Canadian Virtual War Memorial
Simeon Billard
In memory of:
Seaman Simeon Billard
December 10, 1917
Military Service
22
Merchant Navy
Newfoundland Mercantile Marine
Schooner LIZZIE M. STANLEY (Canada)
Additional Information
December 17, 1894
Burgeo, Newfoundland and Labrador
Son of William Billard and Catherine Parthena Spencer. Husband of Emily Blanche Thomas, of Rose Blanche, Newfoundland. Father of Simeon Matthew Billard.
This two-masted, wooden-hulled schooner left St-Pierre-Miquelon for Catalina, New Zealand, on December 10, 1917, and was reported missing. She and the six sailors on board were never heard from again. The date of death for these men, all from Burgeo, Newfoundland, was the date of her departure.
Commemorated on Page 12 of the Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance. Request a copy of this page. Download high resolution copy of this page.
Burial Information
BEAUMONT-HAMEL (NEWFOUNDLAND) MEMORIAL
Somme, France
N/A
The largest of the battlefield parks established in memory of Newfoundlanders who fell in the First World War is Beaumont Hamel, nine kilometres directly north of the town of Albert. In BEAUMONT HAMEL MEMORIAL PARK, which was officially opened by Earl Haig on June 7, 1925, the monument of the great bronze caribou, emblem of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, stands on the highest point overlooking St John's Road and the slopes beyond. At the base of the statue three tablets of bronze carry the names of over 800 members of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, the Newfoundland Royal Naval Reserve, and the Mercantile Marine who gave their lives in the First World War and have no known grave. In the lodge, which houses the reception room for visitors to the Park, a bronze plaque, unveiled in 1961 by the Hon. Joseph Smallwood, Premier of Newfoundland, lists the Battle Honours won by the Royal Newfoundland Regiment and pays tribute to its fallen. The park is one of the few in France or Belgium where the visitor can see a Great War battlefield much as it was. The actual trenches are still there and something of the terrible problem of advancing over such country can be appreciated by the visitor. On the first day of the Battle of the Somme, no unit suffered heavier losses than the Newfoundland Regiment, which had gone into action 801 strong. When the roll call of the unwounded was taken next day, only 68 answered their names. The final figures that revealed the virtual annihilation of the Battalion gave a grim count of 233 killed or dead of wounds, 386 wounded, and 91 missing. Every officer who went forward in the Newfoundland attack was either killed or wounded.
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