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The Crécy-au-Mont national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Crécy-au-Mont. © ECPAD

 

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The Crécy-au-Mont national cemetery holds almost 1,400 French soldiers including 356 who lie in two ossuaries, 1,865 Germans including 579 in an ossuary, but also 19 French soldiers who died in 1940 during the French campaign. Created in 1919, this cemetery was developed up until 1935 in order to bring together the bodies exhumed from temporary military cemeteries located in the numerous communes of the Aisne department.

From autumn 1917 onwards, the village of Crécy-au-Mont was occupied by the Germans, who only left in March 1918. It was taken back from the French in May 1918, to finally be liberated on 30 August 1918. Close to the village, the Germans set up a firing platform for one of the six big SKL/45 naval cannons, wrongly thought to be Big Bertha. This long-range artillery equipment was capable of bombing Compiègne.

 

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Crécy-au-Mont
À 36 km au sud-ouest de Laon. À partir du CD 937, à la croisée du chemin dit d'Estournelles et du vieux chemin Coucy-le-Château / Soissons

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Crouy National Cemetery

Crouy National Cemetery. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Lying on the main Chauny to Soissons road, Crouy National Cemetery holds the remains of French soldiers killed in the battles of Chemin des Dames between 1914 and 1918. Established in 1917, at the time of the April offensive, the cemetery was reorganised between 1920 and 1924 to accommodate the bodies of other soldiers buried in the temporary cemeteries of Bucy-le-Long and Missy-sur-Aisne. The cemetery contains nearly 3 000 bodies: 2 941 French (1 476 in two ossuaries) and 50 British soldiers killed for the most part in September-October 1914. Also buried here are one French and two Polish soldiers killed in the Second World War.

 

The fighting at Crouy, 1914-15

From the very first weeks of the conflict until the end of the war in 1918, the limestone plateau of Chemin des Dames, which dominates the Aisne valley to the south and the Ailette valley to the north, was bitterly disputed. This natural observation point was a strategic position dominating both the Reims and Soissons plains. On 12 September 1914, pursuing the enemy after its defeat on the Marne, the Allies crossed the Aisne. By mid-October, General Maunoury’s 6th Army held the Soissons sector. On 30 October, the Germans occupied Vailly-sur-Aisne, which lay at the heart of the fighting. By November, the plateau was in the hands of the enemy, who progressively transformed it into a veritable fortress.

To relieve enemy pressure on Soissons and secure a position on the road to Laon, on 25 December 1914, amid the floodwater of the Aisne, the French attacked in the Crouy sector. On 1 January 1915, they bombarded the enemy positions. On the 8th, after a series of mine blasts, the attack was launched. Despite taking the first enemy lines on the plateau, the men of General Berthelot’s 55th Division were unable to capitalise on their success, because of the speed of their adversary’s reaction. On 12 January came a violent counter-attack, which drove the French back across to the south bank of the Aisne. Fierce fighting ensued on the slopes of Hill 132. Mine engineer Albert Tastu, an officer of the 289th Infantry Regiment, lost his life in the fighting. Surrounded with his men in the Grotte des Zouaves, Tastu resisted valiantly, but was killed by enemy fire. Paris seemed under threat once again. On 13 January, the French retreated further south and the front became entrenched on the outskirts of Soissons. Exhausted and poorly supplied due to the flooding of the Aisne, the French suffered major losses. In just six days, 12 000 men, including 1 800 of the 60th Infantry Regiment alone, were put hors de combat. This defeat shook public opinion and became known as “the Crouy affair”, as described by soldier and writer Henry Barbusse in his book Le Feu (English title: Under Fire), which won the 1916 Prix Goncourt. Barbusse had enlisted as a volunteer with the 231st Infantry Regiment and took part in the episode.  The press was censored and a number of generals, including Berthelot, were punished.

The Chemin des Dames offensive, April 1917

Despite the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line in March 1917, General Nivelle maintained his attack on the Chemin des Dames in April. To carry the offensive, he deployed 49 Infantry Divisions and five Colonial Infantry Divisions, supported by 5 310 guns and, for the first time, 128 tanks. Altogether, more than a million men took part in the operation.

