Accessible by a dirt road running alongside the "French Woods," it now contains 100 British graves. After the war, the 99 French graves were moved to the Albert National Cemetery. These graves were located at the entrance to the cemetery, and this emptiness is evident today.
The name Point 110 derives from the topography of the area: a small hill rising to 110 meters, which the British called King George's Hill.
The old military cemetery at Point 110 was built by French troops in February 1915, when they occupied the area, before it came under British control in the summer of 1915. The latter, including the 1st Dorsets, continued to bury their dead in the same location until September 1916.