Mont Saint-Quentin Australian war memorial
Mont Saint-Quentin Australian war memorial, located in Mont Saint-Quentin region of Picardy, is an Australian First World War memorial.
Australian Memorial Park | |
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Australia | |
The original sculpture by Web Gilbert at the memorial at Mont St Quentin in France, following its unveiling on 30 August 1925. The sculpture was destroyed by members of the German military in 1940. | |
For Australian 2nd Division | |
Unveiled | 1925 (replacement sculpture, 1971) |
Location | 49°56′50″N 2°55′57″E FRANCE |
The Australian Second Division has a war memorial on the road from Bapaume to Péronne. It is the only one of the five Australian division memorials initiated by members of the division. The base was erected in 1925. It has bronze bas-reliefs by May Butler-George of men hauling and pushing a gun and of men advancing with bayoneted rifles and hand-grenades. It had on its top an Australian soldier thrusting his bayonet through a German eagle. The sculptor was Charles Web Gilbert.[1]
However, in 1940, German soldiers smashed the memorial. A replacement statue by Stanley Hammond of a thoughtful Australian soldier looking down was erected in 1971.[1]
See also
- List of Australian military memorials
- V.C. Corner Australian Cemetery and Memorial
- Villers–Bretonneux Australian National Memorial
- Military Memorials of National Significance in Australia
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to War memorial of Péronne-Mont-Saint-Quentin. |
- "Mont St Quentin, 2nd Australian Division Memorial". Australians on the Western Front 1914-1918. Australian Department of Veterans' Affairs. 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
External links
- History of the memorial (Australians on the Western Front) - includes a photograph of the current memorial