Crouy British Cemetery, Crouy-Sur-Somme

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Crouy British Cemetery
Cemetery Crouy British.jpg
Country: France
Location: Somme
Coordinates: 49°57′43″N 2°05′00″E / 49.96194, 2.083333
Type: Public
Owned by: Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Number of gravesites: 739
Website: Crouy British Cemetery

The Crouy British Cemetery is a cemetery in the Somme region of France containing the graves of Canadians killed during the Great War.

History

The cemetery was used between April and August 1918 for burials from the 5th and 47th Casualty Clearing Stations, which had come to the village because of the German advance.

In October 1919, 42 graves were brought to Crouy from the small military cemetery at Riviere, a few kilometres away to the north-west. These burials had been made from the 12th, 53rd and 55th Casualty Clearing Stations at Longpre-les-Corps Saints between May and August 1918. They now occupy rows E and F of plot IV and part of row D, plot VI.

The cemetery now contains 739 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, and a number of French and German war graves.

Location

Crouy is a village about 16 kilometres north-west of Amiens on the west side of the River Somme, on the Amiens-Abbeville main road. The British Cemetery is a little south of the village on the west side of the road to Cavillon and there is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission signpost on the main road.

"We Rest Here"

The following Signals related person is buried here.

Headstone Service Number Rank and Name Grave Location
Simmins, Sidney Ernest grave marker.jpg
507492 Spr S.E. Simmins VI. A. 26.

See also

References