On 2 April, the artillery pounded the German positions, partly destroying them. Thus, on the morning of 16 April, the first waves came up against barbed wire and were mown down by machine-gun fire. The French nevertheless managed to get a foothold on the ridge. Despite the losses and difficult weather conditions, the attacks continued the next day. Nivelle’s authority crumbled. From 16 to 30 April, 147 000 men were put hors de combat, 40 000 of them dead. Each division lost on average 2 600 men on the Chemin des Dames.

On the verge of collapse, the French held on. During the summer of 1917, a series of operations and counter-attacks were launched for control over the Chemin des Dames’ key positions, from Craonne to Laffaux.

The infantrymen on both sides bore the most extreme hardships. In October 1917, the Battle of Malmaison took place, whose objective was to capture the old fort of La Malmaison, to the west of the Chemin des Dames. Having taken the plateau on 23 October, the Germans retreated to the north of the Ailette valley.

In October 1920, the ruins of Crouy, which had been the scene of bitter fighting in 1915 and suffered the hardships of occupation, received an army citation.

 

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Crouy
3 miles northeast of Soissons, Rue Maurice Dupuis, Crouy

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Vauxbuin National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Vauxbuin. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Built in 1919, Vauxbuin National Cemetery contains the graves of 4,898 French soldiers from the First World War, 940 of whom were laid to rest in two ossuaries, and one Russian soldier, killed mainly during the Chemin des Dames battles in Autumn 1914 and April 1917. The bodies of 17 soldiers who were awarded the ‘Died for France’ distinction during the 1940 French campaign are also buried here. A German cemetery where 9,000 soldiers are buried was built close to this site.

 

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Vauxbuin 02200
À 5 km au sud-ouest de Soissons, en bordure de la RN 2 (Paris/Laon)

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The Bois-Robert national cemetery in Ambleny

La nécropole nationale Le Bois-Robert. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Located at Le Bois-Robert, the Ambleny national cemetery holds 10,601 Frenchmen including 3,076 in four ossuaries, 76 French civilian victims and one Russian who died during the First World War. Created in 1923, this site was developed from 1934-1935 in order to bring together the bodies exhumed from military cemeteries to the south-west of Soissons.

Among the soldiers buried here are the bodies of numerous overseas soldiers. From 1917-1918, Caledonian Creoles were assigned to the Pacific Mixed Regiment (BMP), a unit made up of Kanaks, Caledonians and Tahitians. Behind the front, in the sector of Ailette sector, close to Chemin des Dames, these men took part in trench repair work.

Among the 76 civilian victims is Estelle Allain, née Berhamelle, aged 49, who died on 24 June 1915 in Soissons (grave n°15). She lived in an apartment in Soissons, rue Sainte-Eugénie, and her building was bombed by the Germans in June 1915. She did not have time to hide in the cellar, which had become a shelter, and was seriously wounded. She died as a result of her injuries, and was recognised as having died for her country.

In 1954, the bodies of 561 French soldiers who died for France during the Second World War were also brought here.

 

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Amblény
À 11 km à l'ouest de Soissons, sur la RN31 (Rouen/Reims), avant l'intersection avec la D17

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Chauny National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Chauny. © ECPAD

 

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Built in 1919, the Chauny National Cemetery holds bodies that were exhumed from temporary military cemeteries in the Chauny, Coucy and Laon region. In 1953, the remains of soldiers who had died during the Second World War were buried there. In this cemetery lie 468 French soldiers, including 139 in an ossuary for the period 1914-1918, and 18 killed in May-June 1940, including eight whose identities are unknown. The cemetery is located near a German cemetery with 1,527 tombs and a British cemetery where 435 soldiers are buried.

Among the soldiers buried here lie Roger Turpaud, a soldier in the 276th infantry regiment (IR), a legal journalist at the Figaro and later editor of the Police Commissioners' Newspaper and Financial Administration (plot 1, grave no. 71) and Jean-Louis Coqueton, a corporal in the 278th IR, head of office at the Creuse prefecture, who was wounded and taken prisoner on 21 September 1914 at Moulin-sous-Touvent. He died at the German lazaretto in Chauny on 1 October 1914 (plot 2, grave no. 14).

