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Tag: 87th Battalion

Canadian Grenadier Guards

87th Battalion (Canadian Grenadier Guards) organized in September 1915 under the command of Colonel F. S. Meighen 22 November 1915. Mobilized at Montreal. Recruited in Gaspé, Eastern Townships, Pembroke, Dundas County and the mining districts of Ontario and Quebec. Embarked from Halifax 25 April 1916 aboard EMPRESS OF BRITAIN. Disembarked England 5 May 1916. With a strength of 36 officers, 1026 other ranks. Arrived in France 11 August 1916. 4th Canadian Division, 11th Canadian Infantry Brigade. Reinforced by 22nd Canadian Reserve Battalion and, after 8 May 1917, by 23rd Canadian Reserve Battalion.

4th Canadian Division

MIKAN No. 3395022
Gen. D. Watson who unveiled this Memorial reading the names of the fallen. September, 1917. This appears to be a service at a soldier’s plot for the 87th Canadian Infantry Battalion, showing an early memorial. Note the listing of soldier’s names on the near side of the memorial, who died of wounds during the Vimy Ridge operations of April, 1917. Maj. Gen. David Watson was the officer commanding the 4th Canadian Division, which the 87th Battalion was a unit of. MIKAN No. 3395022

Returned to England 3 May 1919. Disembarked in Canada 6 June 1919. Demobilized 8 June 1919. Disbanded by General Order 149 of 15 September 1920. Colours deposited in Canterbury Cathedral.
Brass and bugle bands. Published a photographic record, 1916. Perpetuated by The Canadian Grenadier Guards.

  • Private Arthur William Coppen in the Great War

    Private Arthur William Coppen in the Great War

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar

    Unfortunately, CVWM does not record the second award of the Military Medal to Private Arthur William Coppen, 87th Battalion, CEF. Arthur was married to Annie Coppen of 1 Henry Street, Woodstock, Ontario (later 96 Delatre St, Woodstock). The location of the former residence, a vacant lot, recently sold for $2.5M.

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar

    Pvt Arthur Coppen 127317 enlisted at Woodstock, Ontario with the 71st Battalion (a recruitment battalion).
    The 71st organized in August 1915 under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel D. M. Sutherland. Mobilized at Woodstock and recruited in Woodstock, Stratford and Galt. Draft of 5 officers and 248 other ranks sent to England on 20 November 1915.

    36th Reserve Battalion

    Arthur arrived in England on 1 December 1915 and immediately attached to 36th Reserve Battalion.

    In April of 1916, Private Arthur William Coppen docked 7 days pay and confined to barracks for destroying government property.

    Westcliff Canadian Eye and Ear Hospital Folkestone, Kent Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    Westcliff Canadian Eye and Ear Hospital Folkestone, Kent

    Otitis Media diagnosed at West Cliff Canadian Eye and Ear Hospital, Folkestone on 12 May 1916.

    X-raying a Patient Shot in the Head No 3 General Hospital
    X-raying a Patient Shot in the Head No 3 General Hospital

    X-rayed at Moore Barracks Canadian Hospital on 28 May 1916 – right frontal sinus smaller and more opaque than left. Discharged to duty on 5 June 1916, just in time to make it over to France with the 60th Battalion (Victoria Rifles).

    60th Battalion

    Transferred to 60th Battalion on 6 June 1916 at West Sandling. A week later, ToS in the field – Arthur arrived in France.

    Lieutenant Ivor Castle
    Observation and Advanced Listening Post 30 yards from the German Lines. Sept. 1916. 60th Battalion. O-714

    Admitted No. 2 CCS on 21 October 1916 at Outreau (myalgia). Admitted No. 7 Convalescent Depot on 25 October 1916, and discharged to duty 5 days later.

