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The CWGC Experience

 >> Take a look behind the scenes at the work of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), which honours the memory of those soldiers killed throughout the world in the two world wars.

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission is over a century old. For the first time, visitors can take a look behind the scenes at the work that is needed to commemorate the 1.7 million Commonwealth casualties from the First and Second World Wars.

The CWGC Experience is a unique new visitor attraction that shines a light on the work of the remarkable organisation at the heart of remembrance of the war dead.

Our free audio guide will walk you through each aspect of the work we do: from the story of how we still recover and rebury the dead today, to the skilled artisan craftsmen at work maintaining the world’s most impressive and recognisable monuments and memorials, a trip to the battlefields of the Western Front is not complete without a visit to the CWGC Experience.

Sources : ©The CWGC Experience
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Practical information

Address

5-7 rue Angèle Richard - 62217
Beaurains
03 21 21 52 75

Prices

Admission - Free - Parking reservation charge for vehicles with over 12 seats: € 20 / Over 20-seaters: € 50

Weekly opening hours

9H – 16H

Fermetures annuelles

December and January

Site Web : www.cwgc.org

Loos en Gohelle

Loos Memorial and Dud Corner cemetery. Source: Lens-Liévin Tourist and Heritage Information Office

 

Invaded in October 1914, Loos-en-Gohelle was not liberated until August 1917 for which it paid the price of thousands of lives.

 

The town of Loos-en-Gohelle suffered huge losses during the war of 1914-18. Invaded on 10 October 1914, it was not liberated until August 1917 at the cost of thousands of lives. French, English, Scottish, Welsh and Canadian men all perished on the town’s soil, hence the number of memorials and groups that continue to preserve a trace of its history today.

The association “Sur les Traces de la Grande Guerre” (In the footsteps of the Great War), whose role is to preserve, safeguard and share this legacy, invites people to visit the Musée Alexandre Villedieu where all the objects on display come from the Loos battlefields. There were three major battles in Loos-en-Gohelle, within the triangle of hills of Artois (Vimy and Lorette) and the Douai plain.

 

The first battle took place on 9 May 1915. A diversion to the Battle of Lorette Hill, it was a deadly massacre for both French regiments.

The second battle began on 25 September 1915, and is more commonly known amongst the British as the Battle of Loos. This battle claimed many victims (among the British, 15,800 lives and 34,580 men injured; among the Germans, 20,000 killed or wounded). This battle is very dear to the British many of whom come to meditate at the graves in three British cemeteries in Loos-en-Gohelle. This battle liberated two-thirds of Loos as far as Hill 70 which remained under German control for a further two years.


The third battle took place on 15 August 1917. After the liberation of Hill 145 in Vimy, the Canadian soldiers arrived in Loos in mid-July to seize the remaining part of German-occupied Loos. Until 15 August 1917, 12,000 Canadians moved around in a network of underground tunnels planning the liberation of Hill 70.


 


The Loos footpaths (Sépultures path and Lone Tree path) are public ways where Great War fanatics and interested visitors can learn all about the historic past of Loos through the former World War I battlefields.


 


Musée 14/18 Alexandre Villedieu

Association "Sur les Traces de la Grande Foyer Omer Caron"

First floor, Place de la République 62750 Loos en Gohelle

Tel: +33 (0)3 21 70 59 75 or +33 (0)3 21 28 99 82

E-mail: a.villedieu@wanadoo.fr


 

Mairie de Loos en Gohelle (town hall)

Place de la République 62750 Loos en Gohelle

Tel: +33 (0)3 21 69 88 77

Fax: +33 (0)3 21 69 88 79

E-mail: contact@loos-en-gohelle.fr


 

Opening times: 9-11 am and 2-5 pm

N.B. Reservation only for afternoon visits.

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Practical information

Address

Place de la République 62750
Loos en Gohelle
Tél. 03 21 69 88 77 Fax : 03 21 69 88 79 Musée 14/18 Alexandre Villedieu Association Sur les Traces de la Grande Foyer Omer Caron -1er étagePlace de la République 62750 Loos en GohelleTél. 03 21 70 59 75 ou 03 21 28 99 82E-mail : a.villedieu@wanadoo.fr

Prices

Free admission

Weekly opening hours

Opening times: 9-11 am and 2-5 pm (reservation only for afternoon visits)

Lens’ 14-18

With free admission, Lens’ 14-18 is an interpretation centre presenting the battles and events of the First World War over the 55 miles of the 1914-18 front in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region.

