Newsletter

Sigolsheim National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Sigolsheim. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_necropole_Pargny-sur-Saulx

 

Located in one of the deadliest areas of the Alsace front, Sigolsheim National Cemetery is home to soldiers who died for France during the Battle of the Colmar Pocket (5 December 1944 – 9 February 1945). It was Marshall Lattre de Tassigny, former Commander of the First French Army, who wanted this  military cemetery built. Construction work took place from 1962 to 1965 and the cemetery was inaugurated on 2 May 1965 by the Minister of Veterans Affairs and Madame de Lattre de Tassigny. The cemetery houses the bodies of soldiers exhumed from communal cemeteries in Haut Rhin, Vosges and Territoire de Belfort.

It also contains the bodies of 1,589 French soldiers buried in individual graves, including 792 graves of North African soldiers and 15 Jewish soldiers’ graves.

To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the liberation of Colmar and to symbolise the fighters’ sacrifice, the military authorities decided that soldiers who helped to liberate the city would also be buried in the same cemetery. The village of Sigolsheim, which lay at the heart of the battle, and hotly disputed right up to the final hours of fighting, was chosen as the site for the cemetery, on the slopes of the hill that was known to the enemy as Blutberg or “Blood Hill”.

Construction was entrusted to the architect Michel Porte. Located 358 metres above sea level, this military cemetery is arranged into twelve rounded terraces, and designed to be seen from the Kaysersberg valley, as well as from Colmar and all the surrounding areas.

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

Sigolsheim
À 10 km au nord de Colmar. Sur la colline surplombant la ville, suivre le fléchage

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

The Col de Wettstein national cemetery in Orbey

La nécropole nationale du Col de Wettstein. © Guillaume Pichard

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Orbey_Wetstein

 

Located next to the Col du Linge, the scene of violent fighting in 1915, the Col de Wettstein national cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France in Haute-Alsace, in the sectors of Lingekopf, Barenkopf, Schartzmännele and the Fecht valley. There were heavy losses during the battles of Le Linge and La Tête des Faux between 1914 and 1915: 10,000 Frenchmen and 7,000 Germans were killed. Following these offensives, this sector no longer played a major role until the end of the war.

This cemetery brings together 3,535 Frenchmen, including 1,334 buried in two ossuaries. They are, for the most part, mountain infantrymen, however some soldiers from the 7th battalion of Indo-Chinese infantrymen also lie here. A testament to their sacrifice, this national cemetery bears the symbolic name of "cimetière des chasseurs", or cemetery of the mountain infantrymen. A monument by the sculptor Antoine de Colmar was inaugurated in August 1939 as a tribute to the dedication of these men. In the shadow of an enormous cross on which the word PAX (Peace) is inscribed, is the recumbent statue of a mountain infantryman, his rifle on the ground. In the absence of a grave around which they can gather their thoughts, bereaved families have affixed plaques to the walls of the two ossuaries in memory of soldiers whose bodies will never be found.

In 1921, after being taken over by the state, the battlefields of Hartmannswillerkopf, La Tête des Faux and Le Linge were classified, followed by the military cemeteries of Moosch and Carrefour Duchêne in 1923-1924. Little by little, they faded into obscurity, only to later receive renewed recognition due to their history and the suffering endured by the French and German soldiers.

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

Orbey
A 20 km à l'ouest de Colmar. Prendre la route Munster/ Orbey, puis celle des lacs et du col du Wettstein

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts des Diables Bleus, 1914-18

The Carrefour Duchesne national cemetery in Orbey

La nécropole nationale du Carrefour Duchesne. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Orbey

 

The Carrefour Duchesne national cemetery, which is located in the middle of a forest, holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles in Haute-Alsace in the sectors of Lingekopf and La Tête des Faux in 1914-1918. There were heavy losses during the battles of Le Linge and La Tête des Faux between 1914 and 1915: 10,000 Frenchmen and 7,000 Germans were killed. Following these offensives, this sector no longer played a major role until the end of the war.

The cemetery is named after Henri Duchesne, battalion commander of the 215th infantry regiment (RI), who was killed on 2 December 1914 during the attack at La Tête des Faux. Today his body lies in the military plot at Plainfaing (Vosges). This site, which is located to the south of the Col de Bonhomme - and can only be reached on foot from the Col du Calvaire - contains the bodies of 408 Frenchmen, including 116 who lie in an ossuary.

Within the cemetery is a chapel built during the hostilities, as well as a monument dedicated to both the men of the 14th battalion of the mountain infantry (BCA) who died in June 1915 and Major Duchesne.

