10 Days
Group
22 persons
Western Front
The “Anzac Day on the Western Front 2025” tour is a unique opportunity to follow closely in the footsteps of the First Australian Imperial Force (AIF) and truly discover where the Anzac legend was forged.
Join your host, Australian author and battlefield historian Adam Holloway, in journeying through the fields of France and Belgium heavily sown with Australian blood and sacrifice. Adam brings to life the places where a generation of young Aussies earned a reputation for battle prowess that saw them feared and respected on both sides of the line. This tour takes you out into the fields where these men lived, fought and died.
You will visit places synonymous with Australian achievement and sacrifice along the Western Front; Fromelles, Pozieres, Mouquet Farm, Villers-Bretonneux, Le Hamel, Messines and the Ypres Salient. You will also venture further afield to lesser-known, but no less significant Australian battles and actions brought to life in Adam Holloway’s book, Duty Nobly Done, including; Bray-sur-Somme, Jeancourt, Le Verguier, and the final assault on the Hindenburg Line.
We will have the honour of experiencing the poignant ‘Last Post’ ceremony at the Menin Gate in Ypres, and to stand on the very ground recaptured by the Australians on 25 April 1918 when we attend the ‘Dawn Service’ at Villers-Bretonneux. Travel back in time as you walk with the Anzacs and truly experience Duty, Nobly Done. Book now to secure your spot.
EXCLUSIVE: You should also consider our Normandy Add-On tour 2025 as part of your trip (click the image below). You're already in France, so... you might as well.
Day 1: Welcome
Arrive in Lille during the day, check in to the hotel, have a look around the town or relax with a coffee - you have come a long way. Later, join your hosts, Adam Holloway, and Phil Hora (Sacred Ground Tours), and other guests for dinner and a chat as we officially kick off the tour.
We stay in Lille for the evening.
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Day 2: “Don’t Forget Me, Cobber.”
We are straight into the action with a battlefield walk at the site of one of Australia’s darkest days during the Great War: Fromelles. The ‘Cobber’ memorial and the unique ‘VC Corner’ cemetery are poignant reminders of the bravery and sacrifice displayed by the Anzacs in their first major battle on the Western Front. We then head north to walk the ground at Messines and follow the attack of 7 June 1917. Venturing through Ploegsteert ‘Plug Street’ Wood we visit further sites of significance, before arriving in the town of Ypres.
We stay in Ypres for the evening.
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Day 3: Buried in Work
This day finds us on the road to Passchendaele with an amazing battlefield walk through ‘Polygon Wood’ to the 5th Australian Division Memorial, and the Buttes New British Cemetery. A visit to the very well done Passchendaele 1917 Museum is followed by a battlefield walk following the ‘Battle of Broodseinde Ridge’.
A sobering visit to the magnificent Tyne Cot gives you an indication of the severity of the fighting for the ridges surrounding Ypres during the Third Battle of Ypres in late 1917, and the view they afforded the enemy. After further adventures, we later head to the Menin Gate for the ‘Last Post’ ceremony where selected guests will lay a wreath on behalf of the tour.
We stay in Ypres for the evening. Best pack your bags as we will be farewelling Ypres tomorrow.
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Day 4: A Big Fritz with Ginger Hair
It is a real treat to start the day with a visit to ‘Talbot House’ in the town of Poperinge, just west of Ypres. The Anzacs were frequent visitors to this oasis behind the lines where they could forget about the war for a while and rest. We then gear up and head down to the relatively unknown (to many Aussies in any case), ‘Lys’ front. In the turbulent days of the German 1918 ‘Spring Offensive’ the enemy threatened the communications centre town of Hazebrouck. It was here that the 1st Australian Division joined their Allies, and played a part in stopping the Germans. The Anzacs remained here until late July 1918; during which time they were involved in numerous actions at Meteren and Merris. We will also visit Vimy Ridge, and pay a visit to the poignant French cemetery and memorial at Notre Dame de Lorette.
We stay in Arras for the evening.
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Day 5: A Delay on the Hindenburg Line
As the Germans fall back, we continue our follow up of the Australian attacks on the Hindenburg Line in March through to May 1917. After capturing Bapaume, the Australians began their attacks to capture the ‘out-post’ villages of Lagnicourt and Noreuil on the road to the battles of Bullecourt. We will walk the ground at Bullecourt and explore the two battles fought by the Anzacs and British in April and May respectively, the latter being successful, albeit costly. A visit to the Jean Letaille 1917 Museum in Bullecourt is a must before we head east and the fighting beyond the Somme.
