French Ardennes a focal point of Great War 100 th commemorations

Similar documents
Location: Mametz Wood in France Locations are given in latitude and longitude.

This year marks the centenary of the end of the First World War which ended on 11 November 1918.

In Memory of Sapper EDWARD PENNINGTON , 105th Field Coy., Royal Engineers. who died on 27 May Remembered with honour ARRAS MEMORIAL

1st battle of the marne By: Jacob

Images: ThinkStock

TOMB OF THE UNKNOWN WARRIOR

The Alliance System. Pre-WWI. During WWI ENTENTE ALLIANCE. Russia Serbia France. Austria-Hungary Germany. US Canada. Italy CENTRAL POWERS

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

WWI road trip - Day 01

The Battle of Quebec: 1759

IST battlefields exhibition 2010

MEMORANDUM. FROM: Debra Anderson, Quartermaster General. DATE: October 12, RE: Trip Report WWI Trip to France, September 21 24, 2018

D-Day. June 6th, 1944

2009 runner-up Northern Territory. Samuel van den Nieuwenhof Darwin High School

EMU PARK SOLDIERS OF WORLD WAR I THE GREAT WAR. FROM EMU PARK and SHIRE OF LIVINGSTONE

9/26/2018. Italy Enters the War. Declares War on Austria- Hungary. 23 May 1915

Witness. John Travers, Detective Branch, Garda Siochana, Dublin Castle. and four others. Identity. Subject. Nil

Private Joseph Wellington Evans (Regimental Number 181) is buried in Hawthorn Ridge Cemetery Number 1, Auchonvillers Grave reference B. 47.

Text 3: The Battles of Lexington and Concord. Topic 3: The Revolutionary Era Lesson 3: Taking Up Arms

9/28/2015. The Gallipoli Campaign (Dardanelles Campaign) Including the Armenian Genocide. February December 1915

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

The Lafayette Escadrille

McCrae s Battalion Trust 101 st Anniversary Pilgrimage Contalmaison 2015

Canada s Defining Moment: Battle of Stoney Creek

Australians on the Western Front: A special display commemorating Australians in France and Belgium in the First World War

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. World War I on Many Fronts

A New Kind of War. Chapter 11 Section 2

11/6/2018. The Battle of the Somme. 1 July Darkest Day in the History of the British Army. 1 July 18 November 1916

Section 2. Objectives

ANZAC DAY ON THE SOMME

Bedford House Cemetery

The Battle of Gallipoli was fought from April to December, 1915.

Private Reginald John Paul (Regimental Number 731) is interred in Hawthorn Ridge Cemetery No. 2, Auchonvillers Grave reference A. 8.

20 June May Born in Kingston (Texas) Died at the Brush Mountain - plane crash Buried at the Arlington National Cemetery

ANZAC Day on the Somme

Stories from Maritime America

Story told by Kevin Bruce Piccione. (See also his own war service history presented on this website.)

Battlefield and Remembrance Tour

22910 Corporal William York Amer

Remarkable Sights of Carcassonne

ANZAC Centenary and ANZAC Day

Major Battles During WWII Events that Changed the Course of the War

HINXHILL. The Great War

-2- The 34th moved up and the First Special Service troops pulled back to our position. I then moved out T.D.'s up to a position about one hundred yar

History of the Mexican Revolution

GALLIPOLI THE WICKHAM CONNECTION

The Tower of London. Did you know?

TOP FUNDRAISING TIPS ON THE RIDE

GREAT WAR ( ): THE WESTERN FRONT: FIRST BATTLE OF THE MARNE 1914

New Haven and the 1779 Invasion

Background. The Allies were stuck in a stalemate in WW1 with the Central powers and were looking for different strategies

The North African Campaign. War in the Desert Expands 12 July May 1943

3/29/2017. The North African Campaign. War in the Desert Expands 12 July May The Battle of El Alamein. Torch.

War Begins. p

Remembrance Day on the Western Front

The combat stories of Peter Likanchuk

MNEMOSIS by Philippe Bréson

Paul-Henri CORTEYS. Grenoble, 21 April 1867 Wancourt, 2 October 1914

WILLIAM RANDOLPH EPPES SABINE

The Great War

The Teams and Their Plans

The Glory of Ancient Greece

Elio Di Rupo, State Minister and Mayor of the city of Mons

Why did this building inspire Victorians to pay for and build it in ?

JAMES WATT

Attractions. All In The Memorial The Memorial

THE HISTORIC CROOKED BILLET MONUMENT

150 th Commemorative Ceremony

The combat stories of Joseph Rotundo

THE BLOCK HOUSE. A time where yesterday is not necessarily the day before today: but a past that no longer exists.