Among the French soldiers lie the remains of Major Charles Golaz, battalion commander of the 359th RI (infantry regiment) (grave 232). Born in Switzerland in 1863, he is the only officer to be buried at Carrefour Duchesne.

In 1921, following their acquisition by the state, the battlefields of Hartmannswillerkopf, La Tête des Faux and Le Linge were classified, followed by the military cemeteries of Moosch and Carrefour Duchêne in 1923-1924.

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

Orbey
A 25 km au nord-ouest de Colmar. A la sortie de Orbey, en direction de la route des lacs, suivre le fléchage à la "Tête des Faux"

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Croix-autel en pierre - Monument aux morts du 147e BCA tombés en juin 1915

Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines

 

In this region of France, position warfare raged and was tailored to the lie of the land. The soldiers dug out bunkers and built specific transport networks (funicular, cable cars, railways) as well as telephone and telegraph communications networks. Unable to dislodge the enemy, each soldier resorted to mine warfare, which lasted throughout the war.

Located on Hajus Hill, Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines National Cemetery contains the bodies of 248 French soldiers, including 122 unknown soldiers buried in two ossuaries (45 and 77 soldiers respectively), and two Russian prisoners (graves 109 and 110). Most of these men were killed during the offensives of August to October 1914.  In 1935, the graves of soldiers buried in the municipal cemeteries of Aubure and Lièpvre were moved to this site.

Four bodies of people killed during the Second World War are buried here. Three of them are soldiers killed in June 1940 and the other is a member of the resistance movement, François Artz (grave 46), who was shot dead by occupying troops in November 1944.

Close by is a German cemetery, which was built in December 1916, and which contains the graves of 1,036 people who were killed during the Great War and 136 during the Second World War.

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address


Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Sainte Marie aux Mines

 

In this region of France, position warfare raged and was tailored to the lie of the land. The soldiers dug out bunkers and built specific transport networks (funicular, cable cars, railways) as well as telephone and telegraph communications networks. Unable to dislodge the enemy, each soldier resorted to mine warfare, which lasted throughout the war.

Built in 1920 to accommodate the bodies of those initially buried in a makeshift cemetery in Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, this National Cemetery, located at the Sainte-Marie Pass (Col Sainte-Marie), is now home to 230 French soldiers, 182 of whom are buried in an ossuary.  These men, who were awarded the ‘Morts pour la France’ (Died for France) distinction, were killed during the battles in the Vosges Mountains between 1914 and 1918.

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines
À 35 km au nord-ouest de Colmar, prendre le col de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, puis suivre le fléchage

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année

Battle of Colmar pocket Memorial Museum

© Musée Mémorial des Combats de la Poche de Colmar

The walls of the charming medieval city of Turckheim reveal nothing of the horrific battles which took place here towards the end of the Second World War. 

 

Turckheim is set at the heart of the "Pocket of Colmar”, the last bastion of Germany in French territory. From Mulhouse to the south of Strasbourg, from the Crête des Vosges to the Rhine, behind a front which stretched 100 miles, the battles that raged from November 1944 to February 1945 devastated the entire Alsace Plane and its foothills. After already waiting four years to be liberated, the population of Alsace were forced to show a further test of patience and sacrifice during these three months of warfare, aggravated by polar temperatures. 
 
Today, an 18th century cellar used as a shelter by some Turckheim residents for 10 weeks,  living without any water or electricity and sleeping on the floor, is now a unique museum in Alsace, dedicated to the liberation of the Colmar Pocket and all those involved.
 

 

Originating from a project started in 1988 (by the "memories and respect for the Battle for Freedom - Colmar Pocket - Winter 44-45" association and founded by young people with a passion for history), the Memorial Museum was inaugurated on 11 November 1993 and extended in 2001. Today it offers two exhibitions rooms with a total 300 sq.m of display space.
 
A museum for peace rather than war, the place celebrates the memory of all the civilian and military victims on whichever side they fought, in the name of a single value: liberty.
It presents a testimony to the several months of hell around Colmar, through the participants in this confrontation and the military equipment of the time. It is the only museum dealing with this theme in Alsace.
 
Visitors to the Memorial Museum can see a magnificent collection of objects (such as this authentic uniform once worn by Maréchal de Lattre), aeronautical equipment and a wide variety of weaponry, all on display in protective cases organised by theme. The origins of almost every piece exhibited is known and has allowed the history of each object to be retraced with great precision.
 
