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Hébuterne in Pas-de-Calais, Upper France, France — Western Europe
 

Queen's Cemetery

 
 
Queen's Cemetery Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by J. Makali Bruton, June 10, 2024
1. Queen's Cemetery Marker
Inscription.  

Queen’s Cemetery
This area was captured from the Germans in February 1917 after intermittent but severe fighting over the previous eight months. This cemetery contains the graves of 311 British soldiers.

The War on the Western Front, 1914-1918
In the First World War the Western Front - a battle line extending from the Channel coast to Switzerland along which, for four years, millions of men fought and died was the principal and vital theatre. Against the German Army were arrayed the armies of the British Commonwealth, France, Belgium and, latterly, the United States. The first two months, a war of movement, saw the containment and partial repulse of the initial German thrust. There then followed three and a half years of static trench fighting-war of attrition - during which defensive power was paramount. Neither side could effect a breakthrough and great battles were fought for small territorial gains. The last seven months were again a war movement culminating in the Allied offensive, starting in August, which finally achieved the breakthrough leading to the armistice of 11 November
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1918.

The six divisions of the British Expeditionary Force which went to France at the outset in 1914 were deployed amongst the French armies and played their full part from 23 August in the Battles of Mons, Le Cateau, the Marne, and the Aisne. The next three weeks, during which the battle line moved every day, were a highly critical period in which the German plan for ending the war at a stroke was foiled and the issue deferred.

In the first two weeks of October the BEF was moved from the central sector of the front to Flanders. This move shortened its lines of communication, which ran through Dunkirk, Calais and Boulogne, and enabled it to protect these ports which were vital both to its own supply and reinforcement and to the Royal Navy's command of the Channel. Over the next four years, during which its strength rose to fifty British and twelve overseas Commonwealth divisions - Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, South African, Indian and troops from Newfoundland, the British West Indies and other territories - the BEF progressively took over more of the northern sector of the Allied line and fought a series of battles of attrition of which the greatest was the First Battle of the Somme in 1916.

After the German offensives of late March to mid-July 1918 had been contained the advance to victory began on 8 August with the Battle of Amiens,
Queen's Cemetery Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by J. Makali Bruton, June 10, 2024
2. Queen's Cemetery Marker
This view of the marker is looking back towards the former British line and the current Sheffield Park.
continued on a broadening front with the Second Battles of the Somme and of Arras and, in September, extended to the Ypres Salient. The advance swiftly gathered momentum and by the day of the armistice the front line ran fifty miles or more eastward of the starting points.

Nearly 750,000 Commonwealth soldiers, sailors and airmen died on the Western Front-200,000 in Belgium and over 500,000 in France. They are commemorated upon headstones marking graves in over 1,000 war cemeteries and 2,000 civil cemeteries, or on one of the six memorials in Belgium and twenty in France which carry the names of more than 300,000 who have no known grave.

Français
Cimetiere de "Queen"
Ce secteur fut pris aux Allemands en février 1917 après des combats intermittents mais acharnés qui furent livres pendant les huit mois précédant sa prise. Ce cimetière contient les tombes de 311 soldats britanniques.

La Guerre sur le Front Occidental 1914-1918
Pendant la Première Guerre Mondiale le Front Occidental - un front continu s'étendant de la côte de la Manche à la Suisse sur lequel, pendant quatre ans, des millions d'hommes ont combattu et sont morts- fut un théâtre d'opérations de toute première importance. Contre l'Armée Allemande étaient déployées les armées du Commonwealth Britannique, de la France, de la Belgique et,
Queen's Cemetery image. Click for full size.
Photographed by J. Makali Bruton, June 10, 2024
3. Queen's Cemetery
plus tard, des Etats-Unis. Pendant les deux premiers mois une guerre de manoeuvre permit de contenir et de refouler la poussée initiale allemande. Puis s'ensuivirent trois années et demie de combats statiques de tranchée - une guerre d'attrition au cours desquelles la capacité défensive était de la plus grande importance. Aucun des adversaires ne pouvait effectuer une sortie et de grandes batailles furent livrées pour des gains territoriaux infimes. Les sept derniers mois furent une guerre de manoeuvre culminant en une offensive alliée qui, ayant débuté en août, parvint finalement à accomplir une percée menant à l'armistice du 11 novembre 1918.

