Bailleul Road East Cemetery - Saint-Laurent-Blangy
The Battle of Arras was opened by the British Army in the spring of 1917 to divert attention away from the main French offensive on Chemin des Dames. The aim of the British operation was twofold: to retake Vimy Ridge in the north to open a road into the Pas-de-Calais coal basin and to advance east along the river Scarpe towards Douai and Cambrai, two towns of strategic importance for the Germans.
On the first two days of the battle, 9 and 10 April, the British penetrated the enemy's lines and advanced five kilometres along both banks of the Scarpe. The Scots of the 9th Division succeeded in reunifying the village of Saint-Laurent-Blangy, which had been cut in two by the front (Saint-Laurent in German hands and Blangy, British), before continuing their advance along the north bank of the Scarpe. The 12th battalion of the Royal Scots Regiment, also part of the 9th Division, established Bailleul Road West Cemetery in May 1917 and nearly all the soldiers laid to rest there fell on the first day of fighting.
Saint-Laurent-Blangy: reunified during the Battle of Arras
Bailleul Road East Cemetery, next to the German Military Cemetery in Saint-Laurent-Blangy, was begun a month earlier by the 34th Scottish Division which saw action north of the 9th Scottish Division. The cemetery was extended after the Armistice to take in graves from the battlefields and the small cemeteries of Lagnicourt and Fampoux.
It was near the village of Fampoux, on 1 April 1918, that Bristol-born Isaac Rosenberg was killed as he returned from a night patrol. He was twenty-seven. Considered by many to be one of the greatest war poets of the English language, Rosenberg was acclaimed for his imaginative power and originality in imagery. His poems, such as the famous Break of the Day in the Trenches, described his life in the trenches of Northern France where the 'Poppies whose roots are in men's veins drop, and are ever dropping'
Buried initially in a mass grave, his body could not be identified during operations in 1926 to concentrate Commonwealth graves in Bailleul Road East Cemetery, which is why his headstone bears the words, 'Buried near this spot'.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: RD 919 - 62223 SAINT-LAURENT-BLANGY
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME D'ARRAS
Call: +33 (0)3 21 51 26 95
Website: www.ot-arras.fr

























































































































































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