Country: Belgium
Locality:
Tournai, Hainaut
Identified
Casualties: 819
Google Earth Link:
Cemetery
Location
Tournai Communal
Cemetery is located in the south west district of
Tournai itself on the N508, Chaussee De Douai, a road
leading from the R52 Tournai ring road. 900 metres
after leaving the R523 and joining the N508, lies the
left hand turning onto the Chaussee de Willemeau, and
the cemetery is along this road on the right, fronted
by large iron gates.
Cemetery
Information
Tournai was captured by
the German II Corps on 23 August 1914, in spite of
resistance from a French Territorial Brigade, and the
town remained in German hands until it was entered by
the 47th (London) and 74th (Yeomanry) Divisions on 8
November 1918. The 51st (or Highland) Casualty
Clearing Station arrived on 14 November and remained
until 20 July 1919; during the occupation, the German
sick and wounded had been nursed in the "Asile",
the Allied in the Hopital Notre-Dame. The (Southern)
Communal Cemetery, in the Faubourg-St. Martin, was
used and extended by the Germans, although the graves
were later regrouped by nationality and some were
brought in from other cemeteries in a wide area around
Tournai. The Allied extension now contains 689
Commonwealth burials of the First World War, 34 of
them unidentified. There are also 117 Russian burials,
all of men who died as prisoners of war, and two
Belgian war graves. Almost all of the 52 Second World
War burials in the extension date from May 1940 and
the withdrawal of the British Expeditionary Force
ahead of the German advance.
WW2
Graves
The
graves here are largely from the fighting in the
Tournai area in May 1940, and include the graves of
men whose bodies were only recovered after WW2.
Photo
Archive