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The Bastion 32 Remembrance Memorial

Situated at the Belgian border and facing England, the port town of Dunkirk has been a historic strategic position through the centuries. The first fortifications were erected around the city in the 10th century. Over the centuries, the town changed hands several times before Louis XIV bought it back from the English in 1662 and asked Colbert to turn it into a fortified town. Between 1818 and 1848, a series of structures was built to establish a bastioned wall surrounding the town. The system was improved between 1869 and 1879. It was during this series of renovations that the bunkers and curtain walls of Bastion 32 were constructed, in 1874. The law of 8 March 1921 decommissioned Dunkirk’s fortifications and the majority of the ramparts were destroyed in 1930. However, the fortifications looking out to sea were preserved.

 

From 13 May 1940, while the armoured German divisions pushed through the front line in Sedan, the entire British Expeditionary Force and the finest troops of the French army were threatened with being surrounded. To avoid this trap, the French and British units retreated to Dunkirk. In no time, the town was overwhelmed with hundreds of thousands of soldiers trying to return to England. Surrounded by German forces, 15,000 French soldiers waged a strong defence to enable their French and British comrades to board a ragtag fleet of over 1,400 ships while the Luftwaffe unleashed hell on the northern port town. The rescue operation, dubbed "Dynamo" would be one of the war’s must surprising defensive successes, since when the town fell, some 340,000 soldiers had been successfully evacuated to England. Only 40,000 men were captured by the Germans. During the battle, Bastion 32 was chosen as the headquarters by Admiral Abrial, commander of the naval forces of the North General Fagalde, tasked with leading the defence of Dunkirk. Later, during the German occupation, Bastion 32 was converted into a military hospital.
 
The museum project
 
This place steeping in history was kept in good condition for several decades before being destroyed in 1979 to make more room for the port’s shipyards. The only remnants of its illustrious past are the 32-5 curtain walls, renovated in the late 1990s to honour the 60th anniversary of the Battle of Dunkirk and the Dynamo Operation on 1 June 2000. The project consisted of transferring a large proportion of an exhibition on the Battle of Dunkirk and the Operation Dynamo, created in 1969 and inaugurated by Michel Debré, the then minister of defence. Since that time, the exhibition had lain dormant in the cellar of Dunkirk’s Fine Arts Museum.
Named the Mémorial du Souvenir, the "new" Bastion 32 displays an important collection of arms, uniforms, objects and photographs from the period, over 700 m² of exhibition space.
Visitors can also see a number of ordnance survey maps and models which help explain how the operations unfurled. The collections include some interesting relics, like a turret from a Hotchkiss tank, a 90mm Schneider gun, a motorbike, plane engines and more. In 2005, three more bunkers were renovated to extend the exhibition. In 2008, one of them was converted into a working 40-seat cinema to show a 15-minute historical archive film. The memorial also takes part in events related to goings-on in the memorial world. For instance, for the 90th anniversary of the armistice of 11 November 1918, Bastion 32 hosted the temporary exhibition entitled “Dunkirk 14-18, a town behind the front”. In June 2010, a commemorative plaque was inaugurated by Michel Delebarre, Deputy Mayor of Dunkirk, and the Ambassador of the Czech Republic. The plaque pays tribute to the Czechoslovakian soldiers who participated in the siege of the town during the Liberation. Each year the memorial is visited by nearly 15,000 people, the majority of which come from outside France.

Website: www.dynamo-dunkerque.com

Mémorial du Souvenir

 

Courtines du Bastion 32
Rue des Chantiers de France – 59140 Dunkirk - France
Tel: Tourist Office – +33 (0)3 28 66 79 21
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Practical information

Address

Rue des Chantiers de France 59140
Dunkerque

Memorial to Montluc Prison

Prison corridor. © Frédéric Bellay


Built in the 1920s, the prison stands opposite the fort of the same name in an industrial district of Lyon.

- Plaquette à télécharger -

 In 2009, Montluc Prison was closed in favour of new facilities built outside Lyon.

On the demand of the prefect for the Rhône-Alpes region, the state services then protected a large part of the Montluc site as historic monuments, responding to the long-standing hope of remembrance and veterans associations and in particular the Montluc survivors association.

In addition to plans to protect the building, discussions were started in order to find ways to use the building to bear witness to the violence of the Nazi regime in Lyon and to open up the site to visitors.

 

Built in the 1920s, Montluc military prison stands opposite the fort of the same name in an industrial district of Lyon. After the armistice in 1940, the prison welcomed ordinary prisoners, soldiers and perpetrators of “anti-national activities”, essentially Gaullists and Communists. Following the invasion of the southern zone, in November 1942, the German requisitioned the prison and placed it under exclusive control. Montluc then became the place for the internment of resistance fighters, hostages and victims of “racial measures”, awaiting their departure for Drancy and deportation to the concentration and extermination camps. Montluc was managed with daily contact with the Gestapo headquarters on Avenue Bertholet – in the premises of the army medical school, where interrogations took place (currently occupied by the History of Resistance and Deportation Centre).


