GUILLEMONT is a village and commune
in the Department of the Somme, 13 kilometres East of Albert. Guillemont
Road Cemetery is between the village and Trones Wood, on the North side
of the road to Montauban.
The village was an important point
in the German defences in July, 1916. It was taken by the 2nd Royal
Scots Fusiliers on the 30th July, but the battalion was obliged to fall
back; and it was again entered for a short time by the 55th (West Lancashire)
Division on the 8th August. On the 18th August it was reached by the
2nd Division, and on the 3rd September (in the Battle of Guillemont)
the village was captured and cleared by the 20th (Light) and part of
the 16th (Irish) Divisions. It was lost in March, 1918, but retaken
on the 29th August by the 18th and 38th (Welsh) Divisions.
The 20th Division erected a Memorial
at the cross roads 450 metres East of the village; which has now been
replaced by a permanent monument near the same spot; and a permanent
Memorial to the 16th Division has been erected between Guillemont and
Ginchy.
The cemetery (which was sometimes called
Trones Wood Cemetery) was begun by fighting units (mainly of the Guards
Division) and Field Ambulances after the Battle of Guillemont, and was
closed in March, 1917. It then contained 121 burials, besides a number
of regimental memorials. It was greatly increased after the Armistice
by the concentration of 2,139 graves (almost all of July-September,
1916) from the battlefields immediately surrounding the village. It
now contains the graves of 2,259 soldiers from the United Kingdom, one
from Canada, one from Australia, one from South Africa and one from
Newfoundland; and two German prisoners. Thirty-nine French graves have
been removed to French cemeteries.
The unnamed graves in the cemetery
number 1,523; and a few others are identified as groups but not individually.
Special memorials are erected to eight soldiers from the United Kingdom,
known or believed to be buried among the unnamed graves.
The cemetery covers an area of 8,344
square metres. It stands in cultivated country, near the head of the
valley which rises to Guillemont from the West..
The only considerable cemetery from
which British graves were brought to Guillemont Road Cemetery was
HARDECOURT VILLAGE FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY. The village of Hardecourt-au-Bois
was captured by French troops on the 8th July, 1916, and again by the
58th (London) and 12th (Eastern) Divisions on the 28th August, 1918.
Five British Artillerymen were buried by their unit in the French Military
Cemetery, in the middle of the village, in September, 1916; and in 1918
the 12th Division buried in the same cemetery 14 men of the 9th Royal
Fusiliers and two of the 7th Royal Sussex.
Number of burials by Unit
King's Liverpool Regt. |
139
|
|
Suffolk Regt. |
38
|
Norfolk Regt. |
33
|
|
Sherwood Foresters
- Notts. & Derbys. Regt. |
31
|
Buffs - East Kent
Regt. |
30
|
|
Royal Field Artillery |
26
|
Rifle Brigade |
24
|
|
Royal Army Medical
Corps |
23
|
Royal
Fusiliers - City of London Regt. |
21
|
|
Middlesex
Regt. |
20
|
Bedfordshire Regt. |
18
|
|
Royal Garrison Artillery |
18
|
Duke of Cornwall's
Light Infantry |
16
|
|
Gloucestershire Regt. |
16
|
Leicestershire Regt. |
14
|
|
Ox. & Bucks. Light
Infantry |
13
|
West Yorkshire Regt. |
13
|
|
Royal Welsh Fusiliers |
12
|
Machine Gun Corps
- Infantry |
11
|
|
Grenadier Guards |
10
|
Coldstream Guards |
9
|
|
King's Own Royal Lancaster
Regt. |
9
|
Royal Dublin Fusiliers |
9
|
|
Royal Engineers |
9
|
Royal Munster Fusiliers |
9
|
|
Durham Light Infantry |
8
|
Gordon Highlanders |
8
|
|
Royal Scots Fusiliers |
8
|
Royal Warwickshire
Regt. |
8
|
|
14th Bn. London Regt.
- London Scottish |
7
|
Lancashire
Fusiliers |
7
|
|
13th Bn.
London Regt. - Kensington |
5
|
York & Lancaster
Regt. |
5
|
|
4th Bn. London Regt.