 

Its aim is to give visitors of all ages a sense of what everyday life was like for soldiers of all nationalities during the First World War.

Set at the foot of the hill of Notre-Dame-de-Lorette, Lens’ 14-18 presents the First World War on Nord-Pas-de-Calais soil.

 

The contemporary building, designed by architect Pierre-Louis Faloci, is comprised of black concrete cubes called ‘chapels’.

 

Using innovative museological techniques, this international interpretation centre has an outstanding collection of iconographic documents (maps, archives photographs, film footage from the period) and emblematic objects from around the world, which reflect the viewpoints of all the protagonists (French, Germans, British, etc.). There are nearly 400 large-format photos on display. Dynamic maps illustrate the different offensives, and some 20 archive films immerse visitors in the Great War.

 

The permanent exhibition, designed by an international scientific committee chaired by French historian Yves Le Maner, offers the keys to interpreting and appropriating the themes and chronology of the First World War. It establishes a coherent account of the events that took place in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region between 1914 and 1918. The major stages of the conflict presented are: the mobile war and the trench system; the bloody offensives and the occupation of the Nord; the 1918 offensives and death on the front; and ruins and reconstruction.

 

The display at Lens’ 14-18 makes the history of the First World War in the Nord and Pas-de-Calais departments accessible to the general public. The events are presented in summarised form, and visits take approximately two hours. The high-quality photos, objects from the collection and dynamic maps are exclusive to the centre, and help give visitors a rapid overview of the conflict.

 

Nearly 580 000 soldiers of 40 nationalities died along the 60 miles of front line spanning French Flanders and Artois. Their names are remembered at the Ring of Remembrance, the International Memorial of Notre-Dame-de-Lorette, 1500 metres above sea level, and their army data sheets can be consulted free of charge on digital tablets in the remembrance area of the Lens’ 14-18 museum.

 

Set at the foot of the hill of Notre-Dame-de-Lorette, Lens’ 14-18 presents the First World War on Nord-Pas-de-Calais soil.

 

The contemporary building, designed by architect Pierre-Louis Faloci, is comprised of black concrete cubes called “chapels”.

 

Using innovative museological techniques, this international interpretation centre has an outstanding collection of iconographic documents (maps, archives photographs, film footage from the period) and emblematic objects from around the world, which reflect the viewpoints of all the protagonists (French, Germans, British, etc.). There are nearly 400 large-format photos on display. Dynamic maps illustrate the different offensives, and some 20 archive films immerse visitors in the Great War.

 

The permanent exhibition, designed by an international scientific committee chaired by French historian Yves Le Maner, offers the keys to interpreting and appropriating the themes and chronology of the First World War. It establishes a coherent account of the events that took place in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region between 1914 and 1918. The major stages of the conflict presented are: the mobile war and the trench system; the bloody offensives and the occupation of the Nord; the 1918 offensives and death on the front; and ruins and reconstruction.

 

The display at Lens’ 14-18 makes the history of the First World War in the Nord and Pas-de-Calais departments accessible to the general public. The events are presented in summarised form, and visits take approximately two hours. The high-quality photos, objects from the collection and dynamic maps are exclusive to the centre, and help give visitors a rapid overview of the conflict.

 

Nearly 580 000 soldiers of 40 nationalities died along the 60 miles of front line spanning French Flanders and Artois. Their names are remembered at the Ring of Remembrance, Notre-Dame-de-Lorette International Memorial, 1500 metres above sea level, and their army data sheets can be consulted free of charge on digital tablets in the remembrance area of the Lens’ 14-18 museum.

 

Sources: © Lens’ 14-18 - Centre d’Histoire Guerre et Paix

 

Local tourist office: Office de Tourisme et du Patrimoine de Lens-Liévin, 58, rue de la Gare - 62300 Lens

Tel.: +33 (0)3 21 67 66 66

 info@tourisme-lenslievin.fr

www.tourisme-lenslievin.fr

 

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Practical information

Address

102 rue Pasteur 62153
SOUCHEZ
03 21 74 83 15

Prices

Free admission. For information on guided tours, visit www.lens14-18.com Free tour: Yes. Audioguide: € 3. Guided tours every Sunday at 3 pm: full price € 6, concessions € 3 or free of charge.

