Boulogne Eastern Cemetery - Boulogne-sur-Mer
During the Great War Boulogne-sur-Mer was one of three important base ports for the British Army. The coast between the British General Headquarters in Montreuil and the Port of Calais was an immense logistics zone comprising army camps, munitions depots and hospitals. For the most part, these were supplied with men and equipment through the port of Boulogne.
Boulogne was essentially an enormous barracks and hospital complex. Public buildings, such as schools and the Casino, were requisitioned to house the wounded who had been evacuated from the Front. Thousands of Commonwealth soldiers died there as a result of their injuries. At first the casualties were buried in the Eastern Cemetery, a long and narrow strip of land in the high part of the town. The sandy nature of the soil meant that the headstones had to be placed horizontally upon the graves. After numerous extensions, the Eastern Cemetery finally reached maximum capacity in the spring of 1918 and so a new cemetery was opened in the village of Terlinchtun near Wimille. In total Boulogne Eastern Cemetery contains 5,821 Commonwealth graves (some contain more than one body) of which 5,577 date from the First World War and 224 from the Second.
A vast hospital complex and its inevitable cemetery.
A corner of the cemetery contains the graves of 140 Portuguese soldiers arranged around a memorial. These were the men of the Portuguese Expeditionary Force which arrived in France in 1917 and set up its headquarters in Ambleteuse, a village north of Boulogne. The HQ comprised barracks, offices, depots and hospitals.
One of the graves in Boulogne Eastern Cemetery belongs to the poet Julian Grenfell whose somewhat scandalous comments caused quite a stir in Britain. In 1914 he shocked many when he likened the war to 'a big picnic without the objectlessness of a picnic' claiming he had 'never been so well or so happy'. His most famous poem, Into Battle, was published on 26 May 1915 a few days after his death in a Boulogne hospital from a shrapnel wound to the head. He was 27 years old.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Rue de Dringhen - 62200 BOULOGNE-SUR-MER
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE BOULOGNE-SUR-MER
Call: +33 (0)3 21 10 88 10
Website: www.tourisme-boulognesurmer.com

























































































































































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