Vis-en-Artois British Cemetery and Memorial - Haucourt
After halting the German offensives in the spring of 1918 the Allies, reinforced with fresh troops from the USA, embarked on the offensive which would eventually lead to the end of the war. Bolstered by a large contingent of Australian and Canadian soldiers the British Army, which was responsible for the section of the front between Flanders and the Somme, launched a series of attacks in Picardy, at Arras and Bapaume, and finally on the Hindenburg Line near Cambrai in the autumn of 1918.
Occupied by the Germans for nearly four years the village of Vis-en-Artois, which lies on the old Roman road from Arras to Cambrai, was finally liberated at the end of August 1918 by the Canadians. The latter buried their dead there after the battle which took place between Vis-en-Artois and Harcourt. The bodies of soldiers killed elsewhere in the area, for the most part in August and September 1918, were gradually moved to Vis-en-Artois from the small neighbouring cemeteries where they had originally been buried. Today the Vis-en-Artois Cemetery accommodates the remains of 2,369 soldiers of whom 885 have been identified. The cemetery was designed by the architect J. R. Truelove who also built the Touret Memorial in Richebourg.
The Advance to Victory
The central path through the cemetery leads to the impressive Vis-en-Artois Memorial. The Stone of Remembrance is surrounded by a semicircular screen wall which bears a relief depicting Saint George and the Dragon. The central part of the wall is flanked by two pylons which mark the entrance to porticos of Doric columns. The porticos shelter panels inscribed with the names of the 9,813 British, Irish and South African soldiers who fell in the fighting in Somme and Artois between August 1918 and the Armistice and whose graves were never found. The Canadian Australian and New Zealand soldiers who died in the same period are commemorated respectively on the Vimy Memorial, on the Australian National Memorial in Villers-Bretonneux (Somme) and in Grévillers near Bapaume.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: D 939 - 62156 HAUCOURT
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME D'ARRAS
Call: +33 (0)3 21 51 26 95
Website: www.ot-arras.fr

























































































































































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