- Royal Fusiliers |
4
|
Essex Regt. |
4
|
|
King's Royal Rifle
Corps |
4
|
King's Shropshire
Light Infantry |
4
|
|
Northumberland Fusiliers |
4
|
Royal Inniskilling
Fusiliers |
4
|
|
Royal Scots - Lothian
Regt. |
4
|
Royal West Kent Regt.
- Queen's Own |
4
|
|
Scots Guards |
4
|
Somerset Light Infantry |
4
|
|
12th Bn. London Regt.
- London Rangers |
3
|
3rd Bn. London Regt.
- Royal Fusiliers |
3
|
|
Connaught Rangers |
3
|
Devonshire
Regt. |
3
|
|
East Surrey
Regt. |
3
|
East Yorkshire Regt. |
3
|
|
Hampshire Regt. |
3
|
Irish Guards |
3
|
|
Leinster Regt. |
3
|
Loyal North Lancashire
Regt. |
3
|
|
Manchester Regt. |
3
|
Royal Irish Regt. |
3
|
|
Dorsetshire Regt. |
2
|
King's Own Yorkshire
Light Infantry |
2
|
|
Lincolnshire Regt. |
2
|
Royal Sussex Regt. |
2
|
|
Seaforth Highlanders |
2
|
South Lancashire Regt. |
2
|
|
Yorkshire Regt. -
The Green Howards |
2
|
18th Bn. London Regt.
- London Irish Rifles |
1
|
|
29th Bn. London Regt. |
1
|
2nd Bn. London Regt.
- Royal Fusiliers |
1
|
|
Argyll & Sutherland
Highlanders |
1
|
Australia |
1
|
|
Border Regt. |
1
|
Cambridgeshire
Regt. |
1
|
|
Cameronians
- Scottish Rifles |
1
|
Cheshire Regt. |
1
|
|
East Lancashire Regt. |
1
|
General List |
1
|
|
Guards - Machine Gun
Regt. |
1
|
King's Dragoon Guards |
1
|
|
King's Own Scottish
Borderers |
1
|
Royal Army Service
Corps |
1
|
|
Royal Berkshire Regt. |
1
|
Royal Irish Fusiliers |
1
|
|
Royal Irish Rifles |
1
|
Royal Newfoundland
Regt. |
1
|
|
South Africa |
1
|
Welsh Guards |
1
|
|
Welsh Regt. |
1
|
Worcestershire Regt. |
1
|
|
|
|
Identified UK burials
|
740
|
|
|
|
Identified German
burials |
2
|
|
|
|
Unidentified
UK burials: |
1522
|
|
|
|
Unidentified
Canadian burials: |
1
|
|
|
|
Total Unidentified
burials |
1523
|
|
|
|
Total burials |
2265
|
|
|
|
Plan of the Cemetery

Those with awards in this cemetery
Lt. Frank Everard Boundy M.C., 17th Bn.
The King's Liverpool Regt. Killed in action near Bois de Trônes,
30th July 1916, aged 21. Son of parents living in Valparaiso, Chile.
2.M.5
Sgt. F. Bowler D.C.M., 2nd Bn. Sherwood Foresters (Notts. &
Derbys. Regt.) Died 16th Sept. 1916, aged 33. 7.J.7
2nd Lt. Harold Joseph Calder, Mentioned in Despatches. 14th Bn.
London Regt. (London Scottish). Killed in action 18th Sept. 1916, aged
25. 15.J.1
Pte. H. Calvert D.C.M., 19th Field Amb. Royal Army Medical Corps.
Died 3rd Nov. 1916. 1.E.6
L/Cpl. J. Cray M.M., 9th Bn. Royal Fusiliers (City of London
Regt.) Died 29th Aug. 1918. 2.B.3
Cpl. A. Edwards M.M., 5th Bn. The King's Liverpool Regt. Died
8th Aug. 1916. 9.F.3
Capt. Leopold Reginald Hargreaves M.C., Irish Guards, died 25th
Sept. 1916, aged 33. 1.C.4
Bmdr. Gravatt Bundell Hobgen M.M., 5th Bty. 281st Brig. Royal Field
Artillery. died 20th Sept. 1916, aged 30. 9.F.9
L/Cpl. A. S. Knight M.M., 8th Bn. The Buffs (East Kent Regt.). Died
4th Aug. 1917, aged 23. 9.J.5
L/Cpl. George Lovell M.M., 1st Bn. Leicestershire Regt. Died 15th
Sept. 1916, aged 22. Native of Hinckley, Leics. 5.G.3
Sgt. Leonard Auton Mann, Mentioned in Despatches. 19th Bn. The
Rifle Brigade. Killed in action 3rd Sept. 1916, aged 33. 2.P.1
Capt. William Joseph Murphy, Mentioned in Despatches. 9th Bn.