 
The soldier in combat is brought to life through faithful reconstructions in meticulous detail.    The exhibition is complemented by many photos and posters as well as a film from the time which depict each phase of the battle, not forgetting the outcome for the civilian population.
 
The Battle of Colmar Pocket Memorial Museum is a cultural and educational centre founded with the intention of passing on a page of our local history and our national heritage to young people today and tomorrow. As such, the museum hosts a large number of school groups every year.
> Return to results

Practical information

Address

25, rue du Conseil - 68230
TURCKHEIM - mmcpcolmar@orange.fr - 03 89 80 86 66
03 89 80 86 66

Prices

ADULTS : € 4,0 CHILDREN : From 8 to 16 years old : € 2,0 Under 8 years old : free GROUPS : 20 people minimum : € 3,0 per visitor CONCESSIONS : Veterans, military, students, Ircos card holders, 'Gîtes de France', 'Guide du routard'....€ 3,0 Additional charge for audio guide : € 2,0

Weekly opening hours

Open from 1st April to 31st October OFF SEASON Monday to Saturday : 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM Sunday : 10:00 AM to 12:00 AM and 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM JULY and AUGUST Monday to Wednesday : From 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM Saturday and Sunday : From 10:00 AM to 12:00 AM and 02:00 PM to 06:00 PM

Fermetures annuelles

Group bookings available all year, please enquire.

Emm Church, First World War Memorial

Illuminated façade. Photo: Samuel Wernain

Parish church of Metzeral-Sondernach, place of pilgrimage and a Memorial dedicated to fallen soldiers of World War One.

Emm Church is the Parish church of Metzeral-Sondernach, an ancient place of pilgrimage dedicated to the Virgin and a Memorial dedicated to soldiers of World War One (Haut-Rhin) who fell in the Vosges, notably at the Battle of Metzeral in June 1915.

 

Historical overview

 

The current Emm church and memorial is built on the site of a 15th-century chapel, which was destroyed during the Battle of Metzeral. It was built by Abbot Martin BÉHÉ(1887-1963).

From 1922 to 1923, a committee dedicated to the "Memory of Alsace" was formed, under the patronage of Mgr RUCH, Bishop of Strasbourg and General de POUYDRAGUIN, former major of the 47th division and former military governor of Strasbourg, members of which came from all over France. Charity sales were organised in France's large cities (Paris, Lyon and Bordeaux) and abroad (notably in Switzerland).

The building was consecrated on 4 October 1931 and the bells were consecrated on 3 July 1932. Both ceremonies took place in the presence of Mgr RUCH, General de POUYDRAGUIN, Madame la Général SERRET and many other well-known people.

 

Description

 

The main material is pink sandstone from the Vosges, from Rauscher d'Adamswiller quarries; this is the same material used for Strasbourg cathedral. A dedication in capital letters stands out on the harmonious façade: "A nos vaillants soldats, l'Alsace reconnaissante" (To our brave soldiers, to whom Alsace is grateful).
The bell tower is inspired by the tower on the old chapel of Fourvière, in memory of a charity sale in 1926 and has four listed bells. Along the nave, in the arcades which are 1.80 m high, there are plaques in yellow marble from Sienna on which the names of soldiers who fell in the Vosges are engraved. One window in particular recalls the sanctuary's vocation: above the side chapel, the stained-glass window known as the "Souvenir" window shows a soldier dying in the arms of a chaplain, to whom an angel brings the crown of the chosen.

A memorial mass is celebrated on the Sunday before 11 November with the participation of war veterans and their standard-bearer.

 

Emm Church

Colline de l'Emm (rue de l'Emm) 68380 METZERAL - SONDERNACH

 

Les Amis de l'Emm

18 rue du Hohneck 68380 METZERAL

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

68380
METZERAL

The Hartmannswillerkopf

Cemetery. ©Evadb

The Hartmannswillerkopf, a rocky mountain spur dominating the Alsace plain to the south of the Vosges, is one of the four national Great War monuments

During the First World War, the Hartmannswillerkopf, a rocky mountain spur dominating the Alsace plain to the south of the Vosges, occupied a strategic position. More than 150,000 men belonging to regiments that came from the whole of France, in particular the Chasseurs et les Diables rouges (Chasseurs and Red Devils) of the Colmar regiment, fought there for four years in order to re-conquer the Alsace. Around 25,000 officers, non-commissioned officers and soldiers fell on the "Vieil Armand", as the poilus or foot soldiers christened it. Situated in the Vosges mountain range at an altitude of 956 metres, the Hartmannswillerkopf site is one of four national monuments of the Great War, during which time it was a strategic battleground. About 25,000 French soldiers died on the slopes of the "Vieil Armand". Listed as a historic monument in 1921, it has been developed thanks to a national fund under the noble patronage of the President of the Republic and five Marshals of France. Several buildings were constructed between 1924 and 1929 at this important place of remembrance and the whole place was inaugurated in October 1932 by the President of the Republic, Albert Lebrun.

