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CWGC Cemetery: VAUXBUIN FRENCH NATIONAL CEMETERY

Country

France

Locality

unspecified

Identified Casualties

162

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Local Information

Vauxbuin is a village 4 kilometres to the south-west of Soissons, and Vauxbuin French National Cemetery can be reached from the direction of Soissons via the N2, Soissons to Paris road. It is necessary to go around the Soissons ring road following the signs for Paris. On leaving the Soissons ring road via a large roundabout, continue to follow the signs for Paris via the N2. Vauxbuin French National Cemetery lies 3 kilometres along this road on the right side. Caution must be taken along this road as it is a very busy road with traffic travelling very fast. The Commission Plot forms a small part of this large French Cemetery which is situated adjacent to a German military cemetery.

Historical Information

The village was passed by British troops on the 31st August, 1914, in the Retreat from Mons; and British troops fought in the neighbourhood in 1918. The French National Cemetery was made by the French Graves Service in 1920-1924. The British plot, made after the Armistice, contains the graves of soldiers from the United Kingdom who fell in 1914 and 1918 and belonged to the 4th, 5th, 15th (Scottish) and 34th Divisions. There are now nearly 300, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this site. Of these, almost half are unidentified and special memorials are erected to three soldiers believed to be buried among them. The British plot covers an area of 1,240 square metres. The following were among the burial grounds from which British graves were transferred to Vauxbuin French National Cemetery: AMBLENY FRENCH NATIONAL CEMETERY, now a permanent cemetery of 10,266 burials, on the North side of the Compiegne-Soissons main road. Here were buried two British soldiers who fell on the 1st April, 1918. DOMMIERS BRITISH CEMETERY, on the East side of that village, which contained the graves of 50 soldiers of the 15th Division who fell in July and August, 1918. LE PRESSOIR FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY, AMBLENY, in which were buried 370 French soldiers, 33 German, and three British who died in French hospitals in April, 1918. LONGPONT FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY, AISNE, (in a garden near La Grille Farm), where one British soldier was buried in July, 1918; the 628 French graves also were moved to Vauxbuin. PARGNY-FILAIN COMMUNAL CEMETERY, used by the Germans in 1914-15; one British soldier was buried there in September, 1914. SOISSONS COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION, made by the French, on the West side of the Communal Cemetery. The graves of 88 British soldiers (who fell for the most part in 1914) were reburied here from the battlefields, but both French and British graves have been removed. TERNY-SORNY FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY (at the North-East end of the village), which contained the graves of 365 French soldiers and those of two R.G.A. Gunners who died in May, 1917. VAUXBUIN COMMUNAL CEMETERY, where two men of the 58th (London) Division were buried in April, 1918. VAUXBUIN (1870) FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY ("Cimetiere des Fusilles") near the Church, where two British soldiers were buried, among French and German, in April, 1918. VEZAPONIN COMMUNAL CEMETERY FRENCH EXTENSION, which contained 80 French graves and those of five British soldiers who died in March, 1918. VILLERS-HELON FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY, which contained 120 French graves and those of three British soldiers who fell in July, 1918.

Cemetery Photo

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CWGC Cemetery Photo: VAUXBUIN FRENCH NATIONAL CEMETERY

CWGC Cemetery Photo: VAUXBUIN FRENCH NATIONAL CEMETERY

Cemetery Plan

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CWGC Cemetery Plan: VAUXBUIN FRENCH NATIONAL CEMETERY

CWGC Cemetery Plan: VAUXBUIN FRENCH NATIONAL CEMETERY

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