The Gueudecourt Memorial is one of six erected in Europe by the Newfoundland government following the First World War. Four were erected in France at
Beaumont-Hamel, Gueudecourt,
Masnières and
Monchy-le-Preux, another is in
Courtrai/Kortrijk in Belgium and a sixth in Turkey at
Gallipoli. A seventh memorial is situated in
Bowring Park in
St. John's, Newfoundland,
Canada and was a gift from Major William Howe Greene, OBE, who served with the Newfoundlanders during the war. All of the memorials are centrally identical, featuring the emblem of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, a
caribou, cast in bronze, as designed by British sculptor Basil Gotto. Standing atop a cairn of Newfoundland granite, the caribou faces and calls out in the direction the Newfoundlanders faced toward the enemy during the battle. The cairn is also surrounded by native Newfoundland plants. The Gueudecourt Memorial is situated on the south-east side the D574 road, about north-east of its namesake village. The memorial site is on ground seized by Newfoundland troops on 12 October 1916 and marks the farthest point of advance by British units from the July 1st front lines during the
Battle of the Somme. Clearly visible behind the caribou as seen from the memorial entrance, is a preserved trench line that was part of the British front line of 17 November 1916, the final day of the British offensive at the Somme. ==Notes==