WW1 Cemeteries.com - A photographic guide to over 4000 military cemeteries and memorials
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Belgium
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in Belgium in Alphabetical Order
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in Belgium >
      • HAINAUT
      • WEST-VLAANDEREN
      • OTHER BELGIAN DEPARTMENTS
    • BELGIAN MILITARY CEMETERIES
    • BELGIAN MEMORIALS
  • France
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in France in Alphabetical Order
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in France >
      • AISNE
      • MARNE
      • NORD
      • OISE
      • PAS DE CALAIS
      • SEINE-ET-MARNE
      • SEINE-MARITIME
      • SOMME
      • OTHER FRENCH DEPARTMENTS
    • FRENCH CEMETERIES WORLDWIDE
    • French Memorials
  • Gallipoli
  • Other CWGC Countries
  • GERMAN CEMETERIES
  • OTHER WAR AND MILITARY CEMETERIES
  • Architects
  • Shot at Dawn
  • Victoria Cross
  • Miscellaneous
  • Regimental Badges
  • "Silent Cities" Revisited

NIEUPORT MEMORIAL

West-Vlaanderen

​Belgium

GPS Coordinates: Latitude: 51.13708 Longitude: 2.75563

The Nieuport Memorial
© Geerhard Joos
Location Information

Nieuport (now Nieuwpoort) is a town in the Province of West Flanders on the south-west side of the River Yser, 3 kilometres from the sea. The Nieuport Memorial is on a site where the road to Lombardsijde joins the road from Nieuport dock. It is located partly along the "Sluizenring" and partly along the "Westendelaan". The Memorial takes the form of a pylon of Euville stone, 8 metres high, surrounded by a bronze band on which are cast the names of the casualties commemorated. It stands on a triangular paved platform, and at each corner of the triangle is the recumbent figure of a lion facing outwards.


Visiting Information

The names on the memorial are recorded by Regiment, then by Rank and then alphabetically. 


Historical Information

The Nieuport Memorial commemorates 552 Commonwealth officers and men who were killed in Allied operations on the Belgian coast during the First World War and have no known grave. Twenty of those commemorated served with the Royal Naval Division and were killed or mortally wounded during the siege of Antwerp in October 1914. Almost all of the remainder fell in heavy fighting in the region of Nieuport in the summer of 1917. The memorial is constructed of Euville limestone and stands eight metres high. It was designed by William Bryce Binnie, an Imperial War Graves Commission architect who served with the Royal Highland Regiment during the war and was twice decorated for bravery. The lions standing at each point of the triangular platform were designed by Charles Sergeant Jagger, a celebrated British sculptor and decorated veteran of the Western Front. The memorial was officially unveiled by Sir George Macdonogh in July 1928.


British Operations on the Belgian Coast

The armies of the German Empire invaded Belgium on 4 August 1914. Within three weeks the fortified cities of Liege and Namur were in German hands and the Belgian forces had retreated to Antwerp, which was well defended and ringed by a series of forts. To begin with, the German First Army under General von Kluck bypassed the city and moved south-west toward the Franco-Belgian border. Yet on September 28, after weeks of heavy fighting in northern France, German artillery batteries began to shell the outer forts from the south-east. The accuracy of the German long-range guns had a devastating effect on the defences of the outer forts, and by the beginning of October the German infantry was slowly closing in on the city. 

Fearing that the fall of Antwerp would expose the channel ports and leave Britain vulnerable to attack, the British deployed the newly formed Royal Naval Division to assist their Belgian allies in defending the city. The first British reinforcements, a brigade of Royal Marines, arrived at Antwerp on 4 October and relieved the 21st Belgian Regiment. On the following day the German forces crossed the river Nethe at Lier, 20 kilometres south of Antwerp. Two more British naval brigades arrived at Antwerp early on 6 October, yet while their arrival lifted the morale of the soldiers and civilians in the city, they could do little to alter the strategic position of the Belgian garrison, which was now critical. On the night of 6 October, the Belgian fortress troops under General Paris retired to the inner forts on the outskirts of the city, and over the course of the next day the German forces crossed the river Scheldt and began to shell the streets and houses of Antwerp. By 8 October, the Belgian Field Army had evacuated the city, which was now defended by mixed units of Belgian and British troops. The first German troops entered the city, following heavy shelling, on 9 October and the siege was at an end. 

