Monument to the 37th British Division - Monchy-le-Preux
The Monchy Memorial comprises the statues of three British infantrymen, easily recognizable by their soup bowl helmets, standing back to back upon a high stone pedestal with their weapons at rest. Inaugurated in 1921, it was designed by Lady Feodora Gleichen who was the sister of the Division's commanding officer at Monchy and the first woman to be elected to the Royal Society of British Sculptors. The memorial is dedicated to 'the memory of the officers and soldiers of the 37th Division of the British Army who fell during the Great War 1915-1918'. The 37th Division, created in 1915 during Lord Kitchener's reorganization of the British Imperial Army, distinguished itself in the Battle of Monchy-le-Preux in April 1917.
Overlooking the village of Scarpe and the Arras to Cambrai road, Monchy was a key strategic position which the Germans took in October 1914. The occupiers heavily fortified the village and incorporated it into the Hindenburg Line.
The infantrymen of the 37th Division
The British launched their offensive at Arras in wintry conditions on 9 April 1917. The weather deteriorated to such an extent that the attack was delayed until 11 April, giving the Germans time to reorganize. And then the snow began to fall. Despite the bad weather the 37th Division set forth with the support of six tanks; however the gunners were late and when they finally started firing they injured their own men and even disabled a tank. In spite of this run of bad luck the British soldiers managed to get a hold on Monchy.
The village was finally secured on 14 April thanks to the exploits of a handful of Newfoundlanders who succeeded in containing the German counter-attack. The Caribou Memorial near the church commemorates their heroism.
A devastated Monchy-le-Preux was retaken by the Germans during the Spring Offensive of 1918 before being definitively liberated by Canadian forces later that year.
In the autumn of 1918 the 37th Division liberated Caudry, an action which is today commemorated on the town's war memorial.
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 Tilleul - 62118 MONCHY-LE-PREUX
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME D'ARRAS
Call: +33 (0)3 21 51 26 95
Website: www.ot-arras.fr

























































































































































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