Close to the prison, a competent military court for the southern zone was set up in 1943. The capital sentences were likely pronounced at the shooting range in Doua (today the national necropolis). Other convicts were shot inside the actual prison, on the covered way at a point now known as the “Wall of the Executed” and still visible today. After the landing in June 1944, a number of massacres of prisoners took place in the towns surrounding Lyon, in retaliation to the Allied advance and resistance actions. Between April and August 1944, over 600 prisoners were executed thus in Saint-Didier de Formans, Toussieu, Bron and Saint-Genis-Laval, the main locations of the exactions. The massacre of Saint-Genis-Lavel on 20 August 1944, where 120 prisoners were murdered in abominable conditions, ignited a vigorous protest of Cardinal Gerlier by the German authorities. At the same time, Yves Farges, commissioner of the republic still living undercover, threatened to execute the same number of German prisons if the massacres continued. On 24 August, the prisoners were released both by the intervention of the resistance and the departure of the jailers, a week before the liberation of Lyon on 3 September.


The Memorial of Montluc Prison, inaugurated by France’s Prime Minister on 21 June 2010, joined the other sites managed by the Ministry of Defence, qualified as a major memorial site, and opened its doors to the public on the occasion of the European Heritage Days in 2010. Since then, the site continues to attract more and more visitors, making it a credible and complementary member in the network of regional places of remembrance alongside the History of Resistance and Deportation Centre in Lyon and the Jean Moulin Caluire Memorial, as well as, on a larger scale, Maison d’Izieu, a memorial to the murdered Jewish children. The Montluc Memorial contributes to the discussions introduced by the problems specific to remembrance sites, both scientifically and historically and in terms of hosting and educating the public.


Memorial to Montluc Prison
1 rue Jeanne Hachette 69003 Lyon

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Practical information

Address

1 rue Jeanne Hachette 69003
Lyon

Weekly opening hours

Groups and individuals: Wednesday to Saturday, 2 pm to 5.30 pm Guided tours every afternoon at 3.30 pm School parties: Tuesday to Friday, 9 am to 5.30 pm July and August, Tuesday to Saturday, 9 am to 5.30 pm Guided tours at 10.30 am and 3.30 pm

Fermetures annuelles

The site is closed to the public on bank holidays.

Morvan Resistance Museum

Vue d'une salle du musée. © ARORM

Officially opened on 26 June 1983 by François Mitterrand, Morvan Resistance Museum is the work of historians and former resistance fighters.

Housed in the Maison du Parc Naturel Régional du Morvan, the museum offers an insight into the role and importance of the Resistance in the region during the Second World War.


View the museum’s educational offering >>>   Morvan


Its sizeable collection brings visitors into close contact with history.

Large numbers of objects, archive documents, materials, photographs and weaponry are displayed in three rooms: Occupation, Resistance, and Liberation and Remembrance.

Midway through the visit, a digital portrait from the Morvan “Digital Gallery” plunges visitors into the world of the maquis rural resistance groups.

The Occupation

The first room, on the Occupation, looks at patriotic feeling and the defence of Morvan from 1940, followed by the impact of the German Occupation: occupied towns and villages, restrictions on freedoms, rationing, requisitioning, Nazi repression, and so on.

The Resistance

In the face of German and Vichyist propaganda, the Resistance organised itself, with underground newspapers and pamphlets, brave acts by local personalities, etc.

This second room presents the first acts of resistance through to the formation of the maquis, through a variety of materials, photographs, weapons and clothing, and the assistance provided by the Allies (parachute drops, containers, letters, mannequins, etc.).

Liberation and Remembrance

Morvan played a strategic role in the liberation of the region.

The maquis liberated Morvan in September 1944, through acts of sabotage, fighting and pitched battles, represented here by photos, reconstructions and objects.

The visit ends with a look at remembrance and the philosophy of the Resistance, through photographs of expressions of remembrance, steles and monuments (poems, texts, letters, etc.).

Digital Gallery

“The Morvan Maquis” is a new digital portrait from Morvan’s “Digital Gallery”.

Situated at midway point in the permanent exhibition, “The Morvan Maquis” is an immersive projection space presenting daily life in the maquis.

In this space, a film is shown on two screens: one shows documents directly related to maquis life, while the other places events in the national and international context of the war.

The installation immerses the visitor in the world of the Morvan maquis, showing how they were organised on a day-to-day basis, and examining their actions, their camps, the roles played by their leaders, and the hunger, fear and courage involved.

From personal stories to major historical events, the portrait focuses on the people, both men and women, involved in these maquis groups, who ultimately played a key role in the liberation of France.

Educational activities

The museum makes an excellent contribution to curriculum requirements in history, history of art and civic education for schools and colleges. It offers students and teachers a practical approach to various themes specific to the Second World War, as well as the concepts of human rights, freedom, political engagement, tolerance and solidarity. It also provides an opportunity to reflect on the values of the French Republic and the founding principles of European unity.

Finally, it offers students a practical insight into civic engagement.

