Canadian Virtual War Memorial
Émile Girard
In memory of:
Private Émile Girard
November 10, 1917
Passchendaele, Belgium
Military Service
120735
20
Army
Canadian Infantry (Quebec Regiment)
22nd Bn.
Additional Information
November 29, 1896
Montréal (St-Henri), Quebec
September 7, 1915
Montréal, Quebec
Baptized Joseph-Émile-Rosario Girard. Son of Philéas Girard and Amanda Richard, of Montréal, Québec. He stated being born in 1897 when he enlisted. He was wounded from shrapnel the year before in Courcelette and had been evacuated for almost one year in England.
Commemorated on Page 244 of the First World War Book of Remembrance. Request a copy of this page. Download high resolution copy of this page.
Burial Information
TYNE COT CEMETERY
Belgium
I. C. 27.
Tyne Cot Cemetery is located 9 Km north east of Ieper town centre on the Tynecotstraat, a road leading from the Zonnebeekseweg (N332). The cemetery itself lies 700 meters along the Tynecotstraat on the right hand side of the road. Tyne Cot or Tyne Cottage was the name given by the Northumberland Fusiliers to a barn which stood near the level crossing on the Passchendaele-Broodseinde road. Three of these blockhouses still stand in the cemetery; the largest, which was captured on 4 October 1917 by the 3rd Australian Division, was chosen as the site for the Cross of Sacrifice by King George V during his pilgrimage to the cemeteries of the Western Front in Belgium and France in 1922. The Tyne Cot Cemetery is now the resting-place of nearly 12,000 soldiers of the Commonwealth Forces, the largest number of burials of any Commonwealth cemetery of either world war.
Information courtesy of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
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