- The French town of Ecoust was on fire even before Lance Corporal William Schofield crossed the canal via the broken bridge. This is evident from the drifting smoke1 visible to Schofield as he observed the town's ruins for a moment, before crossing the canal. This indicates that the (possible) aerial bombing happened before Schofield's arrival.
- When Schofield witnessed a man's silhouette beside the burning Church, he didn't fire at the man immediately because he was unsure whether the man was a German soldier or a British soldier.2
- One of the German soldiers was considering abandoning the place.3
- The Commonwealth War Graves Commission states that Ecoust was captured4 by the 7th and 8th Devons on 2 April 1917. Schofield was from the 8th. And his assignment was given on 6 April 1917.
All of these suggest to me that the town of Ecoust was still in a state of flux even though the British had captured it a few days earlier. Most of its residents had fled from the town, except for few who were in hiding (like the French woman that Schofield met). The broken ruins, the Church on fire, and the few remaining German soldiers represent the closing phase of the territorial conflict between the British and the Germans, that the Germans eventually lost.
I'm not an expert in this field. So, don't take my answer as absolute (goes without saying, but thought I should mention it).
Please let me know in the comments should anyone find any mistakes in my answer.
1 The script for the movie 1917 released by Variety magazine contains the following description on page 74:
The town of Ecoust is a jagged silhouette, visible about two hundred yards the other side of the canal. Smoke drifts. The town is still on fire.
2 Page 80 contains the following description:
In the far corner of the square, the Church is on fire...
Schofield stares at it. Awed.
Then he spots something -
In front of the bright flames: A MAN'S SILHOUETTE.
Schofield sees him. The Man stops, lowers his weapons. Starts to walk towards him.
Schofield cannot make out if he is a German or British soldier and begins to move toward him.
3 Page 90 has the following dialogue:
Private Muller (One of the German soldiers):
(translation)
Christ Baumer... This was a mistake. We should go back tonight, maybe no one will notice we have gone.
4 "Captured" is a strong word since the movie seemed to portray that Germans were still active in the region. Personally, I'm still unable to satisfyingly reconcile the CWGC historical record with the movie.