 47th Battalions) immediately after the capture of the village, and it contained at the Armistice 72 graves (now in Plot I, Rows A and B). It was then enlarged
Vis-En-Artois Canadian Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Haucourt memorial, cemetery, First World War 1914-1918Vis-en-Artois and Haucourt were taken by the Canadian Corps on 27 August 1918. The cemetery was begun immediately afterwards and was used by fighting units and field ambulances until the middle of October. It consisted originally of 430 graves (in
Valley Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Vis-en-Artois The cemetery was begun on 31 August 1918 with the burial of 31 officers and men of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Battalion, who had died the previous day in the capture of Orix Trench, in the big grave in Row
Eterpigny British Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Eterpigny Eterpigny British Cemetery was begun by the 4th and 1st Divisions and was used from the end of August 1918, to the middle of October. One grave was brought in after the Armistice. Casualty Details: UK 54, Canada 12, Total
Dury Mill British Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Cagnicourt cemetery, First World War 1914-1918In August, 1918, Dury was behind the German defence system known as the Drocourt-Queant line; but on the 2nd September this line was broken by the Canadian and XVII Corps, and Dury village and the hill just South of it
Windmill British Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Guemappe cemetery, First World War 1914-1918On 23 April 1917, in the Second Battle of the Scarpe, Infantry Hill (east of Monchy) and Guemappe (due south of Monchy) were captured by Commonwealth troops. Guemappe was lost the same day, but retaken almost at once, and further
Monchy British Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Roeux cemetery, First World War 1914-1918Monchy village, a relatively high and commanding position, was captured by Commonwealth forces on 11 April 1917. The cemetery was begun at once and continued in use as a front-line cemetery until the German offensive of March 1918, when it
Orange Trench Cemetery(en)France / Nord-Pas-de-Calais / Roeux cemetery, First World War 1914-1918Orange Hill and Orange Trench were features of the country south of the river Scarpe, through which Commonwealth forces fought their way in April 1917, during the Battle of Arras, and again in August 1918. Orange Trench Cemetery was made
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