 

Exhibitions, conferences, film screenings, national events (European Heritage Days, European Museum Night, etc.), ceremonies and more

Click to view

 

Educational offering (workshops, tailored visits, learning resources, etc.)

Click to view

 

 

Source : ©Musée de la Résistance en Morvan
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Practical information

Address

Maison du Parc 58230
Saint-Brisson
03 86 78 72 99

Prices

Full price: € 6.50 Young people: € 4 Groups: € 4 Free for children under 8 and members of the organisation Morvan, Terre de Résistances – ARORM Passes/combination tickets (children aged 8 to 15, unemployed, families with four or more members, “Clé des Musées” pass, and students): € 4 “Résistance” pass (access to the Resistance Museum and the Dun-les-Places Memorial): € 8.50

Weekly opening hours

Daily (except Tuesdays and Saturday mornings), 10 am to 1 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm, from May to September. Daily (except Tuesdays and Saturday mornings), 10 am to 1 pm and 2 pm to 5 pm, in April, October and November. Daily, 10 am to 1 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm, in July and August.

Fermetures annuelles

11 November to 1 April. Local tourist office: Maison du Parc - 58230 Saint-Brisson - Tel.: +33 (0)3 86 78 79 57

Vercors Resistance Memorial

Vue panoramique. Source : Mémorial de la Résistance du Vercors

The Memorial is a commemorative monument, a place of memory and contemplation.

Step into the fortress and see what the Resistance fighters' everyday lives were like. A symbolic walk from shadow to light... Vassieux "This is where the land of freedom begins" The history of France's first and biggest maquis. Unlike a museum of objects, the Memorial uses stage sets, images, sound and light. Integrated architecture This citadel embedded in the mountain harmoniously blends into the site's exceptional natural environment, leaving the hollow of a coomb free and intact. The camouflaged, vegetation-covered building recalls the maquisards' underground life. A powerful, highly evocative work The 1,200m2 space recreates the period's moods with a set of codes to decipher. Everything has been designed to help you understand and feel the maquisards' hopes and sorrows.

A universal message of vigilance and solidarity The Memorial is a commemorative monument, a place of remembrance and contemplation. It keeps the memory of the tragic events of July 1944 alive and pays homage to the men and women who fought for freedom. The thought-provoking exhibits feature documentaries and first-hand accounts: an analysis and understanding of human behaviour during acts of grandeur and of barbarism. The goals are to emphasize the universal value of what Vercors stands for and to make the message of resistance, of all resistance, heard by as many people as possible. Not all resistance leads to victory, but it always leads to dignity. Every year 37,000 people visit the Memorial (50% are children).
Become both a player and an onlooker during the visit: From shadow... Live the daily life of the French under the Occupation Feel their fear during the dark years (visual and sound environment). Understand the motives of those who rejected defeat. The sacrificed fortress: Witness the invasion of Vercors Fortress - moving model, original images "This is where the land of freedom begins" Symbolic rise in the Vercors The Corridor of Testimonials : recollections of the maquis veterans and inhabitants of Vercors - audio and video room Daily life in the maquis camps and commitment to the struggle - exhibition "The torn plateau": what meaning can the sacrifices of those who fought in the shadows be given today? - documentary to light... Resisting again! Questions on forms of resistance in today's world - film by Franck Pavloff. The corridor of lead leaves: a silent homage to Vercors' 840 civilian and military victims - a place of contemplation The Belvedere The belvedere, a moment of confrontation between a landscape and its history, offers a sweeping view of the entire range and the magnificent landscapes of Vercors that were battlefields in 1944 "The wind of liberty blows here" - orientation table. In addition to a historical analysis of the history of the Resistance in Vercors, the Memorial recalls two contradictory sides to our humanity, shadow and light. Exhibition updated in 2007 The visit lasts 90 minutes.
The Memorial's plusses For childrenNew! A game called "On Antoine's trail". A historical investigation leading to a young reporter's diploma. Guided tours for all - A cultural mediator at the Belvedere deciphers the visit's codes every Monday at 11am during school holidays - free1 every day by reservation for groups of children and adults (from 15 people) - ask for our group brochure online at www.memorial-vercors.fr) Documents to help you during your visit for French adults and children, tour guide and simultaneous translation into English, German and Dutch for non-French-speaking visitors. Shop The bookshop offers an extremely diversified choice of works on the Vercors, the Second World War and contemporary conflicts - youth, novels, essays, comics, souvenirs, postcards, objects The Memorial's cultural programme delivers a universal message of peace, solidarity, tolerance and commitment to freedom.
Vercors Resistance Memorial Col de La Chau 26420 Vassieux-en-Vercors Tel.: 33 (0)4 75 48 26 00 Fax: 33 (0)4 75 48 28 67 E-mail: info@memorial-vercors.fr Open May to Sept.: 10am-6pm 7/7 non-stop every day Oct.-11 Nov.: 10am-5pm every day School holidays: 10am-5pm every day Closed 12 Nov. to Christmas holidays, 25 Dec. and 1 Jan. Open every day for groups January to April: contact us Admission Adults 5€ Children 8-15 (free for children under 8): 2€50 Reduced price for students, veterans, job-seekers, disabled people, Vertacopass: 4.00 € Family price (2 adults + 2 children): 12€50 (2€/add. child) groups (15p) by reservation. Price: ask us How to get there From Valence by the grands goulets tunnel, col de la bataille, col de la chau From Die by the col de rousset From Grenoble by Villard de Lans Shop, free parking, accessible to people with reduced mobility

