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Additional Information: |
Div. |
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Memorial: |
VIS-EN-ARTOIS MEMORIAL, Pas de Calais, France |
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Grave Reference/ |
Panel 1 |
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Location: |
Vis-en-Artois and Haucourt are villages
on the straight main road from Arras to Cambrai about 10
kilometres south-east of Arras. Within the grounds of
Vis-en-Artois British Cemetery, which is west of Haucourt on
the north side of the main road, will be found the
Vis-en-Artois Memorial. This Memorial bears the names of
over 9,000 men who fell in the period from 8 August 1918 to
the date of the Armistice in the Advance to Victory in
Picardy and Artois, between the Somme and Loos, and who have
no known grave. They belonged to the forces of Great Britain
and Ireland and South Africa; the Canadian, Australian and
New Zealand forces being commemorated on other memorials to
the missing. The Memorial consists of a screen wall in three
parts. The middle part of the screen wall is concave and
carries stone panels on which names are carved. It is 26
feet high flanked by pylons 70 feet high. The Stone of
Remembrance stands exactly between the pylons and behind it,
in the middle of the screen, is a group in relief
representing St George and the Dragon. The flanking parts of
the screen wall are also curved and carry stone panels
carved with names. Each of them forms the back of a roofed
colonnade; and at the far end of each is a small
building. |