Name of Historic Place: Beaumont-Hamel
National Historic Site of Canada
Other names: Newfoundland Beaumont Hamel Memorial Park
Province, territory: France
Community: Albert
Street and street number:Highway D73
Boundary description: The designated place consists of the
25-hectare site as it was when the Government of Newfoundland
acquired the site in the 1920s.
Number and type of contributing resources: 4
structures; 5 landscapes or landscape features; 1
archaeological site/remains; 1 monument, 1 battlefield, 1
Danger Tree, 1 trenches, 1 shell-pocked landscape, 1 Y-ravine, 1
park, 2 plaques, 1 archaeological vestiges from war)
Original functional category and
type: Defence - Battle Site
Defence - Military Defence Installation
Current functional category and type: Leisure - Historic
or Interpretive Site
Community - Commemorative Monument
Leisure - Park
Religion, Ritual and Funeral - Mortuary Site, Cemetery or
Enclosure
Ownership of historic place (current):Department of Veterans
Affairs (Government of Canada)
Construction date range: 1922-1924
Significant date range:1916-1924
Associated event/person/organization/
architect/builder:First World War (event)
Battle of the Somme (event)
1st Newfoundland Regiment (organisation)
Royal Newfoundland Regiment (organisation)
Royal Navy Reserve (organisation)
Mercantile Marine (organisation)
29th British Division (organization)
Major Thomas Nangle (person)
Basil Gottouilder) Rudolph H K Cochius (architect)
Thematic category and type:Expressing Intellectual and Cultural
Life - Architecture and Design
Governing Canada - Canada and the World
Governing Canada - Military and Defence
For more history of the site, visit Veteran Affairs Canada