With the fall of Peronne, the fighting would now head east of the Somme to areas little-known by many Aussies. The Australians of the 4th Division captured the ‘out-post’ line of fortified villages, including Le Verguier. The 4th Australian Division Memorial is at the extent of these great victories, near the ‘Grand Canal’. We will then walk the ground following the last Australian battles to capture the Hindenburg Line.
We stay in Arras for the evening.
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Day 6: Taking the Village
We head back to mid-July 1916 and the town of Albert (Al-bare) on our way to the Somme front. The 1st Australian Division, largely unaware of the catastrophe unfolding at Fromelles, marched through on their way to capture the village of Pozières. We will follow them closely with visits to ‘Lochnagar Crater’, ‘Sausage Gulley’ and beyond Contalmaison to the 23 July 1916 attack line. Further visits in the ‘Pozieres Sector’ include the 1st Australian Division Memorial, the remains of the German blockhouse, ‘Gibraltar’, the ‘Windmill’, and the attacks on ‘Mouquet Farm’.
We stay in Arras for the evening.
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Day 7: Lost in the Maze
We begin the day heading out to walk the 1918 battlefields that saw the German Spring Offensive halted in April 1918. Dernancourt was the scene of some particularly horrendous fighting that saw the Anzacs stretched to breaking point. On Good Friday 1918, the 11th Brigade halted the Germans above Sailly-le-Sec with devastating fire that shattered the enemy waves and prevented an advance on Amiens. The 3rd Australian Division Memorial overlooks this battlefield, nestled between the Rivers Ancre and Somme.
The costly battles of 1916 ensured that the name ‘Somme’ would remain synonymous with death and sheer misery. This was amply demonstrated by the brutal fighting for Delville ‘Devil’s’ Wood where the South African memorial is located. The New Zealanders were in action at Flers and as the weather began to turn, and the Somme offensive ran out of steam, more horrific battles took place in ‘The Maze’ where the Aussie Battalions floundered in ‘Flers mud’.
The winter of 1916/1917 was the worst on record and the New Year brought fresh hell for the Anzacs in the Flers and Gueudecourt sectors. Costly attacks at ‘Stormy Trench’ saw the 15th Battalion denied by poor planning and vicious counter-attacks, only to see the 13th Battalion launch a better-planned and successful attack several days later that saw Harry Murray win the Victoria Cross. We then follow up the Germans in late February 1917 as they begin withdrawing to the ‘Hindenburg Line’.
We stay in Arras for the evening.
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Day 8: A Black Day for the German Army
We head to the Australian National Memorial and the Sir John Monash Centre (SJMC), and explore the 25 April 1918 ‘Recapture of Villers-Bretonneux’. A visit to the ‘Victoria School’ and Museum is a special moment. We then walk the attack line for Monash's brilliant capture of Le Hamel in the famous 4 July 1918 attack with the 'Yanks'.
8 August 1918 saw the beginning of the end of the Great War as the Allies launched a massively successful offensive that breached the German line for distances never before seen. The Anzacs captured all their objectives along the Somme. From there the Aussies are in constant action as they battle along the Somme, flanking and overcoming the Germans in the numerous woods and spurs astride the meandering River Somme. ‘Ceylon Wood’ above Bray-sur-Somme saw the 42nd Battalion in a successful, but costly daylight action.
We stay in Arras for the evening.
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Day 9: Anzac Day on the Western Front
This is what it is all about as we head to the Australian National Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux for the very moving ‘Anzac Day’ Dawn Service. An early start, but well worth it. We have arranged for a special ‘Anzac Day Brekkie’ with the good people of Naours, after which we will venture into the subterranean caves where thousands of soldiers have left their names, including over 1,000 Anzacs.
We stay in Arras for the evening.
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Day 10: Farewell
We begin the day with a leisurely breakfast and a chat as we prepare to head our separate ways (albeit a little tearfully). We hope you will have thoroughly enjoyed the tour and are returning home with many wonderful memories. Until next time... Lest we forget.
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The letters refer to:
(B) Breakfast included.
(L) Lunch included.
(D) Dinner included.
We can assist with booking 'Early Arrival'or 'Late Departure' Accommodation.
N.B. The order and content of this itinerary may be altered slightly on occasion due to operational requirements and constraints as a result of the personalised nature of our tours.