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Ancre British Cemetery,
Beaumont-Hamel, France. Following the German withdrawal to the Hindenburg Line
in the spring of 1917, V Corps cleared the battlefield of 1916 and created a number
of cemeteries, of which Ancre British Cemetery was one. There were originally
517 burials, but after the Armistice the cemetery was greatly enlarged when many
more graves from the same battlefields and from smaller burial grounds were consolidated.
There are now 2,540 Commonwealth casualties of the First World War buried or commemorated
in the cemetery. Some 1,335 of the graves are unidentified, but special memorials
commemorate 43 casualties known or believed to be buried among them. There are
also special memorials to 16 casualties know to have been buried in other cemeteries,
whose graves were destroyed by shell fire.
Information sourced from Commonwealth War Graves Commission www.cwgc.org.
Image
kindly provided by Richard
Evans from his website Nelson, Glamorgan and the Great War http://www.nelson-ww1-memorial.org.uk. |