Travelling along the Australian Remembrance Trail is a popular way of making a commemorative visit to the Western Front. Plan your journey well because there are many important battlefields and memorial sites to cover.
Between 1916 and 1918, some 295,000 Australians served on the Western Front. Over 46,000 died, and 134,000 were wounded or captured during this time.
The Australian Remembrance Trail links the most important sites for Australians along the Western Front. It includes battlefields, cemeteries, memorials and museums.
The trail is 250 km long, with northern, southern and central regions. Depending on how much time you have, plan which sites you'd like to visit. Our booklet, A Traveller's Guide, contains extra details to help plan your trip.
Starting your tour from the Sir John Monash Centre at Villers-Bretonneux is ideal. It's an Australian Government museum operated by DVA at Fouilloy, in the Somme department of France.
We've suggested a route in Google Maps that you can share to your phone. There's a self-guided audio tour at each major stop that you can download or listen to online.
Stop 1 – Australian National Memorial at Villers-Bretonneux
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Australian National Memorial.
Significance for Australians
The Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux was an important action. It marked the limit of the German advance towards Amiens on this part of the Somme. Just over 3 months later, the British launched their part of a major Allied offensive north of Villers-Bretonneux. Known as the Battle of Amiens, this engagement marked the beginning of an Allied advance that ultimately resulted in the end of the fighting on the Western Front.
Annual commemorative events take place at the Australian National Memorial. Over 10,700 Australians were killed in France and Belgium during the war with no known grave. The names of those listed as missing in France are etched on the memorial walls.
Nearby is the Adelaide Cemetery, from where the body of the unknown soldier was exhumed.
The town of Villers-Bretonneux has several symbols of its links with Australia. This includes the Victoria School, rebuilt with funds donated by children in Victoria, Australia.
Sites to visit in this area
- Adelaide Cemetery, Villers-Bretonneux
- Australian National Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux
- École Victoria, Villers-Bretonneux
- Musée Franco-Australien, Villers-Bretonneux
- Underground caves, , Naours
- Vignacourt British Cemetery
- Thuillier farmhouse, Vignacourt
The first Australian soldiers arrived in France in July 1916. They left their mark with graffiti in the tunnels of Naours. Thousands of soldiers wrote their names in pencil here. So far, 731 names have been identified as Australian.
The small town of Vignacourt was a temporary refuge for Australian soldiers. It was close to the battlefields but far from German artillery. Many of the men had their photos taken at the Thuillier house. In 2011, the negatives became public and are now on show in this farmhouse.
Stop 2 – Australian Corps Memorial at Le Hamel
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Australian Corps Memorial.
Significance for Australians
Australian general Sir John Monash made history at Le Hamel. His famous planning and preparation resulted in a brief and very successful action in the Battle of Hamel 4 July 1918.
The Australian Corps Memorial is at the site of the former German command post.
You can read more about this battle in our book, 1918—Villers-Bretonneux to Le Hamel.
Australian troops also played a role in stopping a major German advance at the First Battle of Dernancourt in March 1918. The town's links with Australia are evident in the street 'Rue d'Australie' and the school hall, 'Pavillon Adelaide'.
Sites to visit in this area
- Australian Corps Memorial Park, Le Hamel
- 3rd Australian Division Memorial, Sailly-le-Sec
- Australian memorial places, Dernacourt (Pavilon Adélaïde, Rue d'Australie)
Stop 3 – Second Australian Division Memorial at Mont St Quentin
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Second Australian Division Memorial.
Significance for Australians
Between 31 August and 2 September 1918, 3 divisions of the Australian Corps attacked and captured the German stronghold at Mont St Quentin. Of about 17,000 Australians involved, some 3,000 were either killed or wounded.
You can read more about this battle in our book, 1918—Amiens to Hindenburg Line.
Péronne was held by the Germans from 1914. It was devastated by Allied shelling. The Grande Guerre Museum at Péronne features 70,000 artefacts from all sides.
Nearby is the hamlet of Bellenglise and the Fourth Division Memorial. Some 1,200 Australians died in an action here just 7 weeks before the Armistice.
Sites to visit in this area
- Second Australian Division Memorial, avenue des Australiens, Mont St-Quentin
- L'Historial de la Grande Guerre Museum, Péronne
- Fourth Australian Division Memorial, Bellenglise
Stop 4 – Old Windmill at Pozières
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the old Pozières windmill.
Significance for Australians
More Australians died here than on any other battlefield in France. Australians entered the Battle of the Somme on 23 July 1916 at Pozières. By the time they arrived, the village had been obliterated. It was the first experience of war for many of the soldiers.
The Windmill represents the place where most Australians died.
We are lousy, stinking, ragged, unshaven, sleepless. Even when we're back a bit we can't sleep from our own guns. I have one puttee, a dead man’s helmet, another dead man’s gas protector, a dead man’s bayonet. My tunic is rotten with other men’s blood and partly splattered with a comrade’s brains ... Courage does not count here. It is all nerve. Once that goes, one becomes a gibbering maniac.
[From a letter by Second Lieutenant John Alexander Raws, who was killed in action near Pozières on 23 August 1916]
Learn more about:
You can read more about this battle in our book, 1916—Fromelles and the Somme.
Sites to visit in this area
- First Australian Division Memorial (the Windmill)
- Tank Corps Memorial (where tank warfare began on 15 September 1916).
Stop 5 – Thiepval Anglo-French Cemetery
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Thiepval Anglo-French Cemetery.