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Practical information

Address

Col de La Chau 26420
Vassieux-en-Vercors
Tél. : 04 75 48 26 00Fax. : 04 75 48 28 67

Prices

Adultes: 5,50 € Tarifs réduits: 4,50 € Enfants (+ 8ans) et étudiants: 3,00 € Gratuit : Membres de l'Association nationale des Pionniers et Combattants Volontaires du Vercors Enfants (- de 7 ans)

Weekly opening hours

Juillet à septembre: tout les jours de 10h à 18h. Mai et juin: de 12h à 18h la semaine, de 10h à 18h le weekend et jours fériés. Avril et octobre: de 12h à 17 en semaine, de 10h à 18h le weekend et jours fériés. Novembre à mars: ouvert du mercredi au dimanche

Fermetures annuelles

Du 12 novembre au début des vacances scolaires de Noël

The Rimplas fortification

Vue générale du gros-ouvrage de Rimplas. Secteur fortifié des Alpes-Maritimes de la ligne Maginot. Source : GNU Free Documentation License

Originally called the Madeleine fortification, this was the Maginot Line's earliest ouvrage, or defensive work; construction began in 1928.

Originally called the Madeleine fortification, this was the Maginot Line's earliest ouvrage, or defensive work; construction began in 1928. The French government decided to build it after Mussolini's many sabre-rattling statements on the Nice region's Italian origin.

The Alpes-Maritimes General Council later bought the site to turn it into a "place of remembrance". "Les Amis de l'Ouvrage Maginot de la Madeleine", an association formed in early 2008, has begun rehabilitating the inside and outside and opened the site to the public during the 2009 Open Heritage Weekend.
Rimplas does not illustrate the concepts implemented in the later fortifications: it is in a single block surrounded by escarp walls whose blocks all face one way. They are veritable armoured casemates with 20cm-thick steel reinforcing the concrete walls, which extend inside and wrap around the cannon; two armoured shutters close the embrasure. The construction ran into many problems. First, the soil's crumbly nature required the excavated areas to be covered in concrete in several places. Second, there was severe water infiltration; in July 1936 cracks were still observed in the concrete. The fort was officially handed over to the 74th Alpine Fortress Battalion (BAF) in August 1937, before the work was totally completed.
Mission The Rimplas ouvrage has views stretching from the Upper Tinée in the north to Saint-Dalmas and La Colmiane in the west; its searchlights could scan the Upper Tinée road and the road to Saint-Martin-Vésubie. The fort could fire frontally towards the border, which was less than 5km away and ran along the present-day D2565 before the 1947 rectification. The frontier, which ran along the road between Isola, where a casemate stood, and Valabres, at the mouth of Mollières Glen, encircled nearly three-fourths of the town of Saint-Martin-Vésubie.
Composition The Rimplas ouvrage consists of five blocks connected to underground tunnels and indoor and outdoor facilities: Mixed entrance: three machine gun embrasures, mixed door, aerial tram entrance; B1: two 81mm mortar embrasures, two embrasures for twin Reibel machine guns and one grenade-launcher cloche. The mortars could fire frontally northward, but not as far as the border; B2: one machine gun embrasure; B3: one machine gun cloche and one cloche for twin Reibel machine guns; B4: two 1933 model 75mm howitzer embrasures, one 1931 model 75mm howitzer embrasure, one machine gun cloche, one observation cloche; however, the howitzers could not reach Isola, where an SFAM outpost was located. The underground rooms contained all the usual logistical facilities for a fortification of this size, and even an operating room. The tunnels and rooms are on three levels. B5: two 1933 model 75mm howitzer embrasures, one 1931 model 75mm howitzer embrasure, one machine gun cloche and one observation cloche (this block is the same as the previous one, except for the machine gun cloche). The row of howitzers covered the border to Saint-Martin-Vésubie and beyond. An observation post, located outside on the west façade, consists of an underground casemate closed by a concrete mask. The row of howitzers covered the entire border to the northeast. An emergency way out is atop the west cliff near the present telephone tower. A masonry casemate covered with a reinforced concrete slab stands before the curve in the road leading to the esplanade. The security barracks in the village of Rimplas.
The single-cable aerial tram built by Brien-Anzun, whose lower shaft can still be seen beside the Upper Tinée road, was 878m long, rose a total of 602m and could transport 52 tonnes of munitions or supplies every day in 21 cars. It was powered by two internal combustion motors. In 1939 the Rimplas fortification had a big garrison of 334 soldiers and eight officers from the 84th Alpine Fortress Battalion (BAF) and 167th Position Artillery Regiment (RAP).
The fighting In June 1940 the border zone between Saint-Etienne-de-Tinée and Valdeblore was held by four Ski Scout Sections (SES) belonging to the 84th BAF and 55th RIA: I/55 at Mont Raja, II/55 at Collet de la Sagne, III/55 at Bifarquet and that of the 84th BAF at Cabanes de Lenton. They faced off against the Val Elero battalion of the 1st Alpini. Italy declared war on France on 10 June but the actual offensive did not start until the 20th, when units of the Livorno division crossed the border near Isola and came up the Tinée halfway to Saint-Etienne-de-Tinée, trying to reach the road from Roya to Péone by way of Tolondet, certainly knowing the guns of Rimplas could not cover the area. Nevertheless, they were stopped at Pont-Rouge, before Douans. No source reports fighting in the sector in the following days and up to the armistice. Fort Rimplas nevertheless shelled the border to try and keep the Italian troops from coming across. The enemy did not breach the frontier in this sector and never threatened the work.
Present condition After the 24 June 1940 armistice the Italians disarmed and dismantled the fortification, taking away the 75mm guns. Fort de Rimplas was partially rearmed in 1947 and maintained by the army's corps of engineers until being decommissioned in 1972, when it was sold to the town of Rimplas. The municipality rented it to a company that grew mushrooms; the resulting humidity caused further damage. Much of the fort's interior was sold as scrap. Very little is left inside, but the camouflage painting and false embrasures are still quite visible on the escarp walls.
Rimplas ouvrage Les Amis de l'Ouvrage Maginot de la Madeleine 3 Promenade Saint Roch - Hôtel de ville 06420 Rimplas Tel: 06 80 59 09 94 Fax: 04 93 02 89 19 E-mail: contact@la-madeleine.asso.fr Contact the association for tours Contact Milano Nicolas, Président: nicolas@la-madeleine.asso.fr Icardo Laurent, guide: laurent@la-madeleine.asso.fr