Royal Dublin Fusiliers. Killed in action 9th Sept. 1916, aged 36. Joined
Cadet Corps, Leinster Regt. Nov. 1914; appointed Lt. 9th Dublins, Dec.
1914 and Capt. in March 1915. Special Memorial No. 5
Capt. Guy Mynors Shufflebotham, Mentioned in Despatches. 7th Bn.
Somerset Light Infantry. Killed in action 3rd Sept. 1916, aged 20. Native
of Staplegrove, Somerset. 4 years in O.T.C. King's College, Taunton.
14.E.3
Maj. D. A. Stacey D.S.O., 2nd Bn. London Regt. (Royal Fusiliers),
died 9th Oct. 1916. 1.D.1
Lt. Col. John Collier Stormonth-Darling D.S.O., 1st Bn. Cameronians
(Scottish Rifles), attd. 9th (Glasgow Highlanders) Bn. Highland Light
Infantry. Died 1st Nov. 1916, aged 38. Native of Kelso, Roxburghshire.
1.C.1
Cpl. E. C. Woolridge M.M., "D" Bty. 83rd Brig. Royal
Field Artillery. Died 3rd Sept. 1918. 1.H.1.
Others buried in this cemetery
Lt. Raymond Asquith, 3rd Bn. Grenadier Guards. Died of chest
wounds during the attack on Ginchy on the 15th Sept. 1916. Aged 37.
Son of the Rt. Hon. H. H. Asquith, P.C., Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom 1908-1916 (becoming 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith, K.G.). An
associate of Rupert Brooke, he was a barrister and scholar of high intellect
and had been President of the Union at Oxford, won the Craven, Derby
and Ireland Scholarships, a First in Greats and a Fellowship at All
Souls. The following inscription has been engraved on his grave:
Small time but in that small most greatly lived this star of England.
1.B.3
Pte. Cecil Aubrey Balshaw. 13th Bn. London Regt. (Kensington),
killed in action 9th Sept. 1916, aged 22. Native of Lancashire and Civil
Service clerk at the Admiralty. 9.J.6
Pte. Felix Beattie (served as Craig). 1st Bn. Royal Inniskilling
Fusiliers. Died 27th Jan. 1917. 1.J.2
Pte. Vincent Archer Alphonso Brown, 2nd Bn. Sherwood Foresters
(Notts. & Derbys. Regt.), killed in action 13th Sept. 1916, aged
26. Enlisted Feb. 1907. 6.H.7
Pte. J. Burrow, 4th Bn. King's Own Royal Lancaster Regt. Killed
in action 8th Aug. 1916, aged 25. Pupil of the Ulverston Victoria Grammar
School and student of St. John's College, York. Assistant Master at
Dalton (Church of England) School. 6.N.6
2nd Lt. Robert Furley Callaway, 2nd Bn. Sherwood Foresters (Notts.
& Derbys. Regt.), killed in action 13th Sept. 1916, aged 44. A Missionary
Priest in the Diocese of St. John's, Kaffraria, in charge of the Holy
Cross, Pondoland, South Africa. Special Memorial No. 1
Lt. Harold Quinan Carver, 19th Bn. The King's Liverpool Regt.
Died 30th July 1916, aged 26. Born in Australia. 5.D.7
Pte. H. S. Clarke, 9th Bn. Royal Dublin Fusiliers, died 6th Sept.