Document #1 The Construction of the Suez Canal. Document #2 The Suez Canal: ABC-CLIO

The End of WWII & The Dropping of the Atomic Bombs

75TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE D-DAY INVASION

PRESENTS THE YSER FRONTLINE & YPRES SALIENT TOUR

PASSIVE VOICE. Sightseeings of London

Burgos lies on the main highway from France to

Packet B: Submarine Technology

Hannibal crosses the Alps

Battle of the Frontiers

ARMY MUSEUM OF TASMANIA. Collection Guide AMT 5. Major Augustus Oliver Woods Collection. ARMY MUSEUM OF TASMANIA COLLECTION GUIDE AMT 5 1 of 6

The Guernsey Quarrymen

The Broad Street Park Quest

William O'Shaughnessy. Irish Chief and Major-General of France

70 th Anniversary of D-Day 6 th June 2014

Where and When 35 Squadron was Formed As I Remember By Alfred Boyd N 45542, RAAF, 1941 to 1948.

Bell Ringer Which was NOT an area of discontent (being unhappy) in the Georgia Colony?

Trentham Military Camp

Legacy and the Gallipoli Lone Pine

T H E F A L L E N O F S U T T O N - I N - C R A V E N P E R C Y S T E L L D U K E O F W E L L I N G T O N R E G I M E N T

The Cuban Revolution A short overview

Part 5 War between France and Great Britain

Part 5 War between France and Great Britain

SHARED HISTORIES - Young Ambassadors

Canadian Famtrip in Northern France September 2015

3861 PRIVATE C. A. JENNINGS 32ND BN. AUSTRALIAN INF. 22ND MARCH,

5 places you need to visit in Europe

MESSAGE FROM JEAN-YVES de TROGOFF of FRANCE. June 19, 2010

ANZAC DAY ON THE WESTERN FRONT


ANZAC Memorial Hyde Park June 2013

Transcription:

French Ardennes a focal point of Great War 100 th commemorations President Macron will lead the tributes to the last French soldier killed during The Great War, as the world prepares to fall silent in November to commemorate the 100 th anniversary of the end of the conflict. The President has confirmed that he will pay his respects to Augustin Trébuchon and others who fell on the field of combat, in the week leadingup to the official November 11 commemorations. His visit to the tiny village of Vrigne-Meuse, where Trebuchon died just minutes before the conclusion of hostilities, will help amplify the belief that The French Ardennes has more reason than most areas of France for marking the centenary of the end of WWI. Four years of commemorations across the nation will draw to a close at 11.00 on November 11, 2018. And, for France, it is The French Ardennes that will be providing the full stop, at the end of the final sentence, in the last chapter of the history of the conflict. It was here the last official French victim of The Great War, Augustin Joseph Trébuchon, fell - just fifteen minutes before the ceasefire. Trébuchon is buried in the cemetery of Vrigne-Meuse, an Ardennes village of 220 inhabitants, where visitors today will find a church with 18 white crosses surrounding a memorial, in honour of the men of the 415th Infantry Regiment who all died on November 11 1918 during the last offensive while attempting to cross the River Meuse. The unveiling of a new memorial in honour of Trébuchon is just one of the events planned for November 11, 2018, in The French Ardennes. Leading politicians have been invited to attend a special ceremony - with Trébuchon set to become a symbol of tragedy of the First World War. Unable to be in Vrigne-Meuse that day, it is currently believed that The President will be represent by Geneviève Darrieussecq, Secretary of State for the Ministry of the Armed Forces. The new sculpture commemorating Trébuchon will be unveiled close to where he fell. It has been hewn from the famous blue stone found near to another French Ardennes town, Givet. It will depict Marianne, a national symbol of the French Republic - a personification of liberty and reason, and a portrayal of the Goddess of Liberty - holding Trebuchon. A new memorial trail has already been launched - one that can be followed by boat, bicycle, and on foot. And, at a what promises to be a fitting tribute at Vrigne-Meuse on November 11, there are plans in place to stage a flypast of planes from both the French and German airforces.