Weekly opening hours

Tuesday to Sunday, 10 am to 6 pm, April to mid-November Tuesday to Sunday, 10 am to 5 pm, mid-November to March

Fermetures annuelles

January

Site Web : www.lens14-18.com

The Barly national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Barly. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Barly

 

The Barly national cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Artois battles of 1914 to 1918. Created in 1915 close to the ambulance station set up in the castle of Barly, this military cemetery was developed from 1934 to 1935 in order to bring together the bodies exhumed from several of the region's military plots. Today, this cemetery contains the bodies of 323 French and 28 British men.

 

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Practical information

Address

Barly
20 km au sud-ouest d’Arras, D 8

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

The Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise

 

The Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise national cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Artois battles of 1914 to 1918. Created close to several temporary hospitals, this military cemetery was developed in 1924 in order to welcome other mortal remains exhumed in the Artois area. Today, this cemetery contains the bodies of 724 French and one Belgian soldier.

 

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Practical information

Address

Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise
À l’ouest d’Arras, D 39

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

The national necropolis of Maroeuil

La nécropole nationale de Maroeuil. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_necropole_Maroeuil

 

Situated in Le Mont de Sucre, south of Neuville-Saint-Vaast, the national necropolis of Maroeuil, created in 1919, contains the remains of 585 French soldiers who died in the battles of Artois between 1914 and 1918. In the centre is a monument erected in 1919 to the memory of Major Georges Lilleman of the 156th infantry regiment, killed on 9th May 1915 in La Targette and interred in the necropolis. Financed by the officer’s parents, the monument honours, with its epitaph “Brave soldiers who shed your blood for your country – we salute you”, the memory of the dead of the 156th and 160th infantry regiments, particularly Father Grosjean, a stretcher-bearer assigned as chaplain to the 156th, whose citation is a witness to the commitment of these two units: “Kept pressing his commanding officer for permission to accompany the battle assault troops on 9th May 1915. Constantly showed himself in the most dangerous places on 9th and 10th May, exhorting and encouraging his fellows, dressing the wounds of the injured, ensuring that they were picked up speedily, in a word, being a constant example of courage, good humour and charity.” (Official Journal, 2nd August 1915).

Nearby is the Maroeuil British Cemetery created by the 51st (Highland) Division, today containing the remains of 531 British servicemen, thirty Canadians and eleven Germans.

 

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Practical information

Address


Au nord-ouest d’Arras, D 339

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts des 156ème et 160ème R.I. de 1914-1918

La Targette national necropolis of Neuville-Saint-Vaast

La nécropole nationale de Neuville-Saint-Vaast. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_necropole_Neuville

 

Situated in the municipality of Neuville-Saint-Vaast, La Targette national necropolis contains the bodies of soldiers who died for France in Artois, which was the scene of fierce fighting between 1914 and 1918. Created in 1919, it was redesigned many times between 1923 and 1935. In 1956, the remains of servicemen killed mostly in 1940 were transferred there. Today, as a witness to the bloody Artois offensives in 1915, this national necropolis contains the remains of 11,443 Frenchmen, including 3,882 in two World War I ossuaries. From World War II, there are the remains of 593 Frenchmen, 170 Belgians (of whom 169 are in an ossuary) and four Poles.

The French soldiers include Henri Gaudier aka Henri Gaudier-Brzeska (grave 936), a painter and sculptor, precursor in France of the British artistic movement vorticism. A sergeant in the 129th infantry regiment, he died on 5th June 1915 at the age of 23 in Neuville-Saint-Vaast.

The remains from World War II include those of Paul Nizan (grave 8189) and Jeanne Bartet (grave 8352). The latter, an army nurse who belonged to the Union des Femmes de France de Bordeaux, was killed on 21st May 1940 near ambulance number 257 (Labroye). Paul Nizan, novelist, essayist, journalist and translator, was killed on 23rd May 1940 in Oudricq during the German attack on Dunkirk.

A monument has been erected to the memory of the soldiers of the 15th army corps who fell in August 1914.

Nearby are the Cabaret Rouge British cemetery and also the biggest German cemetery in Europe, Maison Blanche, which contains more than 44,000 graves. To the north of La Targette, towards Souchez, are two monuments, one placed at the entrance to the Czechoslovakian cemetery, honouring the memory of Polish and Czechoslovakian Foreign Legion volunteers.

