Statue of the General Maistre - Ablain-Saint-Nazaire
The artist who sculpted the monument on Lorette Spur evidently had a classic sense of perspective and hierarchy: General Maistre stands on a pedestal and looks down benevolently at a soldier weighed down by equipment.
Initially erected in the nearby cemetery, the monument was later moved 400 metres to the place where the General's command post was thought to have been in May 1915. It is dedicated 'to the glory of General Maistre and the 21st Army Corps' who fought for two weeks in dreadful conditions on the slopes of Lorette Spur above the village of Ablain-Saint-Nazaire. Maistre and his soldiers set up camp in the valley below in December 1914. The Germans had organized an impressive system of defence with five lines of trenches, barbed wire entanglements and machine gun nests. Higher up the hill, pillboxes and underground shelters sealed the access to the Chapel of Our Lady of Loretto.
General Maistre and his men on Lorette Spur
During the Second Battle of Artois, the job of taking this German stronghold was entrusted to General Maistre. The first wave of attacks began on 9 May 1915 at 10 o'clock in the morning. After breaking through the three lines of defence the attack came up against the main fort where the fighting became desperate, with grenades, bayonets and even knives being used. The French held resolutely on to the ground they had taken, sheltering in the numerous shell holes. 'Lorette Spur was a mass grave', recalled one witness. In the night of 12 May, French soldiers crept up to the fort and stopped up the machine gun embrasures with sacks of earth before taking the position in hand-to-hand combat. It took another ten days of intense fighting for General Maistre's men to take neighbouring Blanche-Voie Spur.
Despite the success of the French attack the Germans retained possession of the village of Souchez and Vimy Ridge, key positions for controlling access to Douai Plain and the Pas-de-Calais Coal Basin. The battle for the Artois Hills was far from over...
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Chemin du Mont de Lorette - 62153 ABLAIN-SAINT-NAZAIRE
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME ET DU PATRIMOINE DE LENS-LIÉVIN
Call: +33 (0)3 21 67 66 66
Website: www.tourisme-lenslievin.fr

























































































































































Print
Share
Bookmark




