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Sir John Monash Centre

Inaugurated in April 2018, the Sir John Monash Centre tells the story of Australians on the Western Front during the First World War.

More than 416,000 Australians volunteered, among them 295,000 Australians served on the Western Front between 1916 and 1918. Of these, 132,000 were wounded and 46,000 lost their lives.

The Sir John Monash Centre, named after one of the most respected Australian generals of the First World War, was built on the site of the battle of Villers-Bretonneux (1918), a significant battle in which Australian soldiers played an important role. The Centre is located behind the Australian National Memorial and is adjacent the Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery, in which over 2,000 Commonwealth soldiers are buried. The Memorial, inaugurated in 1938, commemorates close to 11,000 Australian soldiers who died on the Western Front in France and have no known grave.

Upon arrival to the site, visitors are invited to connect to the SJMC Wi-Fi, download the SJMC App on their smartphones and connect their earphones. The App (available in French, English and German) acts as a ‘virtual and personal tour guide’ through the Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery, the Australian National Memorial and the Sir John Monash Centre.

This technology allows visitors to discover the stories of Australian soldiers buried in the cemetery or commemorated on the Memorial. The app also offers a 360° panorama from the Memorial’s tower to explore the Somme Valley and learn more about its history during the war.

Inside the Sir John Monash Centre, visitors are invited to follow the journey taken by Australians during the War - from Australia before the war, to the harsh introduction to the Somme in 1916, and finally to their finest achievements in 1918. It culminates with their return to Australia, a country irrevocably changed by the War despite its distance from the actual battlefield. Visitors learn about the Australians’ experiences in their own words through letters, diaries, life-size images and the use of new and archival footage, animation, maps and soundscapes.

At the centre of the experience is an immersive gallery, which takes visitors on an emotional and educational journey to the heart of the battles of Villers-Bretonneux and Le Hamel.

A visit to the Sir John Monash Centre provides an enhanced understanding of the Australian experience on the Western Front, and the impact and loss suffered by a young nation.

 


Commemorative service: Alongside British and French troops, the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) landed on the Gallipoli Peninsula on 25 April. That fateful day marked the beginning of an eight-month campaign that claimed tens of thousands of lives, including over 8,000 Australians.

A year later, 25 April was officially named "Anzac Day" when Australia, New Zealand and troops in Egypt celebrated the anniversary of the landing.

In remembrance of those who served during the Great War and more recent wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations, Anzac Day ceremonies are held around the world each year. An Anzac Day Dawn service is held at the Australian National Memorial in Villers-Bretonneux, near Amiens. It takes place on the site of an intense battle in 1918 where, from early April, Australian units helped defend Villers-Bretonneux during the German spring offensive.


 

Education program : To make the most of their visit to the Sir John Monash Centre, teachers are encouraged to book a hands-on activities workshop for their students. The Centre offers a wide range of activities for all ages as well as tailored hands-on activities to suit students’ interests and meet curriculum objectives.

As they uncover the true story of Valentine Rochfort through objects he would have been familiar with, students immerse themselves in the Australian experience of the Western Front.

For more information : https://sjmc.gov.au/education/experience/

 

 


 

Sources : Centre Sir John Monash - Crédits photos : ©SJMC

 

https://www.facebook.com/sirjohnmonashcentre

https://instagram.com/sirjohnmonashcentre

https://twitter.com/sirjohnmonash

 

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Practical information

Address

Route de Villers-Bretonneux 80800
Fouilloy
03.60.62.01.40

Prices

Free

Weekly opening hours

Every day from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Fermetures annuelles

Closed from December 25, 2020 to January 1, 2021 inclusive, and from February 1, 2021 to February 21, 2021 inclusive.

Site Web : www.sjmc.gov.au

Gravelotte

The Hall of Remembrance ©Jwh at Wikipedia Luxembourg

It is mid-August 1870 and Napoleon III has declared war on Prussia. Moselle is set to be the scene of three bloody battles, including the Battle of Gravelotte.

Resource page: Musée de la Guerre de 1870 et de l'Annexion
Press pack
 

The Battle of Gravelotte (to the Germans) or Saint-Privat (to the French) took place on 18 August 1870, west of Metz. It paved the way for the French army’s capitulation and Napoleon III’s surrender, on 2 September 1870, at Sedan.


Musée de la Guerre 1870 et de l'Annexion - 11, rue de Metz - 57130 Gravelotte
- Tel.: +33 (0)3 87 33 69 40 -
contact.musee-guerre-70@moselle.fr
 
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Practical information

Address

57130
Gravelotte

The CWGC Experience

 >> Take a look behind the scenes at the work of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), which honours the memory of those soldiers killed throughout the world in the two world wars.