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Practical information

Address

6420
Rimplas
06 80 59 09 94

Prices

Adultes: 3 € Enfants (+ de 6 ans): 2 € Gratuit : Enfants (- de 6 ans)

Weekly opening hours

du deuxième weekend de mai au troisième weekend de septembre, le samedi de 14h à 18h

Fermetures annuelles

D'octobre à Avril

Suresnes American Cemetery

Suresnes American Cemetery. Source: American Battle Monuments Commission

 

This 7.5-acre cemetery was created in 1917 by the Graves Registration Service and inaugurated in 1919.

 

The cemetery covers an area of 7.5 acres and the US was granted perpetual use of this land free of charges and taxation by the French government.

Established in 1917 by the Graves Registration Service, part of the army’s quartermaster corps, it was intended to shelter the remains of soldiers who fell during the First World War. Many of them died of their wounds or illness in the hospitals in Paris or were victims of the influenza epidemic of 1918- 1919. 

 

At the end of the Second World War, it was decided that this cemetery would be dedicated to victims of both world wars. Consequently, an additional plot of graves was reserved to hold the remains of 24 unknown soldiers killed during World War II.

Loggias and memorial rooms were added either side of the original chapel. The graveyard comprises four plots of burial places: three for victims of the First World War with a total of 1,541 graves, and a fourth plot where 24 soldiers, marines and pilots lie, all unknown and killed during the Second World War.


The exterior surface is limestone from Val d'Arion and the four peristyle columns are monolithic. Inside the chapel, the walls and columns are made from Rocheret limestone. The ceiling is oak panelled. Four bronze plaques bear the names of the 974 men buried or lost at sea during the First World War.

The door in the left-hand wall of the chapel leads to the First World War loggia, a covered walkway with a side opening through which visitors can see the graveyards further down and, in the distance, Paris. The walls are limestone. The door in the right-hand wall of the chapel leads to the Second World War loggia, similar to that dedicated to the First World War, with the exception of the inscriptions on the walls. The original chapel, designed by the architect Charles A. Platt from New York was completed in 1932. William and Geoffrey Platt, sons of Charles A. Platt, created the loggias and memorial rooms added to the chapel in 1952. The original cemetery was inaugurated in 1919, on Memorial Day. The inauguration of the Second World War cemetery was held on 13 September 1952.


 


American Battle Monuments Commission

The American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), founded by United States Congress in 1923, is an agency of the executive branch of the federal government. Its mission is to preserve the memory of the sacrifices and deeds of the American military forces wherever they have served since 6 April 1917, the date the United States entered the First World War.


 


Visits Open every day (except 25 December and 1 January) from 9 am to 5 pm.

Admission and guided tours are free of charge.

Information is available from the visitor information centre.


 

Getting there

By train (SNCF): From Paris Saint-Lazare or La Défense, take the train to Suresnes Mont Valérien.

