Flesquières Ridge Panorama
Part of the Hindenburg Line, the village of Flesquières was fortified by the Germany Army to defend the city of Cambrai situated ten kilometres to its rear. Its position on the ridge gave the occupiers an unbridled view of the surrounding area and one of the German observation posts still stands today near the castle wall.
Flesquières Ridge was a key objective during the Battle of Cambrai which opened on 20 November 1917. The British 3rd Army lined up 476 tanks along the eight kilometre front for the task of clearing a path through the enemy lines to allow the infantry to pour through. The hard limestone terrain was ideal for the machines of the Tank Corps which made poor progress on soft ground.
The tank assault on Flesquières Ridge
On the first day of the offensive the British troops succeeded in penetrating far into the Hindenburg Line; however the German positions on the heights of Flesquières and Bourlon brought them to a halt. The 51st Highland Division found itself pitted against some formidable German defences in the shape of six batteries of field artillery The Germans held out to the following day.
On 30 November the Germans received reinforcements and started their counter-attack. By 3 December the British had been pushed back to their starting point, except for troops in the Havrincourt-Flesquières-Ribécourt sector, and 100 tanks had either been disabled or destroyed. In 1998 some local WWI enthusiasts discovered a British tank which had been buried by the Germans in 1918 and set about restoring it. The tank is now on display in Flesquières.
In human terms the Battle of Cambrai was very costly with about 45,000 casualties suffered on both sides.
One of these casualties was the poet Ewart Alan Mackintosh whose grave can be seen in nearby Orival Wood Cemetery. He was the author of the poignant war poem In Memoriam which describes the moment when, in 1916 as a young lieutenant in the Seaforth Highlanders, he had to abandon a wounded man on German lines during a raid near Arras. Mackintosh himself was killed in fighting at Cantaing-sur-Escaut on 21 November 1917 at the age of twenty-four.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Rue du Moulin - 59267 FLESQUIERES
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DU CAMBRÉSIS
Call: +33 (0)3 27 78 36 15
Website: www.tourisme-cambresis.fr

























































































































































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