1916, aged 18. Known as "Brother Stephen" at Twyford Abbey,
Willesden, London. 7.P.8
Pte. E. Coquelin, 6th Bn. Royal Irish Regt. Died 3rd Sept. 1916,
aged 20. From Le Hurel Vale, Guernsey. 2.E.7
2nd Lt. William Alexander Stanhope Forbes, 3rd Bn. Duke of Cornwall's
Light Infantry. Died 3rd Sept. 1916, aged 23. Son of Stanhope Alexander
Forbes, one of the founders of the Newlyn 'School of Art'. Lt. Forbes
was a student of the Royal Architectural Association. The following
inscription can be seen on his grave: He saw beyond the filth of
battle and thought death a fair price to pay to belong to the company
of these fellows. 1.A.1
Lt. Richard William Formby, Royal Engineers, killed in action
16th Feb. 1917. An official of the Public Works Department, Madras.
1.A.2.
2nd Lt. Fred Hall, Dorsetshire Regt. attd. Royal Flying Corps.
Died 22nd Sept. 1916, aged 20. 4.G.5
2nd Lt. William Thomas Hichens, 1st Bn. Duke of Cornwall's Light
Infantry. Killed in action 3rd Sept. 1916, aged 22. From Guernsey. 6.O.4
Pte. Eric Coulthard Hughes, 1/10th Bn. The King's Liverpool Regt.
Died 12th Aug. 1916, aged 18. Apprenticed to Mersey Docks and Harbour
Board. 8.F.4
Gnr. A. Kairis. "X" 29th Trench Mortar Bty. Royal Field
Artillery. Died 23rd Jan. 1917, aged 20. Native of Lithuania. 1.I.4
Pte. F. Lees, 10th Bn. Royal Welsh Fusiliers, died 16th Aug.
1916, aged 27. B.Sc. X.I.9
2nd Lt. Lance Will Lewis, 7th Bn. King's Royal Rifle Corps, attd.
Machine Gun Corps (Infantry). Killed in action 9th Aug. 1916, aged 24.
B.A. Oxford. 7.M.7
Pte. John Macfarlane, 2nd Bn. Seaforth Highlanders. Died 20th
Oct. 1916, aged 24. Came from Monte Video, South America to enlist.
2.E.5
2nd Lt. Kenneth Irvine Thomson Morland, 6th Bn. Ox. & Bucks.
Light Inf. Died 3rd Sept. 1916, aged 32. Born at Abingdon, Berks. Educated
at Haileybury, M.A. of Oriel College Oxford. Tea planter in Ceylon,
1908-1915. Enlisted 1915 in H.A.C. Special Memorial No. 3
Gnr. H. Nye (served as Cotton) "A" Bty. 77th Brig.
Royal Field Artillery. Died 7th Sept. 1916. 2.B.7
L/Cpl. Jack Archibald Nye, 3rd Bn. London Regt. (Royal Fusiliers).
Died 16th Aug. 1916, aged 23. Native of Wembley, Middlesex. Enlisted
Sept. 1914. Served in the Sudan and at the Dardanelles. 7.M.5
Pte. Eric Albert Peppiette, 10th, attd. 13th Bn. The King's Liverpool
Regt. Died 16th Aug. 1916, aged 24. Assistant Librarian at Liverpool
University. 13.M.10
Sgt. William Rhodes, 12th Bn. The King's Liverpool Regt. Died
9th March 1917, aged 25. Employee of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway.
1.G.9
L/Cpl. (Signaller) John Skillcorn, 11th (Pioneer) Bn. Durham
Light Infantry. Died of wounds 10th March 1917, aged 22. Born at Coal
Centre, Washington Co., U.S.A. 1.C.13
Lt. The Hon. Edward Wyndham Tennant, 4th Bn. Grenadier Guards.
Killed in action from a sniper's bullet 22nd Sept. 1916, aged 19. Son
of Edward Priaux, 1st Baron Glenconner and Lady Glenconner (later Viscountess
Grey of Falloden). A talented poet, he was, with Raymond Asquith and
others, an associate of Rupert Brooke. His grave bears the inscription,
Killed in action in his twentieth year. 1.B.18
2nd Lt. Bryn Atherton Brodie Thomas, 13th Bn. The King's Liverpool
Regt. Killed in action 16th Aug. 1916, aged 19.Son of Lt. Col. D. Brodie
Thomas, O.B.E. Native of Chester. 4.N.7
Rfn. D. F. Tuhey (served as Welch), 1/12th Bn. London Regt. (The
Rangers). Died 9th Sept. 1916. 1.L.11
|