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http:// www. memoiregrandeguerre.com
http:// www.ismaww1.com
http:// www.errinerung welt krieg.com
http:// www. wo1memorie.com
memoiregrandeguerre :
Site de référence / premiere guerre mondiale

Entrée libre
The Battle of Vimy Ridge
The Memorial stands on Hill 145, the highest point of the 14 kilometre long Vimy Ridge. In the First World War, the Ridge was a vital part of the German defence system. It was so well fortified that all attempts to take it by Allied forces during the first three years of the war had failed. Superb planning and training ensured that the Canadian Corps would achieve its goal.
At daybreak on April 9, 1917, all four divisions of the Canadian Corps, fighting together for the first time, stormed the Ridge. Preceded by a perfectly-timed artillery barrage, the Canadians advanced and, by mid-afternoon, had taken the whole crest of the Ridge except Hill 145, which they captured three days later. The victory was swift, but it did not come without cost. Out of 1O,6O2 casualties, 3,598 Canadians gave their lives. The victory at Vimy Ridge was a turning point for Allied forces in the First World War. Back home in Canada, the victory at Vimy Ridge united Canadians and brought honour and pride to the young nation.
Today, the Vimy Memorial does more than mark the site of the Battle of Vimy Ridge. It is a monument to all Canadians who died or risked their lives for freedom and peace in the First World War. Designed by Canadian sculptor and architect Walter Seymour Allward, the monument took 11 years to build. It rests on a bed of 11,000 tonnes of concrete, reinforced with hundreds of tonnes of steel. The towering pylons and sculptured figures contain almost 6,000 tonnes of limestone brought to the site from an abandoned Roman quarry on the Adriatic Sea. The figures were carved where they now stand from huge blocks of this stone. A cloaked figure stands at the front, or cast side, of the monument overlooking the Douai Plain. It was carved from a single, 3O-tonne block and is the largest piece in the monument. This sorrowing figure of a woman represents Canada – a young nation mourning her Carved on the walls of the monument are the names of 11,285 Canadians who were killed in France and whose final resting place is unknown. Standing on the monument’s wide stone terrace overlooking the broad fields and rolling hills of France, one can see other places where Canadians fought and died. More than 7,000 are buried in 30 war cemeteries within a 16 kilometre radius of the Vimy Memorial. Altogether, 66,655 Canadians died in the First World War.
The 100 hectare park surrounding the Memorial has been largely reforested to prevent erosion. Today’s visitor will find the ground pock-marked with shell holes from artillery bombardment. Trenches and subways have been restored and preserved and the visitor can picture the magnitude of the task that faced the Canadian Corps on that distant dawn when history was made.
To the valour of their countrymen in the Great War and in memory of their sixty thousand dead this monument is raised by the people of Canada. |
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The Canadian National Vimy Memorial Park
The Canadian National Vimy Memorial is open to the public all year from sunrise to sunset and is free of charge. Between April 1st and November 30 th, guided tours are offered by Canadian students every day from 10,00 to 18,00 hours.
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