Today the site of the battlefield, well maintained and signposted, is one of the most well preserved in France. Forty-five kilometres of paths and trenches provide access to French fortifications, such as the Roche Sermet and the Roche Mégard and to some German structures (Aussichtsfelsen etc.). These paths also lead to a cemetery, to the monument to the 152nd infantry regiment and to the steles (Serret, Chambaud and the one recalling the sacrifice of lieutenant Pierre Scheurer, who died on the 28th April 1915) and finally, to some German monuments such as the one to the chasseurs, and to the staircase with 560 steps "to the sky".
Built on sloping land, the Silberloch cemetery has 1,264 graves of soldiers who could be identified and six ossuaries. Dominating the cemetery, an alter to the Homeland, facing east towards the summit of the Hartmannswillerkopf, has been constructed on a stone esplanade above the crypt. Identical to the one of 1790, it symbolises the mass movement of volunteers who rushed to the borders to defend the Republic. On its four sides are the names of the towns that took part in financing the collection of monuments: Paris, Strasbourg, Colmar, Mulhouse, Besançon, Metz, Lille, Rouen, Lyon, Marseille, Bordeaux, Nantes etc. An eighty metre long trench provides access to the cultural crypt, in the centre of which is the ossuary. Covered with a bronze shield six metres in diameter, it contains the remains of some 12,000 unknown soldiers. The word "Patrie" (Homeland) is engraved on the shield in gold lettering. The entrance to the crypt, which is closed by a wrought iron gate bearing the inscription Ad lucem perpetuat, is guarded by two archangels created by the sculptor Antoine Bourdelle.
Inside, weapons and equipment recovered from the battlefield are on display, as well as photographs and sculptures. On the walls of the corridor leading to the crypt are bronze plaques bearing the numbers of the 101 units, regiments et battalions that succeeded each other on the battle field over fifty-two months. A Catholic Chapel with a statue of the Virgin Mary on top, also by Antoine Bourdelle, is decorated with inscriptions composed by Monseigneur Ruch, the first bishop of Strasbourg after 1918. Sites for the Protestant and Jewish religions have also been built. A reinforced concrete cross 20 m high and 5.25 m wide stretches out towards the hills of the Vosges. It was illuminated for the first time on the night of the 10th November 1936.
The Vieil Armand Battlefield Route des crêtes 68700 Wattwiller Tel.: 03 89 75 50 35

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

68700
Wattwiller
03 89 75 50 35

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année de 14h00 à 18h00

Fermetures annuelles

du 1er mai à fin octobre uniquement les dimanches et jours fériés

Le Linge Memorial Museum

Trench at Le Linge battlefield. Source: "Le mémorial du Linge 1915" Association

Le Linge is a battlefield where a deadly confrontation took place between 20 July and 15 October 1915.

Le Linge ridge is located in the Alsatian Vosges mountains.

At a height of 1,000 metres, it separates the Orbey and Munster valleys, some twenty kilometres west of Colmar.

Designated a historic site by decree on 11 October 1921, it was one of the deadliest battlefields of World War I. During the conflict, the Germans had organised their defences along the crestline of Le Linge ridge to keep the French troops from advancing toward Colmar.


 

From 20 July to 15 October 1915, the Chasseurs Alpins, often between the ages of 19 and 20, launched an assault against this impregnable bastion. Gas shells and flamethrowers were used.

Some 10,000 Frenchmen and 7,000 Germans died during this period before the troops reached a standoff and remained facing each other until the end of the war in November 1918. The site that is visited today is a large rocky knoll, land with scattered shelters and crisscrossed by a network of fortified trenches, covered with heath and a few trees. The barbed wire of the period has not been removed and the whole is very well preserved.


 

It is hard to imagine that his superb site, with the northern tip of the knoll forming a rocky outcropping affording a magnificent view, was witness to such a slaughter. And yet hundreds of soldiers from both sides still rest here.

The Memorial Museum exhibits French and German objects found on the site: arms, munitions, relics and personal objects.

The showcases present of French and German fighters, models of the battlefield, period photographs, letters written by soldiers, and maps indicating tactical operations. Visitors can also view a video projection of period photographs.


