New Brunswick

After more than a century, lost wartime grave of New Brunswick soldier located

The gravesite of Private Nicholas DeLorey, who served with N.B.'s 26th Battalion in World War One, was presumed lost for more than a hundred years. Now, a group of Belgian researchers say they have pinpointed its location, along with 1,400 other Canadian soldiers who served around the town of Ypres.

Belgian researchers pinpoint 1,400 lost WWI Canadian gravesites, create searchable website

A soldier in uniform from the First World War.
Pte. Nicholas DeLorey of the 26th New Brunswick Battalion was killed in action on June 17, 1916, near Ypres, Belgium. (Fredericton Region Museum)

Over the past century or so, too many Canadian families have received the news that a loved one had been killed in combat overseas.

And, for a good portion of them, the news was made especially hard when military officials were unable to provide details on the soldier's remains or final resting place.

That's what happened to Minto, N.B.'s Kate DeLorey in 1916, when she learned of her husband's death in combat near Ypres, Belgium.

For more than a hundred years, the location of Pte. Nicholas DeLorey's grave site has been a mystery.

But now, thanks to the work of researchers in Belgium, the last known place of burial for DeLorey has been found, along with about 1,400 other Canadian graves once lost to history.

An old photo showing soldiers lined up on a city street, with a crowd of people cheering.
The crowd in Saint John sees the 26th Battalion off to Europe on June 13, 1915. (D. Smith Reid/NB Museum 19690)

Those same researchers are now hoping to put faces and stories to those names with the help of relatives here in Canada.

DeLorey was born in 1881 in Tracadie, N.S., about 30 kilometres east of Antigonish, into a large Acadian family of 20 siblings. The family name was Deslauriers, but had been anglicized over the years.

According to his biography, gathered for the Antigonish cenotaph project, he moved to Massachusetts as a young man and married a local woman. They had two children together before she died at a young age.

DeLorey then moved to Minto, where it's believed he went to work mining coal. He married Kate Coakley, and they had four children together.

So, DeLorey was no fresh-faced young man seeking adventure when he enlisted with the newly formed 26th Battalion in Saint John in the fall of 1914 — he was a 33-year-old family man and labourer.

A ship with its deck crowded with soldiers sit's dockside.
The 26th Battalion leaving Saint John for England aboard S.S. Caledonia, June 13, 1915. (D. Smith Reid/NB Museum 19692)

His unit departed Saint John in June of the following year aboard the S.S. Caledonia, bound for England. By September they were in France and were finally sent to the front in the spring of 1916.

Little is known about the particulars of DeLorey's death, but his time in combat would be short and brutal.

On June 14, 1916, the battalion moved into the frontline for the first time, sent to relieve Canadian troops that had just captured a ridge, near the town of Ypres, known as Hill 62. 

The ferocity of that fight had left the trench lines on the ridge so badly damaged there was almost nothing left to protect the 26th Battalion from German artillery.

A photo of a document listing the next of kin of Nicholas DeLorey
Military records of DeLorey's death listing his next of kin. (Fredericton Region Museum)

In UNB historian J.Brent Wilson's book on the battalion, A Family of Brothers: Soldiers of the 26th New Brunswick Battalion in the Great War, a letter home from Pte. Cecil Bennett of Saint John described the scene.

"We got to our place and found there was no cover to be had, everything had been blown to pieces … standing in an open trench with shells flying as thick as hailstones was not a pleasant outlook."

For six days, German artillery pounded the ridge as soldiers clung to whatever meagre cover they could find.

DeLorey was reported killed in action on June 17, just three days after the battalion moved onto the ridge. 

He was one of 36 killed, along with 96 wounded. And his final resting place was listed as unknown.

A man perusing a museum display of various kinds of WWI artillery shells.
The Memorial Museum Passchendaele partnered with Library and Archives Canada on the Names in the Landscape project. (Memorial Museum Passchendaele)

Simon Augustyn is a historian and researcher at the Memorial Museum Passchendaele, set up to commemorate the 1917 battle that led to the capture of that famed village, just eight kilometres east of Ypres.

"A few years ago, while researching the fate of Canadian soldiers who went missing at Passchendaele in 1917, we stumbled onto these military documents," Augustyn said in an interview from his office at the museum.