British units did not return to this sector of the Western Front until June 1917, when the 32nd Division relieved French troops stationed at Nieuport in preparation for planned Allied landings on German-held territory along the Belgian coast. German marines launched a pre-emptive attack against the British forces on the river Yser in July and the landings, codenamed ‘Operation Hush’, never took place. Over 260 men commemorated on the Nieuport Memorial were killed or mortally wounded during heavy fighting with units of the German Marine-Korps Flandern on July 10 1917.

Commemorated: United Kingdom 552.

The memorial was designed by
Major W.B. Binnie.

Images in this gallery © Geerhard Joos

The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
Picture
A soldier of the 4th Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment sitting on a barrel at Nieuport Bains, 2nd September 1917. © IWM Q 2875
Picture
12008 Private
William Evans
1st Bn. South Wales Borderers
9th July 1917.


Private Williams had been attached to the 2nd Australian Tunnelling Company for approximately two weeks in Belgium, when on 10 July 1917, he was killed in action while constructing dugouts on the opposite side of the Yser Canal. His party was attacked by German troops, retreat made impossible by the destruction of the pontoon bridges and the entire party was killed or taken prisoner of war.

Picture
24381 Private
Alexander Houston
16th Bn. Highland Light Infantry
11th July 1917, aged 19.


Son of Mrs. A. Houston, of 322, Hawkhill, Dundee.

Picture
British soldier sitting in the hole made by a shell in a gasometer at Nieuport, 30th July 1917. © IWM Q 2642

Pictures in this gallery © Werner Van Caneghem

The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
The Nieuport Memorial
Picture
German trenches at Nieuport. © IWM Q 55181
Picture
Baroness Elsie de T'Serclaes (aka Elsie Knocker) and her friend, Mairi Chisholm in a Belgian reserve trench near Nieuport. © IWM Q 3959
Picture
A communication trench and dug-out in the dunes of the Nieuport Sector. Graves in the foreground. © IWM Q 41762
Picture
A soldier of the 4th Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment in the trenches at Nieuport Bains, 8th September 1917. He is using a trench periscope to view the German line. © IWM Q 2877

NEARBY CWGC CEMETERIES & MEMORIALS
​

nieuwpoort communal cemetery
ramscappelle road military cemetery
lombardsijde churchyard

World War Two Cemeteries
​

Please ask permission if you wish to use any of our images by using the contact tab above
​

Picture
Commonwealth War Graves
​Commission
Picture
Canadian Virtual War Memorial
Picture
Australian War Memorial
Picture
New Zealand Online Cenotaph

​© COPYRIGHT TERENCE HEARD AND BRENT WHITTAM
​ 2005-2023 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
.​
Disclaimer 

The casualty numbers for each cemetery and G. P. S. Coordinates are taken from the C. W. G. C. site. We are aware that there can be discrepancies in the burial numbers quoted due to rededication burials.

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Belgium
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in Belgium in Alphabetical Order
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in Belgium >
      • HAINAUT
      • WEST-VLAANDEREN
      • OTHER BELGIAN DEPARTMENTS
    • BELGIAN MILITARY CEMETERIES
    • BELGIAN MEMORIALS
  • France
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in France in Alphabetical Order
    • Commonwealth Cemeteries in France >
      • AISNE
      • MARNE
      • NORD
      • OISE
      • PAS DE CALAIS
      • SEINE-ET-MARNE
      • SEINE-MARITIME
      • SOMME
      • OTHER FRENCH DEPARTMENTS
    • FRENCH CEMETERIES WORLDWIDE
    • French Memorials
  • Gallipoli
  • Other CWGC Countries
  • GERMAN CEMETERIES
  • OTHER WAR AND MILITARY CEMETERIES
  • Architects
  • Shot at Dawn
  • Victoria Cross
  • Miscellaneous
  • Regimental Badges
  • "Silent Cities" Revisited