Significance for Australians
The British Memorial to the Missing is the largest Commonwealth War Memorial in the world. It accommodates the 72,243 names of the British and Empire soldiers who were missing after the 1916 Battle of the Somme.
Ten Australians, six of them unknown, are buried in this cemetery.
Symbolically, 300 British and Empire soldiers and 300 French soldiers were buried side-by-side to mark the wartime alliance.
You can read more about this battle in our book, 1916—Fromelles and the Somme.
Sites to visit in this area
Stop 6 – Australian Memorial Park and the 'Digger' at Bullecourt
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Bullecourt Digger
Significance for Australians
During the Battle of Arras 9 April to 16 May 1917, Australians served in the flanking operations:
- First Battle of Bullecourt 10 to 11 April 1917
- German Attack on Lagnicourt 9 April to 16 May 1917
- Second Battle of Bullecourt 3 to 17 May 1917.
You can read more about these battles in our book, 1917—Bapaume and Bullecourt.
Sites to visit in this area
- ‘Digger’ sculpture in the Australian Memorial Park at Bullecourt
- Musée Jean et Denise Letaille - Bullecourt 1917
- Queant Road Cemetery, Buissy
- CWGC Visitor Centre, Beaurains (a behind-the-scenes look at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission teams who care for the fallen)
Stop 7 – V.C. Corner Australian Cemetery at Fromelles
Follow our self-guided audio tour of V.C. Corner Australian Cemetery and Memorial
V.C. Corner is one of only 2 Australian-only burial grounds on the Western Front. The other one is Toronto Avenue Cemetery at Stop 8.
Significance for Australians
The Battle of Fromelles 19 to 20 July 1916 was the first major attack by Australian troops on the Western Front. Australian and British divisions attacked a strong point known as the Sugarloaf. Tragically, Australian casualties numbered 5,500 in a night.
The Australian Memorial Park on the old German front line features 'Cobbers', the bronze sculpture of an Australian soldier carrying a wounded mate from the battlefield.
Sites to visit in this area
- Musée de la Bataille de Fromelles
- Fromelles (Pheasant Wood) Military Cemetery
- VC Corner Australian Cemetery and Memorial, Fromelles
- 'Cobbers' sculpture in the Australian Memorial Park
Stop 8 – Toronto Avenue Cemetery south of Ieper
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Toronto Avenue Cemetery.
Toronto Avenue Cemetery is one of only 2 Australian-only burial grounds on the Western Front. The other one is V.C. Corner at Stop 7.
Significance for Australians
Ploegsteert Wood was the site of fierce fighting between the Allies and the Germans early in 1914 and 1915, before the Australians arrived on the Western Front. The Allies called the area ‘Plugstreet’.
Later on, Australians fought in the Battle of Messines 7 to 14 June 1917. At that time, the Allies tried to take enemy defences from Ploegsteert Wood through Messines and Wytschaete to Mont Sorrel.
You can read more about this battle in our book, 1917—Ypres.
Sites to visit in this area
Stop 9 – the Cloth Hall at Ieper
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Cloth Hall at Ieper.
The Belgian place most damaged by the war was Ieper (Ypres). The Cloth Hall and the town itself were almost completely ruined by 1918. The Cloth Hall was reconstructed between 1933 and 1967.
The headquarters of Australian General Sir John Monash was in the ramparts of the Menin Gate. As a symbol of remembrance, the Last Post ceremony is performed at the Menin Gate every night.
Significance for Australians
In the Third Battle of Ypres from 31 July to 10 November 1917, Australians served in:
- Battle of the Menin Road 20 to 26 September 1917
- Battle of Broodseinde 4 October 1917
- Battle of Poelcappelle 9 October 1917
- Battle of Passchendaele 12 October 1917.
You can read more about these battles in our book, 1917—Ypres.
Sites to visit in this area
- Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial
- In Flanders Fields museum in the Cloth Hall
- Essex Farm Cemetery and canal bank, Boezinge
- Deutscher Soldatenfreidhof (mass grave of over 25,644 German soldiers), Vladslo.
Stop 10 – Tyne Cot Cemetery north of Ieper
Follow our self-guided audio tour of the Tyne Cot Cemetery.
Tyne Cot Cemetery is the largest Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery in the world, with over 11,900 war graves. Sadly, 791 of the 1,369 Australian soldiers buried here are unknown.
Significance for Australians
Tyne Cot is a former battlefield and a cemetery.
Heavy rain in 1917 had turned the Flanders' battlefields into a morass. By August, men and horses drowned in the mud.
Conditions improved during the Passchendaele campaign, also known as the Third Battle of Ypres 31 July to 10 November 1917. The 4 Anzac divisions fought together in a line for the first time at:
- Battle of the Menin Road 20 to 26 September 1917
- Battle of Broodseinde 4 October 1917
- Battle of Poelcappelle 9 October 1917
- Battle of Passchendaele 12 October 1917.
However, the campaign was costly. Nearly 6,500 of the 15,000 British casualties were Australian soldiers.
You can read more about these battles in our book, 1917—Ypres.
Sites to visit in this area
- Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917
- Passchendaele Memorial Garden
- Tyne Cot Cemetery
- Tyne Cot Memorial
- Polygon Wood Cemetery
- Fifth Australian Division Memorial, Polygon Wood
- Buttes New British Cemetery
Sir John Monash Centre
Location: Route de Villers Bretonneux, 80800 Fouilloy, Somme, France.
Email: info@sjmc.gov.au
Phone: +33 3 60 62 01 40
Plan your visit - entry is free.