All tourist information about The French Ardennes can be found at http://gb.ardennes.com. [The full story of Augustin Trébuchon follows below]. For press information, contact: Djamila Daoud T: +33 3 24 56 67 77 E: daoud@ardennes.com THE FRENCH ARDENNES 2018 MEDIA PACK: Copies of a 2018 Media Pack are now available free-of-charge to all UK travel editors, writers and bloggers at: http://fr.calameo.com/read/00002300703993b6ae27b?authid=u2kfqkmt6hot Editor s Notes The story of Augustin Trébuchon has been recalled every year, for 99 years, in the tiny French Ardennes village of Vrigne-Meuse. At 11 o clock on November 11, 2018, he will not only be remembered, but will also become the symbol of the tragedy of the First World War. Partly, because he was involved in an offensive on November 11, 1918, which resulted in him being hit in the head by a German bullet. But mostly, because he was the last French soldier to be officially killed in action during the four-year conflict - falling less than fifteen minutes before his friend and solider-in-arms Octave Delalucque had the honour of sounding his bugle in The French Ardennes to mark the end of hostilities. Trébuchon arrived in The French Ardennes, together with the 700 men in his regiment, on November 8, 1918. At this stage of the war, the Germans were in a slow retreat following their failed August offensive, but were still doggedly defending their positions from the French. Fifteen minutes before the ceasefire scheduled for the 11 th hour on the 11 th month, Trébuchon - as liaison to the 415th RI - ran to the front edge of the River Meuse at Charles Wood, with a message in his hand which read "Rassemblement à 11h 30 pour le ravitaillement ("Muster at 11.30 for food ). He died before he was able to deliver it. Augustin Joseph Louis Victorin Trébuchon was born on May 30, 1878, in Malzieu-Forain Lozère, in France. He was the eldest son in a family of six children, whose parents were 35-years-old farmer Jean-Baptiste Trébuchon and Rosalie a 32-years-old housewife. Before the outbreak of the war, Augustin was a "pastre" (a communal shepherd) in Saint-Privat-du-Fau. Often seen with his trusty accordion, he also hosted the popular dances of the region He became the breadwinner for the family when both of his parents died and - as such - was eligible to be exempted from army service. He nevertheless enlisted on August 4, 1914, and went on to fight in Marne, Verdun, Artois and The Somme. Wounded twice, he became a Private First Class, and received a citation on October 23, 1917 as: "A good soldier who always accomplished his duty, and was wounded twice during the campaign. He then received the Order of the 73rd Brigade for being: "A soldier of remarkable calm - giving his young comrades the best example of a brilliant attitude in fighting between July 15 and 18, 1918".

Unmarried, he was courting the daughter of Liconesse Hortense Brown, and returned home on leave in 1917, saying that he was not keen to return to the front. On November 10, 1918, rain was falling, the River Meuse was flooding, and the temperature was well below freezing. The bridges across the river had already been destroyed, so French sappers worked by night and in fog to build a plank footbridge across a lock. There had been no reconnaissance of the other bank because bad weather had kept the spotter plane on the ground. At 08.00 on November 11, around 700 French soldiers started to advance. Some of the first deaths were caused by drowning. The fog cleared at 10.30 and the French could now see the Germans in position a few hundred metres away. The French were spread over three kilometres between the River Meuse and a railway line. While the French now sent-up a spotter plane so that artillery on the other bank could open fire without fear of killing their own soldiers, the Germans opened fire with their machine guns. Trébuchon s death was recorded as being "with a red hole in his right side". Probably a figure of speech, it was also an amazing twist of fate, given that one of the most famous of all French poets, Arthur Rimbaud (who was himself born in The French Ardennes) had written that line in one of his best-known poems Le Dormeur du Val (The Sleeper in the Valley). The poem describes what the reader first believes is a soldier sleeping peacefully in a small green valley where a slow stream runs but who later turns out to be: At peace. In his side there are two red holes. Officially, the last of the 91 French soldiers to die on November 11, 1918, Trébuchon s war grave in the village of Vrigne-Meuse in The French Ardennes, however, still records (incorrectly) that he was killed on November 10, 1918. Optimists believe the reason for this discrepancy in the date of his death was because that - by stating that these men had died well before the end of the war - their families would be guaranteed a war pension. Realists, however, believe that the government wanted to avoid any political scandal if it ever became known that so many soldiers had died so pointlessly on the last day of the conflict. Officially, there were no French casualties on the last day of the war. If you visit the churchyard you will find that Augustin Trébuchon and his comrades are all still recorded as having been killed the day before. As a result, the soldiers in this battle, including Trébuchon, were largely forgotten beyond the boundaries of Vrigne-Meuse after the end of the war; and it wasn t until 82 years later, in 2000, that events of that day were begun to be seen in a different light. Alain Fauveau sets the record straight in his book Le vagabond de la Grande Guerre, souvenirs de la guerre 1914-1918, where he describes it as la bataille de trop (a useless battle). The tiny village of Vrigne-Meuse, meanwhile, honoured the last official French soldier to fall in the First World War on November 11, 2008, with the inauguration of Rue Augustin Trébuchon. The French Ministry of Defence duly corrected the place of death. But it has yet to correct the date on Augustin Trébuchon s death certificate, or gravestone, even though it is now known that he died so close to the ceasefire, on November 11. Today, Vrigne-Meuse - situated between Charleville-Mézières and Sedan on the banks of the Meuse river - can be reached from A34 Autoroute at

