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St Symphorien Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery

St Symphorien Military Cemetery
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
0 Cimetière militaire et mémorial britannique de Saint-Symphorien (1).JPG
Military Cemetery (English and German) and British memorial of Saint-Symphorien
Used for those deceased World War I
Established 1916
Location Coordinates: 50°25′56″N 4°0′38″E / 50.43222°N 4.01056°E / 50.43222; 4.01056
near Saint-Symphorien, Belgium
Designed by Captain Bäumer (original)
William Harrison Cowlishaw (redesign)
Total burials 513
Unknown burials 105 (40 German, 65 Commonwealth)
Burials by nation
Burials by war
Statistics source: Cemetery Details. Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

The St Symphorien Military Cemetery is a First World War Commonwealth War Graves Commission burial ground in Saint-Symphorien, Belgium. It contains the graves of 284 German and 229 Commonwealth soldiers, principally those killed during the Battle of Mons. The cemetery was established by the German Army on land donated by Jean Houzeau de Lehaie. It was initially designed as a woodland cemetery before being redesigned by William Harrison Cowlishaw after the Imperial War Graves Commission took over maintenance of the cemetery after the war.

Notable Commonwealth burials in the cemetery include John Parr and George Lawrence Price, traditionally believed to be the first and last Commonwealth soldiers killed in action during the First World War, and Maurice Dease, the first posthumous recipient of the Victoria Cross of World War I. Notable German burials include Oskar Niemeyer, the first Iron Cross recipient of World War I.

The Battle of Mons took place as part of the Battle of the Frontiers, in which the advancing German armies clashed with the advancing Allied armies along the Franco-Belgian and Franco-German borders. The British position on the French flank meant that it stood in the path of the German 1st Army. The British reached Mons on 22 August and at the time, the French Fifth Army, located on the right of the British, was heavily engaged with the German 2nd and 3rd armies at the Battle of Charleroi. The British agreed to hold the line of the Condé–Mons–Charleroi Canal for twenty-four hours, to prevent the advancing German 1st Army from threatening the French left flank. The British thus spent the day digging in along the canal.


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