Friday, 12 September 2025

Op La Boisselle - Thiepval

 The Thiepval Memorial bears the names 72,331 soldiers from Britain and South Africa who have no known grave. It commemorates those who died  in the Somme sector before 20 March 1918,   over 90% of whom were lost during the Somme Battles between July and November 1916.

Thiepval Memorial | CWGC

Northumbrian Gunner: Somme 2023 - Thiepval 

Recorded on the memorial are 1,426 Tyneside Scots of whom 778 lost their lives on the 1st July 1916.

Thiepval Memorial IJ

Thiepval Memorial


Thiepval Memorial

Thiepval Memorial
Stone of Remembrance

Thiepval Memorial
French and British Cemeteries

Thiepval Memorial
British and French Cemeteries


Op La Boisselle - Ovillers Military Cemetery

Ovillers Military Cemetery

 Ovillers Military Cemetery is situated 1 km north of La Boisselle. It originated as a battle cemetery behind a dressing station and used until March 17.  After the Armistice it was expanded as the fallen from the battlefields of Pozieres, Ovillers, La Boisselle and Contalmaison were buried in the cemetery. 

The cemetery contains 3,440 graves of which 2,480 are unidentified. Of the 960 identified casualties, 290 are recorded as being killed on 1st July 1916. There are 76 Tyneside Scottish and 27 Tyneside Irish graves. There are many unidentified Tyneside Scots buried in the cemetery, many of whom would have probably lost their lives on 1st July 1916.

The cemetery also contains 120 French casulaties.

Ovillers Military Cemetery | CWGC

Ovillers Military Cemetery IJ

Ovillers Military Cemetery


Ovillers Military Cemetery
Tyneside Scottish Unknown Soldiers

Ovillers Military Cemetery
Tyneside Scottish Unknown Soldier

Ovillers Military Cemetery
Unknown British Officer

Ovillers Military Cemetery
2/Lt William Charles Hickman
KIA 1st July 1916


2nd Lieut. William Christie Hickman
Royal Field Artillery 


Gunner Casualties 16 Battery 41 Brigade RFA 

16 Battery 41st Brigade 
Royal Field Artillery
KIA 20th January 1917

The War Diary of 41st Brigade Royal Field Artillery records;
Place: MOUQUET FARM & COURCELLETTE|  Date: January 20th
16th Battery had a g.s. wagon & team hit at TULLOCH CORNER. 4 men killed + 2 wounded.

Driver F Dolan | CWGC






Ovillers Military Cemetery
British & French Graves

Ovillers Military Cemetery
French Graves




Op La Boisselle - Lochnagar Crater

 The Lochnagar mine was dug beneath a German fortification known as the  Schwabenhöhe (Swabian Height) in preparation for the Battle of the Somme. 

Lochnagar Crater IJ

 The digging of the mine started on  11th November 1915 by 185 Tunnelling Company Royal Engineers. It was completed by 179 Tunnelling Company when they took over in March 1916. The entrance to the Tunnel was in a communication trench named 'Lochnagar Street'.

The tunnel sloped down to a depth of 30 metres then out to 274 metres until it was below the Schwabenhöhe. Two chambers,18 metres apart, were prepared and filled with ammonal explosives. One was charged with 16,330 kg (36,000 lb), the other with 10,900 kg (24,000 lb).



The Lochnagar mine was detonated at 07:28 1st July 1916, two minutes before zero hour.  The explosion created a crater 21 metres deep and 100 metres wide. An officer in the Royal Flying Corps,  2nd Lieutenant Cecil Lewis, on air patrol in the skies two miles from La Boisselle descrided the explosion;

We were over Thiepval and turned south to watch the mines. As we sailed down above all, came the final moment. Zero! At Boisselle the earth heaved and flashed, a tremendous and magnificent column rose up into the sky. There was an ear-splitting roar, drowning all the guns, flinging the machine sideways in the repercussing air. The earthly column rose, higher and higher to almost four thousand feet. There it hung, or seemed to hang, for a moment in the air, like a silhouette of some great cypress tree, then fell away in a widening cone of dust and debris. 

Lochnagar Crater

At 07:30 the infantry of the 34th Division assaulted forward from their trenches. The Lochnagar Crater was secured by the Grimsby Chums, the 10th (Service) Battalion, The Lincolnshire Regiment. They continued onto their first objective where they were repulsed by a German Counter attack and withdrew to the crater. Stragglers and wounded from across the 34th Division, including Tyneside Scottish and Tyneside Irish, took shelter in the crater.

