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    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914

    4.0 (1 review)

    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 Photos

    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 - Landmarks & Historical Buildings Near Me - Comines-Warneton, WHT
    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 - Landmarks & Historical Buildings Near Me - Comines-Warneton, WHT
    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 - Landmarks & Historical Buildings Near Me - Comines-Warneton, WHT
    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 - Landmarks & Historical Buildings Near Me - Comines-Warneton, WHT

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    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 - Landmarks & Historical Buildings Near Me - Comines-Warneton, WHT

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    9 years ago

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    Essex Farm Cemetery - Poppies growing across from the Advanced Dressing Station

    Essex Farm Cemetery

    4.8(5 reviews)
    13.1 km

    It's known as the site that is close to where Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae wrote his famous poem…read more It is here that you'll see the Advanced Dressing Station bunkers along a bank of the Yser Canal. These types of medical stations were established very close to the front line. The original one where he tended to the wounded was a roughly made dugout shelter that had a roof covered with wooden boards. The ones that you see today are the reinforced concrete dressing stations built into the bank around 1917. The cemetery was named after the Essex Regiment in memory of the very first soldiers to be buried here from the Commonwealth. There are military cemeteries peppered throughout this region. Many that are buried in these cemeteries are still unknown. Recovery of the dead was difficult due to constant artillery bombardment and the initial gas attack during the Second Battle of Ypres. You'll learn more about that at In Flanders Fields Museum. This was our final stop of the tour. It put everything that we saw that day into perspective. The John McCrae Memorial Site, Monument to the 49th West Riding Division, and the Stone of Remembrance are prominent along with all the beautifully manicured garden of headstones. In the midst of it all are wild poppies that sprout up in the Fields around it. You can definitely see and understand how it all inspired a Canadian infantry field surgeon to write such a beautiful poem after one of his closest friends was killed in battle. I'll leave you with this famous poem. In Flanders Fields by John McCrae In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row, That mark our place; and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fly Scarce heard amid the guns below. We are the Dead. Short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, Loved, and were loved, and now we lie In Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high. If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, through poppies grow In Flanders fields.

    A small cemetery by World War I standards, but the medical facilities behind it on the Yser Canal,…read morethe British Advanced Dressing Station (ADS), are its most unusual feature. A line of crude, cold bunkers faces away from the canal and the line of advance of the 1915 German Army. It is difficult to imagine doctors working in near-caves like these - but no more difficult than imagining a civilization that would descend to the lunacy of the Western Front. The ADS saw its worst action in the Second Battle of Ypres, on April 23rd, 1915, when the German Army attacked for the first time under a cloud of poison gas.

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    Essex Farm Cemetery - View of Essex Farm Cemetery

    View of Essex Farm Cemetery

    Essex Farm Cemetery - Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae's poem "In Flanders Field"

    Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae's poem "In Flanders Field"

    Essex Farm Cemetery - Their Name Liveth For Evermore

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    Their Name Liveth For Evermore

    Christmas Truce Memorial 1914 - landmarks - Updated June 2026

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