By bus: take the 160, 241 or 360 (Stop: Cluseret Hôpital Foch)

By road: From Pont de Suresnes (bridge), follow the blue signs: American Military Cemetery and Memorial


 

Suresnes American Cemetery

123 bd Washington 92150 Suresnes - France

Tel: +33 (0)1 46 25 01 70

Fax: +33 (0)1 46 25 01 71

E-mail: suresnes@abmc.gov


 

American Battle Monuments Commission

68 rue du 19 janvier BP 50 92380 Garches

Tel: +33 (0)1 47 01 37 49


 


 

American Battle Monuments Commission

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Practical information

Address

123 bd Washington 92150
Suresnes
Tél. : 01 46 25 01 70Fax : 01 46 25 01 71 American Battle Monuments Commission68 rue du 19 janvier BP 5092380 GarchesTel : 01 47 01 37 49

Weekly opening hours

Ouvert tous les jours de 9h00 à 17h00.

Fermetures annuelles

25 décembre et 1er janvier

Mémorial de Caen

Memorial of Caen ©Licence Creative Commons. Public domain.

 

The Mémorial de Caen is a museum and war memorial dedicated to the causes and consequences of World War II taking the year 1918 as its starting point.
 

 

Inaugurated on 6th June 1988 by François Mitterrand, the Mémorial de Caen is a landmark museum on the history of the 20th century.
 
Awarded Musée de France status, it sets out to demonstrate the importance of understanding the history of the world to understand the world today. Based on its innovative and emotion-charged displays, this City of History for Peace offers a journey through history and a pause for thought on our future via three key exhibition areas: international tensions during the Second World War, the Cold War and also the subject of Peace.
 
 
In addition to its historic interests, the Mémorial de Caen seeks to demonstrate the fragility and demands of Peace and Human Rights.
A major cultural and tourist site in Normandy, the Mémorial de Caen is set in almost 90 acres of gardens and is today one of the most popular memorial sites in Europe attracting 400,000 visitors every year. The winner of many prizes for its facilities and fascinating museum displays, the site also offers guided tours.

 

 

 

Four permanent displays and a temporary exhibition at the Mémorial de Caen give visitors a broad understanding of 20th century history.

Permanent spaces:

  • Berlin at the heart of the Cold War
  • Taches d'Opinions – Global current affairs through press cartoons
  • World War, Total War
  • The Normandy Landings and the Battle of Normandy

 

The Mémorial de Caen offers visitors a comprehensive multi-language audioguide service in addition to its guided tours.

 


The Mémorial de Caen

Esplanade Eisenhower B.P. 55026 - 14050 Caen Cedex 4

Tél : +33 (0)2 31 06 06 45

Fax : +33 (0)2 31 06 01 66

Email : contact@memorial-caen.fr

 

 

Opening times

 Prices

 

 

Site of the Caen Musée de la Paix memorial

 

 

Memory of Normandy

 

 

Site of the Calvados tourist board

 

 

 

Website of Normandy's regional tourist committee

 

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Practical information

Address

Esplanade Eisenhower - CS 55026 14066
caen Cedex 4
02 31 06 06 44

Prices

Voir lien en bas de l'article

Weekly opening hours

Voir lien en bas de l'article

Fermetures annuelles

Du 5 au 27 janvier 2014 inclus Fermé le 25 décembre et le 1er janvier

Brittany American Cemetery

Brittany American Cemetery. Source: American Battle Monuments Commission

 

The Brittany American Cemetery covers 28 acres and shelters the remains of 4,410 soldiers.

 

This 28-acre cemetery was established on a temporary cemetery set up just after the region was liberated by the 8th Infantry Division (US) on 2 August 1944.


 

After the war, when the temporary cemeteries were closed down by the American identification and interment services, the remains of American soldiers killed at war and whose families had request a burial abroad, were transferred from the temporary cemeteries to 14 permanent cemeteries.

The French government granted perpetual use of the land free of charges and taxes to the American government, in recognition of the sacrifices made to liberate Europe. The majority of the soldiers buried here were killed during the liberation of Brittany, the fall of A ranches and the violent battles around Saint Lô and Mortain.

 

The cemetery holds the remains of 4,410 soldiers. They account for 43% of burials made in the region.


 

The graves are divided into 16 plots, set out in concentric rows spreading out from the central lawn. These dead soldiers, who laid down their lives for their homeland, came from every State of the Union, the District of Colombia, Hawaii, Alaska and also Canada. Some 95 steles bear the inscription “Unknown Soldier” and shelter the remains of soldiers who could not be identified. Two of these graves contain the bodies of two soldiers who could not be separately identified. In 20 cases, two brothers lie side by side, and two others are buried in neighbouring plots.


 


The chapel, made from La Pirye granite from the Hanglé region in Brittany, comprises a vestibule, tower, memorial room and chapel. At its east end stands a sculpture representing “Youth Triumphing over Evil” made in Chauvigny limestone.

The Wall of the Missing, slightly curved, supports the terrace and bears the names, grades, units and home states of 498 unknown soldiers. They gave their life for their homeland yet there bodies were never found or formally identified. A bronze rosette marks those whose bodies were found.

The architect of the cemetery and memorial was William T. Aldrich from Boston, Massachusetts. Shurcliff & Shurcliff, also from Boston, landscaped the grounds. Lee Lawrie, from Easton, Maryland, designed the sculpture group “Youth Triumphing Over Evil” and the sculpture above the chapel’s entrance.