Sortie 6 (Exit 6), and by then following the D105 south towards the village. On entering the village, there is a right turn onto the Chemin de Mézières when the road starts to climb uphill to what was known as the Signal de l Epine Cote 249 (Hill 249). Here, a stark monument marks the last battle fought by the French Army on the last day of the war. It pays homage to the entire Division - despite the fact that most of the heavy fighting was carried out by the one regiment: 415e RI, after whom the main street in the village is named. The upper part of the column reads: À la 163e Division et à ses glorieux morts ( To the 163rd Division and its glorious dead ). It is followed by a quote from Jean Cocteau: Le vrai tombeau des morts c est le coeur des vivants ( The real tomb of the dead is in the hearts of the living ). Another reason why Augustin Trébuchon never become a household name in the UK, of course, may be due to the fact that he was a Frenchman and that here, in Britain, we re much more likely to know the name George Edwin Ellison (the last British soldier to be killed during the First World War). Henry Nicholas John Gunther isn t world-famous either. Yet. But chances are that we ll all hear his name in 2018. Finding himself stationed in the Argonne region of France on November 11 th 1918, US soldier Henry Gunther was involved in a final charge against German troops who had been told that the Armistice would take place at 11.00. The Baltimore Private - ironically of German descent - was shot at 10.59 and is now recognised as the last soldier to be killed in action in the First World War. Posthumously restored to rank of Sergeant, awarded a Distinguished Service Cross and a Divisional Citation for Gallantry in Action, and remembered with a memorial constructed near the place where he died, Gunther was one of 11,000 casualties on that final, fateful day of the war. This is all recalled in a book written by Roger Faindt: 10h59: Henry Gunther, le dernier soldat americain mort en 1918. Trébuchon s turn to finally becomes a symbol of the First World War will also occur in 2018 - not only in France, but also much further afield. Standing close to the Belgian border, where the Germans invaded France at the start of the conflict, the entire region was occupied for much of the war, with the local population suffering badly from imprisonments, severe food shortages and deportations. French soldiers hid themselves deep within the forests and, despite the fear of reprisals, were often helped by the local Ardennes population. The German HQ in France was located in Charléville, within The French Ardennes, and their army staged a rearguard action in the villages and countryside nearby as the end of the war drew close. Trebuchon s story, according to some locals, has hung over The French Ardennes ever since his untimely death. Commemorative events have always been held in the village to honour him and his colleagues but, nationally, this battle was largely overlooked. A friend of Trebuchon from the World War One trenches, Marcel G. Chambaz, would always arrive in town a night or two before November 11 and re-tell the story: a tradition that continued right up to his own death in in 1985. In 1968, the locals commemorated the 50 th anniversary of the battle and, incredibly, 50,000 people attended. No-one really knows for sure whether the generals passed an order for this final battle, or whether it was made as a suggestion that a battle could take

place at Vrigne-Meuse to help ensure the Germans adhered to the ceasefire on November 11. But as word passed down the chain of command line of command it did, indeed, become an order. And in the battle which ensued, Trebuchon became the last French solider to be killed in action in a war that had lasted four long years, Plans are now well under way to commemorate the 100 th anniversary on a grand scale, with Trebuchon at its heart. After four years of commemorative events throughout France to mark the impact of the First World War on a nation, this promised to be the full stop at the end of the final sentence, in the last chapter of the story of WWI. A new sculpture commemorating the last French solider to be killed in action during The Great War will be unveiled close to where he fell. This has been hewn from the famous blue stone found near to another French Ardennes town, Givet. It will depict Marianne, a national symbol of the French Republic - a personification of liberty and reason, and a portrayal of the Goddess of Liberty - holding the head of Trebuchon. A new memorial trail will also be launched one that can be followed by boat, bicycle, and on foot. Stamps, bottles of champagne and beer will also feature Trebuchon s image during 2018. And at a what promises to be a very grand ceremony at Vrigne-Meuse on November 11, 2018, there are plans in place to stage a fly-past of planes from both the French and German airforces. Invitations are also being sent to leading officials and politicians, to attend.