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Carrière du Chauffour in Thiescourt dans l'Oise

Patrimoine classé
Vestiges de la Guerre 14-18
Carrière de la Guerre 14-18
Oise

Carrière du Chauffour in Thiescourt

    89 Rue des Boucaudes
    60310 Thiescourt
Private property
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Carrière du Chauffour à Thiescourt
Crédit photo : OwenPhil - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
début XIXe siècle
Initial operation
1915
Troglodyte arrangements
septembre 1914 - juin 1918
French military occupation
23 novembre 1999
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Career and Troglodyte Habitats (Box E 248): Registration by Order of 23 November 1999

Key figures

Louis Leclabart - Soldier and sculptor Author of four rock sculptures in the quarry.

Origin and history

The Chauffour quarry, located near Thiescourt in the department of l'Oise (Hauts-de-France), is a 19th-century underground limestone farm. Its extractive activity continued in the early 20th century, before it became a strategic place during the First World War. Beginning in September 1914, the career was found on the French lines, sheltering soldiers exhausted by the battles of Verdun or La Somme. This relatively calm front of the Noyonnais served as a resting area for the convalescent regiments.

Between 1915 and 1918, the quarry was built by the 72nd Territorial Infantry Regiment (RTI) to accommodate two companies. The soldiers create a troglodyte village, with windows inspired by Byzantine art and more than 200 rock engravings. These sculptures, made during the war and then during the "funny war", represent military scenes, portraits, patriotic or religious symbols, and even enemy cartoons. Four of them are attributed to Louis Leclabart, a soldier-artist.

Ranked a historic monument in 1999 for its troglodyt habitats and sculptures, the career bears witness to the life of the hairs and their creativity in adversity. The traces left, ranging from surnames to erotic scenes, reflect the diverse concerns of the soldiers. After the war, the site retains a major heritage value, illustrating both the Oise industrial history and the daily lives of the fighters during the conflict.

Today, the Chauffour's career remains an accessible place of memory, although its exact location in the Thiescourt woods is sometimes difficult to specify (map precision estimated at 6/10). Its listing in the inventory of historical monuments covers both underground galleries and military developments, thus preserving a unique heritage linked to the Great War.

External links