The cemetery’s inauguration ceremony took place after its completion on 20 July 1956.


 


American Battle Monuments Commission

The American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), founded by United States Congress in 1923, is an agency of the executive branch of the federal government. Its mission is to preserve the memory of the sacrifices and deeds of the American military forces wherever they have served since 6 April 1917, the date the United States entered the First World War.


 

Brittany American Cemetery

50240 Saint-James - France

Tel: +33 (0)2 33 89 24 90

Fax: +33 (0)2 33 89 24 91

E-mail: brittany@abmc.gov


 


Tours

Open from 9 am to 5 pm. Admission and guided tours are free of charge. Information is available from the visitor information centre.

Closed on 25 December and 1 January.

Getting there

South of Avranches via the A84, one mile from the village of Saint James.


 

American Battle Monuments Commission

68 rue du 19 janvier BP 50 92380 Garches

Tel: +33 (0)1 47 01 37


 

American Battle Monuments Commission

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Practical information

Address

50240
Saint-James

Museum of the Order of the Liberation

Façade du musée. Source : Musée de l'Ordre de la Libération

Memorial dedicated to the Companions of the Liberation

General de Gaulle created the Order of the Lib In 1965, General de Gaulle, the President of the Republic, decided that the Order of the Liberation would be located in the Invalides, an important place of national military remembrance. Five years later, the Museum of the Order of the Liberation opened to the public.

In thirty years the unquestionable prestige of the Order has allowed a great wealth of collections to be assembled in a single place. Its magnificence owes much to the diversity of the 1,061 Companions of the Liberation, which unites all sectors of the active resistance movement, bringing together teachers and military chaplains, African tirailleurs and Army Generals, students and workers, as well as 18 fighting units and 5 French towns. These collections - comprising mainly of personal objects and documents donated by the companions and their families - bear witness to their commitment and the ordeals they endured. A veritable showcase of the Order, the museum has more than 4,000 items in its permanent collection which, covering three areas (the France libre, the Resistance movement on the home front and the Deportation), illustrate the companions' journeys. Although several objects are remarkable because of their rarity, they are equally so because of the people to whom they are linked. Of particular note are Jean Moulin's civilian clothes and sub-prefect uniform, the would-be Commander General Leclerc's jacket, pennants taken from the enemy on the battlefields of Africa and Europe, Pierre-Henri Clostermann's flying jacket, the first flags of the France Libre's navy, original drawings made in the concentration camps and secret pamphlets, diaries and radio sets etc.
The museum's main hall is devoted to General de Gaulle, the founder and Grand Master of the Order. It houses personal objects, all of his French and foreign decorations, his only surviving full uniform and some of his most important war manuscripts, amongst which is the original text for the "A tous les Français" (calling all French people) poster, which was given UNESCO status in 2005. As a museum of objects, the Museum of the Order of the Liberation is an obvious complement to the renovated Museum of the Army and the Charles de Gaulle History Museum, a thoroughly modern concept, based uniquely on images and sound. A place of remembrance and history As the companions gradually die, the museum has become the focus for the Order of the Liberation's remembrance work. Because of its good position in the Invalides, it receives an average of 100,000 visitors a year and has developed several educational programmes (preparing for the national competition of the Resistance movement and the Deportation, commentated tours for 3rd, 1st and final year pupils and questionnaires for primary school pupils etc.). A place of remembrance and history, the museum is also a research and documentation centre, managing the Order's archives and the companions of the Liberation's files, a library (4,000 titles) and a photographic library (10,000 photographs). The Museum is also on the internet, thanks to the Order's website, where of particular interest is a biographical note on each Companion of the Liberation as well as a selection of some of the most significant objects and documents from the Museum's collections
Museum of the Order of the Liberation Visitor reception and tickets through the Museum of the Army Hôtel national des Invalides 129, rue de Grenelle (northern entrance) or Place Vauban (southern entrance) Telephone & fax: + 33 (0)1 47 05 04 10 Email: musee@ordredelaliberation.fr Opening times (cash desks close I hour earlier) From the 1st April to the 30th September: Monday to Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm, Sundays and Bank Holidays from 10 am to 6.30 pm From the 1st October to the 31st March: Monday to Saturday from 10 am to 5 pm, Sundays and Bank Holidays from 10 am to 5.30 pm Closed: the first Monday of each month (except in July, August and September) and the 1st January, 1st May, 1st November and the 25th December Entrance charges Full rate: 8.5 € - Reduced rate: 6.5 € (students - under 26 years old, ex-servicemen and large families). The Paris Museum Pass is accepted. Free entry: under 18's, young people between 18 and 25 years old resident or born in the European Union, job seekers and those on benefits (on production of proof dated within three months), the disabled, students of history and Art history from the School of the Louvre, and ministry of defence personnel. Tickets provide entry to the Museum of the Army, the tomb of Napoleon the First, temporary exhibitions, the Museum of Relief Maps and the Museum of the Order of the Liberation. Guided tours available by appointment only (maximum 25 people). Access RER: Line C (Invalides station) Underground: Invalides, Varenne, Latour-Maubourg Bus: 28, 49, 63, 69, 82, 83, 92, 93 Centre of documentation Photographic library 18,000 photographs (reproduction on request) Library 4,000 works (by appointment only from Monday to Friday) Postal address : Museum of the Order of the Liberation 51 bis bd de Latour-Maubourg 75700 PARIS cedex 07