    MIKAN No. 3395761
    Operating Room. No. 3 Casualty Clearing Station, 22 June 1616 NO.3 C.C.S. was located at Remy siding at this time. MIKAN No. 3395761

    Medium Trench Mortar Battery

    Arthur On Command with Medium Trench Mortar Battery from 11 November 1916 to 5 December 1916.

    A Trench Mortar being loaded. 1st Army School Clarques. This soldier is loading a bomb (nicknamed “Flying Pig”) into a ML 9.45 inch Heavy Trench Mortar. 3404552

    Military Medal

    Awarded the Military Medal in the field on 31 January 1917. London Gazette No. 29893, dated 6 January 1917.

    Private Albert Hyde
    Motor Ambulance, 2nd Canadian Field Ambulance. June, 1916. MIKAN No. 3395744

    Admitted to No. 3 Rest Station on 5 February 1917. Discharged from No. 9 CFA on 8 February 1917.

    87th Battalion

    Transferred to the 87th Battalion on 24 April 1917 (the Victoria Rifles had disbanded). Admitted to No. 10 CFA (defective vision) on 11 May 1917, rejoining his unit a week later.

    MIKAN No.3395495 Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    87th Bn. enjoying mid-day meal amid mud caused by storms, Douai plain. MIKAN No.3395495

    Arthur granted 10 days leave in August 1917.

    1918

    Pvt Coppen treated for Otis Media again in February 1918, rejoining his unit on the 23rd.

    Patients and nurses in Ward E of No. 32 Stationary Hospital, Wimereux. © IWM (Q 107072)
    Patients and nurses in Ward E of No. 32 Stationary Hospital, Wimereux. © IWM (Q 107072)

    The family somehow under the impression Arthur had become a casualty in January of 1918, however, on 24 February 1918, Arthur in good health and managed to communicate this to family.

    Trouble again with a corneal ulcer in June of 1918, rejoining his unit on 20 July 1918.

    Man identified greeting Haig as Albert Joseph Maingot, courtesy his son Joseph Maingot.
    Man identified greeting Haig as Albert Joseph Maingot, courtesy his son Joseph Maingot. MIKAN NO 3404919

    Private Arthur William Coppen granted 14 days leave to the UK on 28 September 1918.

    Shortly after returning from leave, Private Arthur William Coppen Killed-in-action, 18 October 1918. He would not be with the 87th when they entered Valenciennes on 1 November 1918.

    MIKAN No. 3396936 Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    87th Battalion Band playing outside Hotel de Ville. November, 1918. [Valenciennes, France]. MIKAN No. 3396936

    CoD

    Private Arthur William Coppen’s CoD mentions he was killed by a shell and later buried in Bugnicourt Communal Cemetery.

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    Circumstances of Death (CoD)

    But, as we will soon learn, his burial on another side of town in a cemetery constructed years ago by the German Army.

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    Reference to Bugnicourt Communal Cemetery

    Bugnicourt Communal Cemetery

    The cemetery located at 28 Rue de l’Égalité, 59151 Bugnicourt. However, the GRRF refers to a Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery, likely formerly on the D47 at the north end of town. Truly a lost cemetery, no record, other than the IWGC references, exist for Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery.

    1919

    Bar to Military Medal

    Pvt A Coppen’s Bar to the MM awarded posthumously on 14 April 1919.

    Military Medals and Two Bars
    Military Medals and Two Bars

    1922

    Exhumation

    Arthur’s body remained in Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery for over four years. Unusual it took the IWGC so long considering an obviously known cemetery within city limits. Perhaps, by the time the IWGC arrived in 1919, the German graves had recently ‘disappeared’. Refugees of Bugnicourt may not have been too pleased to find a German Cemetery when they returned in 1919. They would have had plenty of time to erase this presence from their town, as residents of Hallu had in 1919/1920.

    Hallu Cemetery in September 1919 photo by Herbert Hunter
    This cemetery in Hallu, France, photographed by Herbert Hunter in the Fall of 1919. Though the French graves later concentrated, residents had desecrated the German graves, and also Canadian graves.
    Graves of the Winnipeg Grenadiers (78th Battalion) had been made by the German Army, and were written in German, lending the impression to the local residents they were German.