The documents in question were recently digitized records from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and military "Circumstances of Death" records that had been made public by Library and Archives Canada. 

A large stone wall, engraved with thousands of names.
Just some of the approximately 54,000 names engraved on the Menin Gate. (Commonwealth War Graves Commission)

"They showed us the wartime burial locations of Canadian soldiers who were supposed to have gone missing in Flanders," he said.

Their thoughts then turned to the Menin Gate in Ypres, a massive memorial to British and Commonwealth soldiers whose final resting place is not known.

There are 54,000 names engraved there, almost 7,000 belonging to Canadian soldiers, including Nicholas DeLorey.

So they began checking those names against the new documents.

A photo of a stone memorial engraved with a list of soldier's names.
A section of the Menin Gate in Ypres, Belgium, a memorial to soldiers whose final resting places were unknown. These are men from the 26th Battalion, including Nicholas DeLorey at the very bottom. (Marg Liessens/Canadian Virtual War Memorial)

"So we were able to pinpoint wartime graves for more than 1,400 of them … that's about 20 per cent of all the Canadians on the Menin Gate."

DeLorey's wartime grave lies in a wooded area about 1,500 metres east of the village of Zillebeke. Several other soldiers were buried at the same site, including Pte. Fred Legere of Scoudouc.

Augustyn points out that their research doesn't preclude the chance that the grave has been disturbed since. It only confirms there was a wartime burial site.

Today, the area is on a quiet road in the Belgian countryside, not far from the Maple Copse Canadian Military Cemetery and the Hill 62 Canadian Memorial.

A close up of a map of Flanders, showing a section of forest, and a large red-brown dot marking DeLorey's gravesite.
The map showing the site of DeLorey's wartime burial site, just 250 metres from the memorial commemorating the battle where he was killed. (nitl.be)

And, thanks to the museum and Library and Archives Canada, anyone can search for these lost graves on an interactive website called Names in the Landscape.

Augustyn hopes they can put faces to all those names with the help of relatives of the fallen soldiers.

"If people contact us, if they send us pictures, if they send us information on all those soldiers missing, soldiers who we were able to find a wartime grave for, if they shared with us, they'll be helping to build a platform for surviving relatives, researchers, museums and so forth," he said.

The museum also made one final symbolic gesture in honour of these soldiers, in the form of another letter home.

"We wrote a letter to the historic contact addresses we assembled of all the soldiers whom we found a wartime burial location for and we sent [those addresses] a letter," Augustyn said.

A country road in Belgium, with a forested area to the centre-right of the road.
The road near where DeLorey's grave was located. His grave is in the treed area, centre-right, in the photo. (Google Streetview)

"So more than a century ago, a letter was written to these addresses stating that the grave of a loved one had gone missing in Flanders. And 100 years later, more than 100 years later, we wrote to these addresses again stating that we found the location where the soldier's grave used to be."

In DeLorey's case, the address for his wife was only listed as Minto, N.B., so they sent a letter to the Fredericton Region Museum instead, looking for biographical information.

The museum was able to provide a photo of DeLorey, which can now be seen on the website.

Augustyn said he's happy the effort is resonating with Canadians and hopes as word spreads, researchers will get more information on each soldier.

He said he's already swamped with mail from Canada, replies to the letters the museum sent out before Christmas.

three people at a table, with stacks of envelopes and stationary around them.
Historian Simon Augustyn (centre) and two volunteers prepare to mail out hundreds of letters to the historic addresses of the next of kin of the soldiers whose wartime graves they've pinpointed. (Submitted by Simon Augustyn)

And he also hopes the website map, which is peppered with grave sites, can act as a warning about the horrors of war.

"There are wartime graves along every road, around every bend between Ypres and Passchendaele, and when you look at the map it's quite confronting," he said, "And even more so when you realize that that's only 20 per cent of the Canadians, only the Canadians on the Menin Gate.

"So when you would add the wartime graves of Australians, British, German, French, Belgian soldiers, I believe you wouldn't find a free square metre on the map." 

"It's really astonishing what happened here."

Names in the Landscape
(nitl.be)

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