 


Le Linge Memorial Association

86, route du général de Gaulle 68370 Orbey

Tel.: +33 (0)3 89 77 29 97

Fax: +33 (0)3 89 71 31 61

info@linge1915.com


 

Access

The Memorial Museum and the Le Linge battlefield at Orbey are located near the Col du Wettstein "Nécropole Nationale française" on highway D11V1.


 

Opening hours

From Good Friday to 11 November: 9.00 am to 12.30 pm and 2.00 pm to 6.00 pm


 

Admission price

Adults: €3

Group (over 10 people): €2.50 / person

Under 16 years of age (accompanied by an adult) and military personnel in uniform: free admission

Primary and middle school students: €20 per class: free for two accompanying adults

High school students: €2.50 / person, free for two accompanying adults


 

Reservations are required for school groups, and an educational dossier can be downloaded at www.linge1915.com


 

Tourism 68


 

Le Linge World War I Memorial Museum

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

86 route du général de Gaulle 68370
Orbey
03 89 77 29 97

Prices

Adults: 3 euros Groups (over 10 people): 2.5 euros / person Under 16 years of age (accompanied by an adult) and military personnel in uniform: free admission

Weekly opening hours

From 6 April to 11 November: 9.00 am to 12.30 pm and 2.00 pm to 6.00 pm

Fermetures annuelles

From 12 November to 5 April

Neuf-Brisach

Vue aérienne de Neuf-Brisach. Source : ©Denis DONTENVILLE. http://www.fotocommunity.de

Created in 1697 after the loss of Vieux-Brisach across the Rhine, Neuf-Brisach is the only, yet magnificent, example of Vauban's third system.

In 1697, in accordance with the Ryswick treaties, France had to give back all those towns situated on the right bank of the Rhine, including Brisach. She was thus to lose her foothold in Germany and leave the centre of the Alsace undefended. In 1698 Vauban was despatched to the town and started to build three projects, of which the third one, the most complete, was retained by Louis XIV on 6 September 1698. The highly experienced Vauban, closely following the layout already achieved in Landau, designed a town with a double defensive main front part to increase its resistance to attack and make it less vulnerable to ricochet fire, which he himself had invented.

The town, a perfect octagon, comprises an internal fortified "secure" part, whose fortified defensive walls are flanked by fortified towers and an outer "fighting" area. This is made up of two defensive levels. The first consists of counter-guards serving as an artillery platform, which conceal the fortified towers and tenailles to protect the defensive walls. The second level is made up of half-moons in front of the tenailles, of which only those above the doors have a reduit, and of a covered walkway that encircles the whole town. Within the walls, Neuf-Brisach is arranged into 48 areas around the Place d'Armes. This ias how Neuf-Brisach came to be built from scratch on the left bank of the Rhine a short distance from the old town of Brisach. Construction work, which began in 1700, was carried out quickly so that by March 1702, the town could be used as a defence.
However, the return of Brisach to French rule in 1703 was to be the death knell for Neuf-Brisach. This is why, due to lack of funds, the crowning work that featured in Vauban's plans was abandoned and the first stone of the church of Saint-Louis was not laid until 1731, while the construction of the governor's hall would not be started until 1772. Only a small amount of modernisation work was carried out in the middle of the 19th century to compensate for some defects, in particular the lack of casemates. It was also a question of adapting its defences after the construction of the canal between the Rhone and the Rhine that runs along the slope to the east, by adding a lunette covering a floodgate. After a few alarms in 1814 and 1815, it wasn't until 1870 that Neuf-Brisach was to witness its first siege: besieged from 6th October 1870, it was subjected to violent artillery fire between the 2nd and 10th November before capitulating on the 11th November.
However Neuf-Brisach's military purpose was never to be fulfilled. The Germans would significantly alter the ramparts, as well as the urban layout of the ancient fortified town, turning it into a key constituent of the Neuf-Brisach bridgehead, intended to protect an important crossing point on the Rhine using several very modern fortifications. In June 1940, the breaching of the Rhine by the Germans in the Neuf-Brisach area was to be marked by intense fighting, before the town temporarily became the largest prisoner of war camp in France. Neuf-Brisach was to be severely bombarded once more, this time by American troops at the end of the Second World War.
Tourist Office Point I Neuf-Brisach 6, place d'Armes 68600 Neuf-Brisach Tel. 03 89 72 56 66 Fax: 03 89 72 91 73 E-mail: info@tourisme-rhin.com

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

68600
Neuf-Brisach
Tél. 03 89 72 56 66Fax : 03 89 72 91 73

Weekly opening hours

Accessible toute l'année