Au début de 1914 les six divisions du Corps Expéditionnaire Britannique en France furent déployées aux côtés des armées françaises et jouèrent leur plein rôle à partir du 23 août dans les Batailles de Mons, Le Cateau, la Marne et l'Aisne. Les trois semaines suivantes, pendant lesquelles le front du combat bougeait chaque jour, furent une période hautement critique au cours de laquelle le plan allemand pour mettre un terme rapide aux combats fut un échec et l'issue de la guerre remise à plus tard.

Pendant les deux premières semaines d'octobre le C.E.B. fut déplacé du secteur central du front dans les Flandres. Ce changement réduisit ses lignes de communication, qui passaient par Dunkerque, Calais et Boulogne,
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et lui permit de protéger ces ports qui étaient d'une importance vitale à la fois pour son propre ravitaillement et renforcement et pour le contrôle de la Manche par la Marine Royale. Pendant les quatre années suivantes les forces du C.E.B. s'accrurent à cinquante divisions britanniques et douze du Commonwealth d'outremer - des troupes du Canada, de l'Australie, de la Nouvelle-Zélande, de l'Afrique du Sud, de l'Inde et des autres territoires. Le C.E.B, reprit progressivement une plus grande partie du secteur nord du front allié et livra une série de batailles d'attrition dont la plus grande fut la Première Bataille de la Somme en 1916.

Les offensives allemandes de la fin mars à la mi-juillet 1918 furent contenues et la contre-offensive menant à la victoire commença le 8 août avec la Bataille d'Amiens, se poursuivit sur un front élargi avec les Deuxièmes Batailles de la Somme et d'Arras et, en septembre, s'étendit au Saillant d'Ypres. L'avance prit rapidement de l'ampleur et le jour de l'armistice la ligne du front atteignait quatre-vingt kilomètres ou plus à l'est des points de départ.

Presque 750.000 soldats, marins et aviateurs du Commonwealth perdirent la vie sur le Front Occidental-200.000 en Belgique et plus de 500.000 en France. Leur mémoire est commémorée par des stèles marquant leur tombes dans 1.000 cimetières militaires et 2.000 cimetières civils, ou par un des six monuments en Belgique et vingt en France qui portent les noms de plus de 300.000 d'entre eux qui n'ont pas de tombe connue.
 
Erected by Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
 
Topics. This memorial is listed in these topic lists: Cemeteries & Burial SitesWar, World I. A significant historical month for this entry is February 1917.
 
Location. 50° 6.338′ N, 2° 39.495′ E. Memorial is in Hébuterne, Hauts-de-France (Upper France), in Pas-de-Calais. It can be reached from Unnamed farm road south of Rue du Chateau d'Eau, on the left when traveling south. Touch for map. Memorial is in this post office area: Hébuterne, Hauts-de-France 62116, France. Touch for directions.

Regionally, it is in the North Atlantic Region, Europe, the European Union, Atlantic Europe, the Schengen Area, Western Europe, a coastal Mediterranean country, and the Western World. Historically, it finds itself in what was once a French colony and also the Roman Empire.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 3 kilometers of this marker, measured as the crow flies: The Barnsley Pals (about 120 meters away, measured in a direct line); The British Front Line (about 120 meters away); Chorley Pals (about 120 meters away); Burnley and District Pals Memorial (about 120 meters away); Accrington Pals (about 120 meters away); Sheffield World War Memorial (about 150 meters away); Railway Hollow Cemetery (about 180 meters away); Hunters Cemetery (approx. 3.1 kilometers away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Hébuterne.
 
Regarding Queen's Cemetery. CWGC notes the cemetery as "Queens" (plural) although this marker spells it as "Queen's" (possessive).
 
Also see . . .  Queens Cemetery at CWGC. The village of Puisieux was taken by Commonwealth forces on the 28 February 1917, lost on the 26 March 1918 and recovered on the following 21 August. In the spring of 1917, the battlefields of the Somme and Ancre were cleared by V Corps and a number of new cemeteries were made. Queens Cemetery (originally known as Queens V Corps Cemetery No 4) is on the old front line of July 1916, south of Mark Copse, one of four small plantations that were on or close behind the line between Serre and Hebuterne. The graves are of casualties of the 31st, 3rd and 19th Divisions who died in July and November 1916, and February 1917. There are now 311 First World War burials in the cemetery, 131 of them unidentified. The cemetery was designed by N A Rew. (Submitted on July 13, 2024.) 
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on July 13, 2024. It was originally submitted on July 13, 2024, by J. Makali Bruton of Washington, District of Columbia. This page has been viewed 112 times since then and 8 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3. submitted on July 13, 2024, by J. Makali Bruton of Washington, District of Columbia.
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Jun. 7, 2026