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updated: May 27, 2003 BEAUMONT HAMEL BRITISH CEMETERY |
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| Beaumont-Hamel British Cemetery is about 500 yards North-West of the village, close to the road to Auchonvillers. A little West of it is the memorial of the 8th Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, almost on the site of their Battalion Headquarters in the capture of Beaumont-Hamel; East, at Beaucourt is that of the 63rd (Royal Naval) Division which took part in the same vistory; and in the Newfoundland Memorial Park, West of the village, are those of the 29th Division (some of whose units reached Beaumont-Hamel in the first attack on the 1st July, 1916) and the 51st (Highland) Division (which included the 8th Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders and captures the village itself and "Y" Ravine in November) Beaumont-Hamel was attacked, and reached, on the 1st July, 1916, but it could not be held. It was attacked again, and taken, on the 13th November, 1916; and the British Cemetery was made by units thaking part in that and subsequent operations until February, 1917. It was increased after the Armistice by the concentration of 31 graves from the surrounding battlefields. It now contains the graves of 111 soldiers from the United Kingdom, one from Canada, one from Newfoundland, and 63 whose unit could not be ascertained; and two German prisoners were buried in it. Eighty of the graves are unnamed; but the names of two soldiers from the United Kingdom, known to buried among them, are recorded on special headstones. Number of burials by Unit
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