Location
Maricourt is a village situated on the D938, Albert-Peronne Road, 10.5
kilometres from Albert. The Cemetery is on the western outskirts of the
village.
Historical Information
Maricourt was, at the beginning of the Battles of the Somme, 1916, the point
of junction of the British and French forces, and within a very short distance
of the front line; it was lost in the German advance of March, 1918, and
recaptured at the end of the following August.
The Cemetery was begun by fighting units and Field Ambulances in the Battles
of the Somme, 1916, and used until August, 1917; a few graves were added later
in the War, and at the Armistice it consisted of 175 graves which now form
almost the whole of Plot I. It was completed after the Armistice by the
concentration of graves from the battlefields in the immediate neighbourhood
and from certain smaller burial grounds.
There are now 1348, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this site. Of
these, 366 are unidentified and special memorials are erected to 26 soldiers
from the United Kingdom known or believed to be buried among them.
Other special memorials record the names of three soldiers from the United
Kingdom, buried in other cemeteries, whose graves could not be found.
The cemetery covers an area of 3,787 square metres and is enclosed on three
sides by a low red brick wall. The following were among the burial grounds from
which British graves were removed to Peronne Road Cemetery.
AUTHUILE COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION, which was on the South side of the
Communal Cemetery. It contained the graves of 108 French soldiers and those of
23 from the United Kingdom who fell in 1915 and early 1916.
BRIQUETERIE EAST CEMETERY, MONTAUBAN, on the East side of the brick-works
between Maricourt and Montauban, containing the graves of 46 soldiers from the
United Kingdom who fell in the latter half of 1916.
CARNOY COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION, in which 36 French soldiers and one from
the United Kingdom were buried in March, 1918.
CASEMENT TRENCH CEMETERY, MARICOURT, on the West side of the road to the
Briqueterie, in which 163 soldiers from the United Kingdom and one from South
Africa were buried in 1916-1918.
FARGNY MILL FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY, CURLU, on the North bank of the Somme,
in which six soldiers from the United Kingdom and two from Australia were
buried in 1916-1918.
LA COTE MILITARY CEMETERY, MARICOURT, a little way West of Peronne Road
Cemetery, containing the graves of 38 soldiers from the United Kingdom and one
from Australia who fell in 1916-1917.
MARICOURT FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY, on the South side of the village,
containing the graves of two soldiers from the United Kingdom who fell in
December, 1916.
MONTAUBAN ROAD FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY, MARICOURT, in which six men of the
1st/8th King's Liverpools were buried in August, 1916.
TALUS BOISE BRITISH CEMETERY, CARNOY, between Carnoy and Maricourt, at the
South end of a long copse. It was used in the latter half of 1916 and (chiefly
by the 5th Royal Berks) in August, 1918, and it contained the graves of 175
soldiers from the United Kingdom and five from South Africa.
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