Designed by the English architect
Sir Edwin Lutyens and administered by the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the Bancourt British Cemetery is located off the D7 road, to the east of Bancourt. The entrance is along the south wall. A
Cross of Sacrifice is positioned at the northern end of the cemetery while a
Stone of Remembrance is located close to the entry. Bancourt's communal cemetery is on the opposite side of the road. The cemetery contains the remains of 2,480 soldiers, 1,462 of them unidentified. The majority of the identified burials are those from the United Kingdom but 171 soldiers of the
New Zealand Expeditionary Force are also buried at Bancourt alongside 161 soldiers of the
Australian Imperial Force. Eleven Canadian soldiers are identified as being interred at the cemetery. There is also a special memorial to 43 soldiers believed to be among the unidentified burials as well as to a soldier's grave in a German military cemetery which was unable to be located during the consolidation phase. These can be found along the northern wall, behind the Cross of Sacrifice. A notable burial at Bancourt is Sergeant
David Jones, a Victoria Cross recipient who was killed in action on 7 October 1916. ==Notes==