 

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Chauny
À l’est de Soissons, D 937

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The national necropolis of Villers-Cotterêts

La nécropole nationale de Villers-Cotterêts. © ECPAD

 

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The national necropolis of Villers-Cotterêts contains the remains of 3,411 French soldiers (including 933 interred in two ossuaries), four British and four Russians who died during the First World War and ten French combatants who died for France between 1939 and 1940. The cemetery was created in 1914 for the bodies of the injured who died in the town's hospitals between 1914 and 1918. It was redesigned between 1920 and 1926 and again in 1936 in order to bring together bodies exhumed from municipal cemeteries in the Aisne.

The combatants include several soldiers from the combined Pacific battalion. These men from French Polynesia died during the fighting to take Vesles, Caumont and the farm of Le Petit Caumont on the Marlois plain in the Aisne.

 


 

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Villers-Cotterêts
À 22 km au sud-ouest de Soissons, avenue de Compi

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The national necropolis of Betz

La nécropole nationale de Betz. © ECPAD

 

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Situated a few kilometres from Acy-le-Multien, the national necropolis of Betz-Montrolles contains the bodies of 44 soldiers who died for France, including 21 in an ossuary. The other combatants, most of whom fell during the Battle of the Matz in June 1918 and were repatriated in ambulance 5/1 from Betz, lie in individual graves.

Saluting the memory of the soldiers of the Army of Paris who fought on the battlefields of the Ourcq, a monument / ossuary preserves the remains of combatants killed between 7th and 9th September 1914 in the vicinity of the Bois de Montrolles.

 

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Betz
Au sud-ouest de Villers-Cotterêts, D 332

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The Vic-sur-Aisne National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Vic-sur-Aisne. © ECPAD

 

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The Vic-sur-Aisne National Cemetery holds the remains of 3,046 French soldiers, 932 of whom lie in two ossuaries, and seven other soldiers killed during the Second World War. Built in 1921, this cemetery was further developed up to 1935 to make room for exhumed bodies from the military cemetries of the west of Soissons.

Among these soldiers is a Chinese legionnaire, MA YI PAO (plot F, grave no. 59). A Muslim, Ma Yi Pao had left his country, then in the midst of political instability, to escape religious persecution. At 24 years of age, he joined the Foreign Legion. Although most of his countrymen were employed as workers, he is the only Chinese soldier now recognised to have died for France, on 2 September 1918, of his wounds, in the Jaulzy ambulance, in Oise.

 

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Vic-sur-Aisne
À l’est de Compiègne et à l’ouest de Soissons, D 2

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Senlis French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Senlis. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Senlis contains the remains of soldiers killed during the major offensives of the spring of 1918. Created in June 1918, close to the military hospital, this war cemetery was extended until 1921 to hold the remains of other soldiers initially buried in temporary military cemeteries of Ognon, Gouvieux, Chantilly and Vineuil. In total there are 1,146 French soldiers buried here, along with four soldiers who died in May 1940 or in 1944. Two ossuaries hold the remains of 78 soldiers. 136 British soldiers are also buried at this site.

 

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Senlis
Rue aux Chevaux

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Verberie National Cemetery

Nécropole nationale de Verberie. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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The Verberie National Cemetery holds the bodies of soldiers who died for France during battle in the Oise department.

Built in 1918, this cemetery was developed from 1921 to 1934 to include bodies exhumed from temporary cemeteries in the department and again from 1941 to 1951 to rebury the bodies of soldiers who died during WWII. Nearly 2,600 bodies are buried there, including over 2,500 French soldiers in two ossuaries. In WWI, 56 British soldiers were buried there and in WWII, 41 French soldiers were buried in individual graves.

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Verberie
À 15 km au sud-ouest de Compiègne Rue des Moulins (à côté du cimetière communal de Verberie)

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