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission is over a century old. For the first time, visitors can take a look behind the scenes at the work that is needed to commemorate the 1.7 million Commonwealth casualties from the First and Second World Wars.

The CWGC Experience is a unique new visitor attraction that shines a light on the work of the remarkable organisation at the heart of remembrance of the war dead.

Our free audio guide will walk you through each aspect of the work we do: from the story of how we still recover and rebury the dead today, to the skilled artisan craftsmen at work maintaining the world’s most impressive and recognisable monuments and memorials, a trip to the battlefields of the Western Front is not complete without a visit to the CWGC Experience.

Sources : ©The CWGC Experience
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Practical information

Address

5-7 rue Angèle Richard - 62217
Beaurains
03 21 21 52 75

Prices

Admission - Free - Parking reservation charge for vehicles with over 12 seats: € 20 / Over 20-seaters: € 50

Weekly opening hours

9H – 16H

Fermetures annuelles

December and January

Site Web : www.cwgc.org

39-45 MEMORIAL

Complex of blockhouses in the fort of Cité d’Alet, Saint-Malo, with the museum entrance. © TCY / fr.wikipedia

Built in 1994 by Saint-Malo city council for the 50th anniversary of liberation, the memorial is installed in the German anti-aircraft defences built from 1942 onwards, in the grounds of the 18th-century fort of Cité d’Alet.

In an area of just over 500 m2, split between three levels and ten rooms, visitors are plunged into those dark years of Saint-Malo’s history. Photos, mannequins, weaponry and reconstructed scenes recreate the atmosphere of the period, based on the following themes:

 

  • The invasion of 1940
  • How the port was used
  • Building the bunkers
  • Cité d’Alet (one of the most fortified sites on the Atlantic Wall)
  • The battle for liberation
  • The island of Cézembre (one of the most heavily bombed sites of the Second World War)

 

The bunker itself has been restored to its original state. Tours (guided only) begin at set times and last one hour. Tours are followed at certain times by the screening of an archive film (45 mins), which charts the different stages of the battle for liberation, then shows the reconstruction of the old city, 80% destroyed in the fighting.

 

From June to September, themed tours are offered:

- “History” tour: Almost entirely in the bunker. Evokes the period 1940-44 in Saint-Malo. With film screening.

- “Discovery of the fortifications” tour: 75% outside, 25% in the bunker. Evokes the construction of the 18th-century and Second World War fortifications found on the site. Evokes the everyday lives of soldiers in those fortifications. No film screening.

The two tours are complementary.

 

Dias-MEMORIAL-39-45

Heavy machine-gun position in its original bunker.
Only reconstruction of its kind in France - A loophole in the corridors of the bunker.
- The radio and telephone transmission room.
- US transmission post.
Credit: © Mémorial 39-45

 

Sources : ©MÉMORIAL 39-45
 

2019 PRICES

 

 

39-45 Memorial

Pass for

themed tours

39-45 Memorial

(June to September)

Adults

Groups of over 10 adults (per person)

Schoolchildren, students*

Families (2 adults + 2 or more children)*

Members of the armed forces, school parties (Saint-Malo only), jobseekers, people in receipt of Income Support

€ 6

€ 4

€ 3

€ 15

Free

 

€ 9

 

€ 4

€ 20

Free

 

 

Weekly opening hours

 

 

Tour start times

 

April, May, October

Closed on Mondays

 

 

June, September

Closed on Mondays

 

 

July, August

Daily

 

 

39-45 Memorial

Guided tours only (1 hour). Please arrive 20 minutes early.

 

Maximum 25 people at a time.

Groups by arrangement in the morning.

 

* Tours with film screening (45 mins extra):

“The Battle of Saint-Malo”

 

 

2.30 pm*

3.15 pm

4.30 pm*

 

 

 

 

Annual closing on 3/11

 

History” tour

2.30 pm*
3.15 pm

4.30 pm*

 

Discovery of the fortifications” tour

10.30 am, Thursday to Sunday

 

 

History” tour

10.15 am*
2 pm*
3 pm*

4 pm*

 

Discovery of the fortifications” tour

11 am
5 pm

Closed on 1 May and 1 November.

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Practical information

Address

Allée Gaston Buy 35400
Saint-Malo
+33 (0)2 99 82 41 74

Prices

See table bottom left.

