Mill Road Cemetery, Thiepval (Somme) |
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Details Thiepval is a village and commune in
the Department of the Somme. The village is a little East of the river
Ancre, about 5km above Albert, and between the village and the river
was Thiepval Wood. The village was destroyed in the war, but the existence
of the commune after a long period of uncertainty was preserved. From the time when trench warefare began on the Ancre, Thiepval was garrisoned by the 108th Regiment of Württembergers. It was attacked unsucessfully by the 32nd and 36th (Ulster) Division on the 1st July, 1916, and in memory of that attack the Ulster Divisional Memorial, a replica of Helen's Tower at Clandeboye, has been erected on the high ground North of the Wood. The 18th Division attacked again and took it on the 26th September, 1916, and their memorial obelisk is erected in the former Château grounds. The village remained in British occupation until 25th March 1918, and it was retaken on the following 24th August by the 38th (Welsh) and 17th Divisions. The cemetery (called at one time Mill Road Cemetery No.2) is midway between the site of Thiepval village and St. Pierre-Divion. It was made in the spring of 1917, when the battlefield was cleared; the present Plot I contains 260 War Dead then gathered. After the Armistice it was enlarged by the concentration of 1,038 War Dead from smaller cemeteries and from the battlefields of Beaumont-Hamel and Thiepval. Mill Road Cemetery now contains the graves of 1,304 soldiers (or sailors of the Royal Naval Division) from the United Kingdom. No fewer than 815 of these are unidentified, and special memorials are erected to three soldiers who fell in 1916 and are beleived to be buried among them. Other special memorials are erected to three soldiers from the United Kingdom, buried in Divion Road Cemetery No.1, whose graves were destroyed by shell fire. Number of Burials by Unit
Awards/Mentioned in Despatches |