Cross of Sacrifice in the CWGC St Marys Advanced Dressing Station Cemetery, Haisnes, Pas de Calais, France.


John Kipling, the only son of Carrie and Rudyard Kipling and brother to Elsie and Josephine, is buried in this cemetery The village was reached, or nearly reached, by the 9th (Scottish) and 7th Divisions on the 25th September 1915, the first day of the Battle of Loos; and parts of the commune were the scene of desperate fighting in the Actions of the Hohenzollern Redoubt (13th-15th October, 1915). No further advance was made in this sector until October 1918, when the enemy withdrew his line. "St. Mary's Advanced Dressing Station" was established, during the Battle of Loos, and the cemetery named from it is at the same place. The cemetery was made after the Armistice, by the concentration of graves from the battlefield of Loos; the great majority of the graves are those of men who fell in September and October 1915. There are now nearly 2,000, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this cemetery. Of these, over two-thirds are unidentified and Special Memorials are erected to 23 soldiers from the United Kingdom, known or believed to be buried among them. Six other special memorials record the names of soldiers from the United Kingdom, buried in Loos Communal Cemetery, whose graves were destroyed by shell fire.


Size: 3396px × 2232px
Location: Haisnes, Pas de Calais, France
Photo credit: © Maurice Savage / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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