Difference between revisions of "War Memorials: France (A-H)"
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<td>[[Image:Cambrai East Military Cemetery-France.jpg|thumb|150px|Submitted by Chrissie Smiff]]</td> | <td>[[Image:Cambrai East Military Cemetery-France.jpg|thumb|150px|Submitted by Chrissie Smiff]]</td> | ||
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+ | ==Doullens : Communal Cemetery== | ||
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+ | <td>[[Image:Doullens Communal Cemetery-France.jpg|thumb|150px|Submitted by Chrissie Smiff]]</td> | ||
+ | <td>[[Image:Doullens Communal Cemetery 2-France.jpg|thumb|150px|Submitted by Chrissie Smiff]]</td> | ||
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Revision as of 09:09, 13 October 2008
Beaumont Hamel
On July 1, 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme in World War I, 801 soldiers of the 1st Newfoundland Regiment rose from the British trenches and went into battle at Beaumont-Hamel, nine kilometers north of Albert in France. After only 30 minutes the regiment was devastated. Only 68 men stood to answer the regimental roll call the next morning. 255 were dead, 386 were wounded, and 91 were listed as missing in action and presumed dead. Every officer who had gone over the top was either wounded or dead. The Caribou memorial overlooks the ground across which the regiment advanced. (Source: Wikipedia)
Cambrai : Cambrai East Military Cemetery
Doullens : Communal Cemetery
Etaples : Military Cemetery
Fouquereuil : Sandpits British Cemetery
Ovillers : Military Cemetery
Thiepval : Memorial to the Missing of the Somme
Thiepval : The Ulster Tower
Vimy Ridge : Canadian Memorial
Back to War Memorials