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Practical information

Address

129, rue de Grenelle Hôtel national des Invalides 75007
Paris
Téléphone & fax : 01 47 05 04 10

Prices

Plein tarif : 8,5 € - Tarif réduit : 6,5 € (étudiants - de 26 ans, anciens combattants, familles nombreuses). Accessible avec la carte Paris Museum Pass. Gratuité : - de 18 ans, jeunes de 18 à 25 ans résidents ou ressortissants de l'Union européenne, demandeurs d'emploi et bénéficiaires des minima sociaux (sur présentation d'un justificatif de moins de trois mois), handicapés, étudiants de l'Ecole du Louvre, en histoire et histoire de l'Art, personnel du ministère de la Défense.

Weekly opening hours

du 1er avril au 30 septembre : du lundi au samedi de 10 h à 18 h 00, dimanche et jours fériés de 10 h à 18 h 30 du 1er octobre au 31 mars : du lundi au samedi de 10 h à 17 h 00, dimanche et jours fériés de 10 h à 17 h 30

Fermetures annuelles

Dans le cadre de la rénovation du bâtiment Robert de Cotte, le Musée de l'Ordre de la Libération sera fermé au public du 1er janvier 2012 au 1er juin 2014. Fermé Tous les premiers lundi du mois (sauf en juillet, août et septembre) et 1er janvier, 1er mai, 1er novembre, 25 décembre

Fort de Bron

The caponier. Source: Association of the Fort de Bron

This fort was responsible for preventing any enemy from crossing the heights of Chassieu or St-Priest and advancing towards Lyon.

It was responsible , thanks to the weaponry it contained (155 mm and 120 mm artillery pieces - 220 mm mortars) for preventing any enemy from crossing the heights of Chassieu or St-Priest and advancing towards Lyon, or setting up their own canons, which would then have been able to bomb the town. Trapezoid in shape, which is a characteristic of polygonal fortifications, the length of its perimeter was protected by a dry moat, which prevented the central structure from being surrounded by an infantry attack. Its buildings were covered with a mass of earth in order to absorb the effects of projectiles (an anti-impact layer). In the event of war, its garrison was increased to 841 artillery and infantrymen. More than 1500 m² of stores of various kinds housed provisions and munitions, food supplies, fuel and equipment etc.

History: Advances in artillery quite rapidly rendered this type of fortification obsolete and unsuitable. Nevertheless, the deterrent factor of any fortress could never be totally removed. It remained partly armed up until 1914. After 1920, it had only a logistical role for the nearby air base. It would be occupied by German troops in 1942, and finally given to the urban community of Lyon (la communauté urbaine de Lyon or COURLY) in 1975, to be used as a support building for the enormous water reservoirs. The town of Bron uses it for storing council equipment, for which the COURLY has granted a long lease in return for a modest rent.
The Association of the fort de Bron, created in 1982, brings together all the people and associations who want to contribute to the development, improvement and running of the place. Its administrative committee, with two permanent elected officers from the BRON district, defines the work that needs to be done and participates in the research work on future projects carried out by the council. A sports track and circular walk have been created. A long-term programme is planned for the renovation and conservation of the Fort: access to most of the moats, making some of the rooms in the Fort available for public use and the temporary opening of part of the interior for cultural, community and theatrical events.
The association is particularly keen to promote the historical heritage of this example of military architecture from the end of the 19th century. On the first Sunday of every month it organises free guided tours of the Fort and its museum, from 1.30 to 4.30 pm in winter and 2 to 5 pm in summer. It also organises occasional tours for associations and schools (requests to be addressed to the cultural department of the mairie).
It takes part in Heritage days and holds an artwork exhibition on the first Saturday and Sunday in October. The Fort de Bron belongs to the fortified defence system set up around Lyon after the war of 1870, at the instigation of General Séré de Rivières, who was responsible for fortifications on a national level. One room in the Fort bears his name. A museum is in the process of being established, with new documents and photographs from the period, as well as a visual display showing the different parts of the fort.
Fort de Bron Avenue Maréchal de Tassigny 69500 Bron Association du fort de Bron Bt 74 Maison des sociétés square Grimma 69500 Bron Tel: + 33 (0)6 60 65 25 23 E-mail: chaandre@numericable.fr

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Practical information

Address

Avenue Maréchal de Tassigny 69500
Bron
Tél. : 06 60 65 25 23

Weekly opening hours

tous les premiers dimanches de chaque mois en période d'hiver de 13h30 à 16h30 et en période d'été de 14h à 17h, en après midi.