Fins is a village on the road between Cambrai and Péronne. The British Cemetery is a little south-east of the village in the district of Sorel Le Grand on the right hand side of the road to Heudicourt.
| GPS | N | E | OSM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Decimal | 50.032755 | 3.049071 | Map |
Fins and Sorel were occupied at the beginning of April 1917, in the German Retreat to the Hindenburg Line. They were lost on the 23rd March 1918, after a stubborn defence of Sorel by the 6th K.O.S.B. and the staff of the South African Brigade; and they were regained in the following September.
The first British burials at Fins were carried out in the Churchyard and the Churchyard Extension, and the New British Cemetery was not begun until July 1917. It was used by fighting units (especially the 40th, 61st (South Midland) and 9th (Scottish) Divisions) and Field Ambulances until March 1918, when it comprised about 590 graves in Plots I to IV.
It was then used by the Germans, who added 255 burials, including 26 British, in Plots IV, V, and VI. In September and October 1918, about 73 British soldiers were buried by the 33rd and other Divisions, partly in Plots I and II, but mainly in Plots V and VI.
Lastly, Plots VII and VIII were made, and other Plots completed, by the concentration of 591 graves after Armistice from the surrounding battlefields and from other smaller cemeteries, including :
There are now 1289, First World War casualties commemorated in this site. Of these 208 are unidentified, and special memorials are erected to nine soldiers from the United Kingdom who are believed to be buried among them. Another special memorial records the name of a soldier from the United Kingdom, buried in Fins Churchyard Extension, whose grave could not be found on concentration. Nine graves in Plot VIII, Row E, identified as a whole but not individually, are marked by headstones bearing the words: “Buried near this spot.”
There are also 276 German burials here, 89 being unidentified. This cemetery was designed by Sir Herbert Baker.
Some of the German burials
Rifleman Bertie Chorlton S/11645
12th Bn The Rifle Brigade
Died on 1st December 1917
Grave: II D 7
2nd Lieutenant Royston Mason
5th Bn Royal Fusiliers
Died on 20th November 1917 aged 20
Son of Mrs. E. M. Mason
of 1, Victoria Drive, Eastbourne
Grave: II B 21
My Roy
Mother’s undying love
For a perfect son
Here awaits the dawn
Major Wilfred Whitson
9th Bn Highland Light Infantry
Died on 30th November 1917 aged 30
Son of Alexander and Isabella Whitson
of 5, Prince’s Terrace, Dowanhill, Glasgow
Grave: II C 18
Major John Archdale-Porter DSO
9th (Queen’s Royal) Lancers
Died on 22nd November 1917 aged 31
Son of John and Josephine Porter
of Belle Isle, Lisbellaw, Co. Fermanagh
Husband of Enid Archdale-Porter
of 8, Chesterfield St., London
Grave: II B 17
Tranquil you lie
Your knightly virtue proved
Your memory hallowed
In the land you loved
Private Harry Knight G/6565
1st Bn Queens Regiment
(Royal West Surrey Regiment)
Died on 6th October 1918
Son of Mrs. Ellen Knight
of 2, Lower Addiscombe Road,
West Croydon, Surrey
Grave: VI E 20
Shot at Dawn for desertion
Knight had volunteered in 1914 but had a chequered career with a number of previous convictions for disobedience. He had also been wounded. At his court martial he stated that his nerves had gone.
In the communal cemetery you will find David Ross 14 years,
the youngest proven Commonwealth soldier to die during the war.