 

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Practical information

Address

62580 Neuville-saint-vaast
Au sud de Lens, au nord d’Arras, D 937

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

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Notre-Dame de Lorette National Cemetery

Vue aérienne de la nécropole nationale de Notre-Dame-de-Lorette. © FreeWay Prod Sarl

- Plaquette à télécharger -

01-NDDL-2022-x3


Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette Panneau necropole_Lorette P1

 

The Notre-Dame de Lorette National Cemetery is located in the town of Albain-Saint-Nazaire and is home to the remains of soldiers who died for France during battle in Artois from 1914 to 1918. As of 1919, the site emerged as the symbolic location where all the bodies of French soldiers killed in Flanders-Artois should be buried. This small cemetery was built in 1915 and was expanded gradually from 1920. Since 1920, it accommodates the bodies of French troops from more than 150 cemeteries on the Artois, Yser and the Belgian fronts.

Covering an area of 25 hectares, the cemetery holds over 40,000 bodies, half of which are in individual graves, and the other half are divided into seven ossuaries. It is France’s largest national cemetery.

Some foreign soldiers (Belgian, Romanian and Russian) are also buried there. French soldiers killed in WWII were also buried there.

Amongst the graves, you can find the grave of a father and his son who died on the battlefield in 1915 and 1918. Six other graves hold the bodies of a father killed in WWI and a son killed in WWII.

 

 

Soldats dans une tranchée

Pour accéder au diaporama, cliquer ici

 

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Practical information

Address

62153 Ablain-Saint-Nazaire
Chemin de la Chapelle

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l'année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Chapelle-basilique, tour-lanterne avec crypte-ossuaires - Urne contenant des cendres de déportés déposée dans la crypte en 1955 - Soldat inconnu de 1939-1945 - Soldat inconnu d’Afrique du Nord 1952-1962 - Tombe du général Barbot, mort pour la France le 10 mai 1915

Faubourg d'Amiens Military Cemetery - Arras

Flying Services Memorial. Source: Jean-Pierre Le Padellec SGA/DMPA

 

This cemetery shelters 2,651 graves and displays the names, inscribed on the perimeter wall, of the 35,942 men who were never recovered following the Battles of Arras.

 

Arras and the First World War (1914-18)

Arras was at the centre of battle throughout the First World War. After falling into German hands in 1914 and then taken back by the French, it was defended by the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) from spring 1916. Almost razed to the ground, the town had become an underground city organised into a maze of galleries several kilometres long (known as boves) that were used during the great offensive of 1917. At the start of April, at dawn, some 20,000 British soldiers emerged in the surrounding German trenches to the complete surprise of the enemy, managing to seize officers as they were having breakfast.

 

 

For the Commonwealth forces, this was an absolute massacre: 159,000 men lost in 39 days, or the equivalent of 4,076 deaths every day. While notching up the biggest death toll, this offensive was nevertheless a significant military victory, perhaps the only one achieved by the Allies in 1917. In 1918, the Germans attempted, in vein, to recapture Arras.


 

Within the walls of the cemetery, all men are equal. The memorials were created in this spirit, with soldiers and officers lying side by side. The Cross of Sacrifice symbolises the faith of the majority (Christian) whole the Steele Memorial was built in honour of the men of other faiths and atheists.

Used from March 1916 by the British forces, the cemetery was enlarged after the Armistice by the graves repatriated from the battlefield and two small cemeteries nearby. It is the site of 2,651 burial places of Commonwealth soldiers who fought in World War I. A further 30 graves hold men of other nationalities, mainly German. Seven graves date back to the Second World War, when Arras served as the headquarters of British troops until the town was evacuated on 23 May 1940. In German hands at the time, it was taken back by the Allies on 1 September 1944.


 


For those with no known grave

The cemetery features a memorial that pays tribute to the more than 35,000 missing soldiers whose bodies were never found. These men fought in terrible conditions, against the deadliest weapons of war the world had ever known. Sent from the United Kingdom, South Africa and New Zealand, they fell in the Arras region between spring 1916 and 7 August 1918, the eve of the March to Victory. The Canadian and Australian soldiers killed during this period are commemorated by the memorials in Vimy and Villers-Bretonneux. A specific memorial honours the men who fell during the Battle of Cambrai in 1917.


