Orchard Dump
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Wancourt British Cemetery

Location

Wancourt is a village about 8 kilometres south-east of Arras. It is 2 kilometres south of the main road from Arras to Cambrai. The cemetery is a short distance south-east of the village just off the D 35 road.

GPSNEOSM
Decimal50.2447902.878257 Map
Wancourt British Cemetery

Historical Information

Wancourt was captured on 12th April 1917 after very heavy fighting and the advance was continued on the following days. The cemetery, called at first Cojeul Valley Cemetery, or River Road Cemetery, was opened about ten days later; it was used until October 1918, but was in German hands from March 1918 until 26th August, when the Canadian Corps recaptured Wancourt.

At the Armistice, the cemetery contained 410 graves, but was very greatly increased in the following years when graves were brought in from the following small cemeteries and isolated positions on the battlefields south-east of Arras :

  • St. Martin-Croisilles Road Cemetery, in the commune of St. Martin-sur-Cojeul. In this graveyard, about midway on the road, were buried 15 British officers and men who fell on 9th April 1917, or the four following days, and of whom 13 belonged to the 1st East Yorkshire Regiment.
  • Shaft Trench Cemetery, in the commune of Heninel, about 1600 metres from that village on the road to Croisilles. Here, in April, May and June 1917, 19 British soldiers were buried by the 50th (Northumbrian) Division.
  • Signal Trench Cemetery, Heninel. Here, on the far side of the ridge between Wancourt and Cherisy, “in a rather broken part of the British front line”, 22 British soldiers were buried in April and May 1917.
  • Fontaine Road Cemetery, Heninel. In this graveyard, slightly North of Signal Trench Cemetery, 17 British officers and men (of whom 15 belonged to the 2nd Royal Welch Fusiliers) were buried in April 1917.
  • Heninel-Cherisy Road West Cemetery, Heninel, which was about 800 metres East of Heninel village, contained 25 British graves of April 1917.
  • The Lincolns Cemetery, St. Martin-sur-Cojeul, about 800 metres South-East of that village, where 22 non-commissioned officers and men of the 1st Lincolns, who fell on 11 April 1917, were buried.
  • Henin North Cemetery, Henin-sur-Cojeul, about 800 metres North of the village, contained the graves of 29 British soldiers who fell on 9th April 1917, almost all of whom belonged to the 2nd Wilts or the 18th King’s Liverpools.
Wancourt British Cemetery

The cemetery now contains 1,936 burials and commemorations of the First World War. 829 of the burials are unidentified but there are special memorials to 76 casualties known or believed to be buried among them, and to 20 who were buried in Signal Trench Cemetery whose graves were destroyed in later battles.

The cemetery was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens.

Wancourt British Cemetery
Captain Montagu Yeatherd

Captain Montagu Yeatherd
XII Royal Lancers
Died on 11th April aged 33
Son of Mabel and the late Lt Col E Yeatherd
of 31 Montpelier Square, South Kensington, London
Joined 7th Queen’s Own Hussars
from Sandhurst, April 1903,
and transfered to XIIth Royal Lancers
October 1916

Grave: IV D 3

2nd Lieutenant Frederick Rankin

2nd Lieutenant Frederick Rankin
1/5th Border Regiment
Attached D Battalion Tank Corps
Died on 23rd April 1917 aged 20
Native of Oxton, Cheshire.
The Youngest son of Jane and the late James Rankin
of 2 Valley Rd., Welwyn Garden City, Herts.
Enlisted in 10th Bn The King’s
Liverpool Regiment, August 1914.
Commissioned September 1916

Grave: I D 23

Corporal James Richardson MM and Bar

Corporal James Richardson 265424 MM and Bar
6th Bn Seaforth Highlanders
Died on 19th October 1917 aged 24
Son of Mrs Jane Richardson
of William St, Blairgowrie, Perthshire

Grave: I B 56

2nd Lieutenant Ralph Snowdon

2nd Lieutenant Ralph Snowdon
4th Bn East Yorkshire Regiment
Died on 2nd October 1917 aged 36
Son of William and Charlotte Snowdon
of Hornsea, East Yorks.
Branch manager of the Hull Savings Bank.
Enlisted September 1914, in the 10th Bn.
Served in Egypt and France
Was gassed at the Battle of the Somme, 1916.
Gazetted to Commission, July 1917

Grave: I A 39

Lt Colonel Archibald McKenzie DSO and Bar

Lt Colonel Archibald McKenzie DSO and Bar
26th Bn Canadian Infantry
(New Brunswick Regiment)
Died on 28th August 1918 aged 39
Son of Archibald McKenzie
of Campbellton, New Brunswick
Husband of Charlotte McKenzie
of Newcastle, New Brunswick

Grave: II C 9


Other cemeteries in the area