Mémoire du Maquis, history resource

The Les Glières Plateau is a Second World War remembrance site. From 31 January to 26 March 1944, nearly 500 men gathered here, under the command of Lieutenant

Tom Morel, then Captain Maurice Anjot, to take delivery of weapons. After two months, those who had chosen “to live in freedom or to die” faced a massive, combined attack from the forces of Vichy and the Wehrmacht. Over 140 maquisards lost their lives

Things to see on the Les Glières Plateau, a site which is emblematic of Resistance values:


The Mémoire du Maquis history resource is open to the public approximately ten months of the year, and activities, events and visits are regularly organised there. Run by the Haute-Savoie Departmental Authority, this multimedia space is equipped with interactive terminals that enable you to freely consult the CD-ROM ‘The Resistance en Haute-Savoie’ and the website ‘Mémoire des Alpes’. It also has a projection room, where you can watch a historical portrayal of Les Glières, ‘To live in freedom or to die’ (52 mins) or the documentary ‘August 1944: the liberation of Annecy and Haute-Savoie’ (25 mins). There is also a gift shop.


The historical discovery trail: In the middle of the plateau, around the parachute drop zone, this waymarked trail charts the organisation and everyday life of the Les Glières battalion during the winter of 1944. Lasting two hours, it is accessible to walkers of all abilities. A worksheet is available for children to complete by reading the information boards along the path.


The National Monument to the Resistance: This work of modern art by Émile Gilioli symbolises resistance and hope. It was built in 1973 on the initiative of the Association des Glières. Inside the monument are other works by the artist. When you approach the Les Glières Plateau, the National Monument to the Resistance appears to sit on the grass of this vast meadow, its geometry mimicking the shapes of the mountains, in particular the Montagne de Jalouvre, which serves as its backdrop. It is a sculpture without substance, a bas-relief that appears disproportionately larger against a background of nature, its white mass standing out from the rest of the landscape.

 

 

Sources: © Mémoire du Maquis, accueil historique

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Practical information

Address

Plateau des Glières 74570
Thorens-Glière
04 50 33 21 31

Prices

- Full price: € 3 - Young people: € 2 (ages 9-25) - Groups: € 2 (over 11 people) - Free for children under 8 and veterans - Passes/combination tickets: two-site pass, family pass

Weekly opening hours

Daily except Saturdays, 9.30 am to 12.30 pm and 1.30 pm to 5 pm July and August: Open daily, 10 am to 12.30 pm and 2 pm to 6 pm

Fermetures annuelles

October to February Local tourist office: Office de Tourisme de Pays de Fillière - 22, place de la Mairie - 74570 Thorens-Glières - Tel.: +33 (0)4 50 22 40 31

La Mounière – Maison des Mémoires de Septfonds

A small village with a big history

In the light of the theme of displaced peoples and the values of welcome and hospitality, find out how the Camp de Judes, which opened in 1939 to provide shelter for Spanish refugees of the retirada (the mass exodus of Spanish republicans after Franco came to power), has made Septfonds an important Second World War remembrance site. La Mounière also offers an insight into how the development of the hatmaking industry in the 19th century influenced the village’s architecture.

Discover local personalities, some of them famous - like the aviator Dieudonné Costes, one of the pioneers of aviation and transatlantic flights - and how each contributed to the history and heritage of Septfonds.

La Mounière is an interactive museum, whose themes are discovered using multimedia resources. The visit can be extended with two outdoor trails, one around the remembrance sites in the commune, connected to the camp, the other around the theme of hatmaking and its architectural impact.

The museum has a particular focus on appealing to young people.

All content is translated into Spanish and English.

 

Sources: © La Mounière – Maison des Mémoires de Septfonds
 
La Mounière | Maison des Mémoires de Septfonds
www.septfonds-la-mouniere.com
15 Rue des Déportés - 82240 Septfonds - Email: mairie@septfonds.fr
Tel.: +33 (0)5 63 64 90 27 - Mob.: +33 (0)6 70 36 86 90
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Practical information

Address

15 rue des déportés - 82240
SEPTFONDS
Tél. : 05 63 64 90 27 - Port : 06 70 36 86 90

Prices

- Full price: € 3 - Concessions (students, retired people, jobseekers, children under 12): € 2 - Groups (at least 10 people, without guide): € 2 (please enquire about rate with guide) - Free to children under 6

Weekly opening hours

10 May to 30 September: Wednesday and Saturday, 2.30 pm to 6.30 pm and by arrangement
July/August: Wednesday to Sunday, 2.30 pm to 6.30 pm 
October to May: by arrangement 
- Open on Sundays throughout July and August

Site Web : www.septfonds.fr

Mont-Mouchet

The Mont-Mouchet Memorial. Source: www.margeride-truyere.com

Set in grandiose and stunning countryside, at the heart of the Margeride forest, stands a museum in honour of the Auvergne Resistance