Those sheltering in the crater were harassed by both German and British artillery fire. By the evening of the 2nd July a communication trench had been dug to the crater.

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Lochnagar Crater Memorial Cross

La Boisselle Mine Crater Aug 1916
IWM Q912

La Boisselle Mine Crater Sep 2025

Troops passing Lochnagar Crater Oct 1916
IWM Q1479

La Boisselle Crater Sep 2025

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ROYAL ENGINEERS
TUNNELING COMPANYS




Royal Engineers Tunnelers Commemoration

179 Tunnelling Company RE

179 Tunnelling Company RE





Op La Boisselle - Tyneside Scottish La Boisselle

 The Tyneside Scottish, part of the 34th Division, were located at La Boisselle for the Big Push in the Somme Sector in the summer of 1916.

The village  lay on the Albert-Bapaume Road from which it rises to the Thiepval Ridge passing through the shallow valleys nicknamed Sausage (right) and Mash (left).


La Boisselle Panorama

The Tyneside Scottish Brigade on on the left of the Divisional assault were tasked with attacking forward of the village of La Boisselle toward Contalmaison. The 101st Brigade were on their right with the Tyneside Irish Brigade echeloned to the rear. The axis of the attack was along the Albert to Bapaume Road. 

Two mines had been dug by Royal Engineers Tunnellers below German strongpoints at Lochnagar and Y Sap which would be blown prior to Zero Hour. 




British artillery had pounded the German defences around La Boisselle and along the Sausage and Mash Valleys in the six days prior to the assault.


On the morning of the 1st July 1916 the two mines at Lochnagar and Y Sap were blown at 07:28 and two minutes later at Zero Hour, 07:30, the Tyneside Scottish left their trenches to the skirl of the pipes. To their rear the Tyneside Irish advanced to the tune of the Minstrel Boy. 


Tyneside Irish advance at La Boisselle

The preliminary bombardment had failed to subdue the Germans. Deep bunkers had protected the defenders who quickly manned their trenches and machine guns and wreaked havoc on the Tyneside Scottish and Tyneside Irish.

By nightfall of the 1st July 1916 the Tyneside  Scottish and Tyneside Irish were back in the original trenches they held at 07:30. Tyneside Irish parties  penetrated as far as   Contalmaison but forced to withdraw. Only slight gains were made to the south of La Boisselle. The two Tyneside Brigades had been decimated by machine gun fire.

Brigadier Trevor Ternan commander of the Tyneside Scottish Brigade recorded;

"The attack had been pushed on with extraordinary heroism , but with no avail.

Officers and men had been literally mowed down, but in rapidly diminishing numbers they resolutely  pushed on to meet their  deaths close to the enemy wire. No-Mans-Land was reported to be heaped with dead. “

“While the enemy’s Artillery caused many casualties our losses were mainly due to the intensity of the enemy’s machine gun fire”

The British Army sustained 60,000 casualties on the 1st July 1916. The assault by the Fourth Army failed to break through the German defences.  To the North of the Albert to Bapaume road little ground was gained, the main successes were to the South where British and French troops advanced 2,000 metres.

The Tyneside Scottish and Irish Brigades had sustained the heaviest casualties that fateful day with around 4,000 men killed, missing or wounded. The losses were such that of all the Brigades engaged on the 1st July, the Tyneside Scottish and Tyneside Irish were the only ones withdrawn due to the extent of their losses. 



The Tyneside Memorial at La Boisselle commemorating the men of the Tyneside Scottish and Tyneside Irish was unveiled on the 20th April 1922 by Marshall Foch, the Supreme Allied Commander in the Western Front during World War One. Representatives of the Tyneside Scottish and Tyneside Irish together with civic dignitaries from the  North East were in attendance.

Marshall Foch unveils Tyneside Memorial

Civic  / TS / TI Representatives

Tyneside Memorial 1922


The Tyneside Memorial has a sculptured George and the Dragon panel, representing the Northumberland Fusiliers, in the centre. On the left is a Tyneside Scottish badge and on the right a Tyneside Irish badge .

Tyneside Memorial 2025

Northumberland Fusiliers George and the Dragon

Tyneside Scottish badge

Tyneside Irish badge

Tyneside Memorial IJ

Tyneside Memorial
Tyneside Scottish Branch RAA