 

The Flying Services Memorial bears the names of around 1,000 men from the Royal Naval Air Service, the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Air Force (following the merger of the RNAS and the RFC in April 1918) who were shot down on the Western Front and have no known graves. For the pilots involved in the Battle of Arras, April 1917 was dubbed Bloody April and life expectancy fell to three weeks at 5.30 p.m. Fiercely efficient, the German airforce decimated the RFC forces by a third in just one month.


 


Faubourg d'Amiens Military Cemetery

Boulevard du général de Gaulle 62000, Arras


 

Office de tourisme d'Arras

 

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Practical information

Address

Boulevard du général de Gaulle 62100
Arras

Prices

Free admission

Weekly opening hours

Open all year

Memorial - Battle of Arras

The Battle of Arras Memorial. Source: Town of Arras

 

The memorial, which stands in the former Wellington Quarry, commemorates the offensive launched by the British in Arras in April 1917.

 

The Battle of Arras Memorial was opened to the public on 1 March 2008. Erected in the former Wellington Quarry, it commemorates the Allied Engagement and the role this location played in the planning of the British offensive of April 1917 in Arras.


 


 

In spring 1917, the French General Nivelle, while preparing the Chemin des Dames offensive, requested that the commander of the British troops launch a diversion attack in the sector of Arras.

The main difficulty with this operation was gathering the troops in large numbers without attracting the enemy’s attention. The New Zealand fire brigade were commanded to dig tunnels beneath the enemy trenches in order to link together the old quarries used by stonecutters in the 15th and 16th centuries and create a huge underground network stretching 20 kilometres. It allowed the British troops to come out from nowhere, on the morning of 9 April, a few metres from the German front line.

This underground network was the biggest of its kind ever constructed by the British troops. The other purpose of these passages was to meet the basic needs of the 24,000 men billeted there prior to combat, the quarries providing a high level of security despite its close proximity to the Front with kitchens, showers and latrines installed as well as a military hospital. To facilitate their movements around the tunnels, the New Zealand and British troops named the quarries after towns and cities from their homelands. The main quarry was named Wellington.


 


A recent research programme carried out on these quarries by Arras’ archaeological department unearthed many traces of their former French and British occupants, the soldiers who lived and fought here during the war. In light of the interest these new-found testimonials hold in helping us to understand the everyday lives of the soldiers, a thorough inventory of the passages was made in the Wellington Quarry.


 


The town of Arras took the initiative to build this memorial, part funded by the Regional Council, the French Ministry of Regional Planning, the Urban Community, the General Council and the Ministry of Defence.

This place of remembrance comprises a remembrance garden and a wall dedicated to the British regiments who fought in this battle engraved with the names of all the soldiers. Documents about Arras dating back to the Great War are displayed in the half-buried reception hall.

Over 75 minutes, the tour pays tribute to the engagement of the Allied troops around Arras, focusing more on the soldiers’ everyday lives than the war itself. The quarry is open to groups of up to 17 people led by a tour guide. A glass lift takes the group 20 metres below ground to visit the 350 metres of tunnels that have been renovated.


 

This strategic network also housed the living quarters of thousands of soldiers billeted below ground. Drawings and graffiti, bas reliefs, crosses and other features can be seen on the walls, along with traces left behind by the soldiers such as helmets and rusted tins of food.

Each visitor is given an audio-guide that describes 10 sequences illustrated by visual projections and light shows on the surrounding walls: the discovery of the underground world; the traces left by the working quarry in the Middle Ages; the tunnel of history (the quarries up to 1916); the objectives of this unique military strategy in the context of the war; the tunnelling operation in 1916 and 1917; daily life in the quarries in April 1917; the construction of the network, and the Battle of Arras in April 1917. To conclude, a film about the Battle of Arras, based on archives from the Imperial War Museum, is shown in a room at the end of the tour. The memorial hopes to welcome 60,000 visitors a year.


 


Wellington Quarry

Rue Delétoile 62000 Arras

Tel: +(0)3 21 51 26 95


 


 

Office de tourisme d'Arras


 

Carrière Wellington

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Practical information

Address

Rue Delétoile 62000
Arras
03 21 51 26 95

Prices

Price: €6.80 Concessions: €3.10 Standard group price: €5.80 “Advantage” group price: €4.30 Standard school price: €2.90 “Advantage” school price: €2.10

Weekly opening hours

10 am to 12.30 pm and 1.30-6.00 pm

Fermetures annuelles

1 January and the three weeks immediately after the Christmas holidays. 28, 29 and 30 June and 25 December.