Quéant Road Cemetery, Buissy | |
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Commonwealth War Graves Commission | |
For the dead of various battles of World War I | |
Established | October 1918 |
Location | 50°11′39″N 3°0′51″E / 50.19417°N 3.01417°E near |
Designed by | Sir Edwin Lutyens |
Total burials | 2,377 |
Unknowns | 1,441 |
Statistics source: Cemetery details. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. |
Quéant Road Cemetery is a World War I cemetery located between the villages of Buissy and Quéant in the Nord-Pas de Calais region of France. Situated on the north side of the D14 road, about three kilometres (two miles) from Buissy, it contains 2,377 burials and commemorations of Commonwealth soldiers who died in the era of 1917 and 1918. The first burials were of soldiers who died in the period from September to November 1918. Following the Armistice the cemetery was enlarged to accommodate over 2,200 burials moved from surrounding battlefields and cemeteries.
Buissy was reached by the Third Army on 2 September 1918, after the storming of the Drocourt-Quéant line, and was evacuated by the Germans on the following day.
Quéant Road Cemetery was created by the 2nd and 57th Casualty Clearing Stations in October and November 1918. It then consisted of 71 graves (now Plot I, Rows A and B), but was greatly enlarged after the Armistice when 2,200 graves were brought in from the battlefields of 1917–1918 between Arras and Bapaume, and from the following smaller burial grounds in the area:
There are 2,377 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in Quéant Road Cemetery. 1,441 of the burials are unidentified, and there are special memorials to 56 casualties known or believed to be buried among them. Other special memorials commemorate 26 casualties buried in German cemeteries in the neighbourhood, whose graves could not be found on concentration.