Daours Communal Cemetery Extension

Historical Information (Source: CWGC)

The preparations for the Somme offensive of July 1916 brought a group of casualty clearing stations (the 1st/1st South Midland, 21st, 34th, 45th and Lucknow, section "B") to Daours. The extension to the communal cemetery was opened and the first burials made in Plots I, II, Row A of Plot III and the Indian plot, between June and November 1916. The Allied advance in the spring of 1917 took the hospitals with it, and no further burials were made in the cemetery until April 1918, when the Germans recovered the ground they had lost. From April to the middle of August 1918, the extension was almost a front line cemetery. In August and September 1918, the casualty clearing stations came forward again (the 5th, 37th, 41st, 53rd, 55th and 61st) but in September, the cemetery was closed.

There are now 1,231 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in Daours Communal Cemetery Extension. The total includes special memorials to four men of the Chinese labour corps whose graves in White Chateau Cemetery, Cachy, could not be located. The adjoining communal cemetery contains two First World War burials made before the extension was opened.

The extension was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens.

 

Served with

  • United Kingdom (761)
  • Australian (457)
  • Indian (8)
  • Canadian (2)
  • New Zealand (1)
  • South African (1)

Served in

  • Army (1228)
  • Air Force (2)
Daours Communal Ext
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PRIVATE LIONEL REGINALD HOWARTH - 4399 - 8th Field Amb. Australian Army Medical Corps

Died 04 May 1918 Age 17

Country of Service: Australian

Foster son of Grace Bedding, of "Walworth," Raynor St., Leichhardt, New South Wales.

Personal Inscription: A YOUNG LIFE NOBLY ENDED DEEPLY MOURNED

NAA Item Number 6994434 Howarth
PDF – 10,6 MB
5572293 Howarth PDF
PDF – 73,0 KB

Pte Robert Owen CONMY  Age 16 - 1 South Africa - 1 New Zealand


Indian and Chinese graves.


DCM - DSO - MC - MM