    Lt J R Pitman, Registration Officer, No. 3 Area brought Arthur’s body into Cabaret-Rouge during December 1922, along with:

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    • Lt Alexander Robert Grant MM
    • Pvt Leo Antonio Brossard
    • Pvt Stephen Henry Taylor

    Note GRU teams had no instructions to remove French or German graves while performing their work.

    Bugnicourt – Déblaiement des décombres 1919
    Clearing the rubble)

    The CoD’s of these men should prove interesting. Were they with Arthur at the time of his death? Had they all met the same fate? No need to consult their CoD files as the war diary tells all.

    Quennason Farm

    Note AI gets one thing right about Quennason Farm – this was the location where Lt Grant and three others killed by a shell. Incorrectly: the men belonged to ‘A’ Company of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment.

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    Quennason Farm
    Blue marker – Location of Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery

    GRRF

    The Burial return and GGRF have one discrepancy with regards to the four men of the 87th. Initially Lt Grant identified by a disc (no GRU cross found) as per the Burial Return, but, the GRRF records all four men with a GRU (wooden) cross.

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar

    1925

    By 1925, their official CWGC headstones erected at Cabaret-Rouge.

    GRRF

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar

    CABARET-ROUGE BRITISH CEMETERY, SOUCHEZ

    “Cabaret Rouge” a small, red-bricked, red-tiled café that stood close to this site in the early days of the Great War. The café destroyed by shellfire in March 1915 but it gave its unusual name to this sector, and to a communication trench that later led Canadian troops up the front-line.

    Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar
    Note the CWGC does acknowledge Arthur William Coppen’s Bar to the MM.

    Over 100 local cemeteries concentrated to Cabaret-Rouge in the years following the Armistice. Unfortunately, as customary, CWGC does not record any in their history of Cabaret-Rouge. Only these references can be found.

    • Ablain St. Nazaire Military Cemetery
    • Blairville Orchard British Cemetery
    • Blangy Cross Roads, St. Laurent Blangy
    • Blangy Military Cemetery, near Arras
    • Edward Road No. 2 Cemetery, Richebourg l’Avoue
    • Edward Road No. 4 (Factory Trench) Cemetery, Richebourg l’Avoue
    • Vieille Chapelle Old Military Cemetery

    It was hoped some reference to Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery might be found.

    What Happened to Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery?

    A Cabaret-Rouge burial return refers to Cantin C.C.G. Extension (Old). This was located 2 km north-west of Bugnicourt, in or by Cimetière Communal Cantin. This towards Ferin C.C. German Extension, also known to have a concentration to Cabaret-Rouge. Férin now contains 2,119 German Graves, along with 17 Russian POWs, and 5 executed for war crimes by the German Army.

    Private Arthur William Coppen
    Deutscher Soldatenfriedhof Férin adjacent to the Cimetière communal Férin

    The other closest German cemetery to the south of Bugnicourt, Oisy le Verger German Military Cemetery which no longer exists.

    What Happened to the Germans who were buried at Bugnicourt German Military Cemetery?

    Contact CEFRG

    The post motivated by a comment on FB (Félix 1914-1918 Canadian Railway Troops) from a family member of Private Arthur William Coppen MM & Bar. The descendant under the belief that Arthur had died at Vimy Ridge. I too must admit to being ignorant of my Grandfather’s service, having believed for decades that he had served at Passchendaele. Unfortunately, this notoriously difficult platform to search prevented CEFRG from contacting Ms Coppen, and hoped this post may catch her attention.

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    Thank you for your response. ✨

    German prisoner interrogated by Intelligence Officer, February, 1918 About CEFRG
    What’s it all about? German prisoner interrogated by Intelligence Officer, February, 1918, MIKAN No. 3403150