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Le Trou Aid Post Cemetery

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Cemetery located in Pas-de-Calais, in France

Le Trou Aid Post Cemetery
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Le Trou Aid Post
For Allied war dead of World War I
EstablishedOctober 1914
Location50°37′26″N 02°49′35″E / 50.62389°N 2.82639°E / 50.62389; 2.82639 (Le Trou Aid Post Cemetery)
near Fleurbaix
Designed bySir Herbert Baker
Total burials350+
Unknowns200+
Burials by nation
Statistics source: Commonwealth War Graves Commission

The Le Trou Aid Post Cemetery is a World War I cemetery located in the commune of Fleurbaix, in the Pas-de-Calais departement of France, about 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) south of the village of Fleurbaix on the D175 road (rue de Pétillon).

British soldiers of the 19th Infantry Brigade made the earliest burials at the site in October 1914 during the First Battle of Ypres. By the end of the war, the cemetery contained 123 graves. This number nearly tripled after a postwar consolidation of war burial sites, when Le Trou Aid Post was expanded by the architect Sir Herbert Baker.

Described as one of Baker's most sentimental works, the rural site is surrounded by a narrow moat and sheltered by a grove of weeping willows. Visitors approach over a footbridge and enter through a delicate cottage-style gateway.

The cemetery contains more than 350 graves, and over two hundred are unidentified. The dead represent the battlefields of Ypres, Le Maisnil (October 1914), Aubers Ridge (May 1915), Loos (September–October 1915), and Fromelles (July 1916).

See also

References

  1. ^ "Le Trou Aid Post Cemetery, Fleurbaix". Cwgc.org. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 29 December 2013..
  2. ^ "CWGC – Cemetery Details". Cwgc.org. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  3. ^ Geurst, Jeroen (2010). Cemeteries of the Great War by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Rotterdam: 010 Publ. p. 70. ISBN 9789064507151.

External links

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