Le Touret Military Cemetery and Memorial - Richebourg
On the road from Armentières to Béthune stands an impressive monument built of white stone from Nîmes whose covered galleries and colonnades lead to a peaceful cloister around a lawn where a central column bears this simple inscription: 1914-1918. Le Touret Memorial pays tribute to the soldiers of the British Imperial Army who died in the fierce fighting between Lys River and the town of La Bassée from the beginning of the war up to the eve of the Battle of Loos in September 1915.
The entrance to the monument bears the following inscription in English and French: To the Glory of God and in Memory of 13,482 British officers and men who fell fighting in this neighbourhood from October 1914 to September 1915 whose names are here recorded but to whom the fortune of war denied the known and honoured burial given to their comrades in death. Their names are engraved on the walls of the memorial and so are the names of the regiments who took part in the many battles, such as La Bassée, Festubert (1914), Givenchy (1914/1915), Cuinchy, Neuve-Chapelle, Aubers and Festubert (1915). Many of these battles were badly-prepared, prosecuted in confusion and concluded in the worst of circumstances: they resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of soldiers on both sides. The area around Le Touret was known as the 'Forgotten Front' because the main focus of the Allied effort was on Ypres and Artois.
Le Touret Memorial to the fallen of the Forgotten Front
The Canadian and Indian soldiers who fell in these same battles and who have no known grave are honoured on Vimy Ridge and the Neuve-Chapelle Indian Memorial.
Designed by J.R. Truelove, who also created the Vis-en-Artois Memorial, Le Touret Memorial occupies the east side of Le Touret Military Cemetery which was begun by the Indian Corps in November 1914 and is the final resting place for 912 soldiers of the British Army, many of whom died in the neighbouring field ambulances.
The cemetery also accommodated the bodies of 264 Portuguese soldiers from 1917 until their transfer in 1919 to the nearby Richebourg-l'Avoue Portuguese National Cemetery.
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 Bois - 62136 RICHEBOURG
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE BÉTHUNE-BRUAY
Call: +33 (0)3 21 52 50 00
Website: www.tourisme-bethune-bruay.fr

























































































































































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