Mont-Mouchet can be found in grandiose and stunning countryside, at the heart of the Margeride forest, 1335 metres above sea level, between the départements of Cantal, Haute-loire and Lozère. It was here, from 20th May 1944, that one of the five major Maquis in France was established, under Colonel Gaspard, Regional Commander of the F.F.I for zone R6. On 2nd June 1944, it was attacked for the first time by a German battalion. Then, on 10th and 11th June, 2,200 Wehrmacht soldiers, unleashed fierce fighting here against the Maquis fighters. Forced back to the "La Truyère Reduit", the maquisards suffered an even heavier assault on 20th June, forcing them to lose contact. After the fighting at Mont-Mouchet, the reconstituted F.F.I. companies, split into 20 guerrilla warfare zones, harried the Nazi troops almost everywhere throughout the four Auvergne départements until the Liberation of France. Throughout the sector, losses were severe on both the F.F.I and German sides. Several villages were destroyed. With the approval and support of General de Gaulle, the National Monument to the French Resistance and Maquis was erected here and inaugurated on 9th June 1946, the work of Parisian sculptor Raymond Coulon. Each year at the end of June, a major Remembrance Gathering is held at the foot of the monument.

The first museum was established in the Forestry Centre, rebuilt after the Liberation on the site of the one destroyed in the fighting, which had housed the General Staff of the F.F.I. This was replaced by a new building, financed by National and Regional Government and opened on 8th May 1989. This museum to the Resistance houses a fascinating collection of material and documents recalling the situation in which France found itself in 1939, the four years of German occupation, Pétain's doctrine, the Gestapo, Deportation, the Resistance, etc. A video details the fighting at Mont-Mouchet, Saugues and La Truyère. Tour duration approx. 1 hour.


Musée de la Résistance du Mont-Mouchet 43300 Auvers Tel.: +33 (0) 471 74 11 28 / 11 91 Fax: +33 (0) 471 74 11 91 p.koller@haut-allier.com

Opening times From April 1 to September 30: daily except Monday in May, June and September from 10:00 to 12:30 and 14:00 to 18:00.

Group visits welcome during the week by appointment

Prices children under 10 : free Children aged 10 and over, school groups: €2 Age 15 and over: €5 Groups (minimum 20 people): €4

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Practical information

Address

43300
Auvers
Tél : 04 71 74 11 91 Fax : 04 71 77 19 14

Prices

Enfants (+ de 10 ans) et groupes scolaires: 2 € Adulte et enfant (+ de 15 ans) : 5 € Groupes (20 personnes minimum) : 4 € Gratuit : Enfant (- de 10 ans)

Weekly opening hours

Du 28 avril au 30 septembre 2012 : tous les jours sauf le lundi en mai, juin et septembre, de 10h à 12h30 et de 14h à 18h

Lieu de Mémoire au Chambon-sur-Lignon

?View leaflet   ? Page Facebook

A unique site dedicated to the history of the Righteous and the Resistance movements during the Second World War.

Pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, entre Haute-Loire et Ardèche, le Chambon-sur-Lignon et les villages alentours ont accueilli et aidé de nombreux réfugiés, la plupart juifs pourchassés dans une Europe sous le joug nazi. C’est pour transmettre les valeurs d’humanité et d’engagement qui ont permis ce sauvetage à grande échelle que le Lieu de Mémoire a ouvert en juin 2013.

 

Un Lieu de mémoire, d’histoire et d’éducation :

 

Le parcours historique s’organise autour des différentes formes de résistances : civile, spirituelle et armée. Il est complété par une salle mémorielle où des écrans tactiles permettent de visionner des témoignages de sauveteurs, réfugiés et résistants. Les outils multimédias facilitent la compréhension des événements, même pour les plus jeunes.

 

Le Service éducatif du Lieu de Mémoire propose toute l’année des visites et des ateliers pédagogiques adaptés aux différents niveaux scolaires. Pour les élèves, c’est l’occasion d’aborder la Seconde Guerre mondiale sous un angle différent. ?Catalogue pédagogique en lien

 

 

 

Sources : ©Lieu de Mémoire au Chambon-sur-Lignon - ©Luc Olivier – MDDT43

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Practical information

Address

23 Route du Mazet 43400
Le Chambon-sur-Lignon
04 71 56 56 65

Prices

- Plein tarif : 5 € - Jeunes : 3 € / Scolaires : 2 € - Groupes : 3.50 € - Gratuité : moins de 10 ans - Pass/tarifs groupés éventuels : Carte ambassadeur, 10 €

Weekly opening hours

Toute l’année sur réservation pour les scolaires et les groupes Public individuel : 1er mars au 31 mai et 1er octobre au 30 novembre : du mercredi au samedi, 14h/18h 1er juin au 30 septembre : du mardi au dimanche, 10h/12h30 et 14h/18h

Fermetures annuelles

Fermé en décembre, janvier et février, sauf pour les scolaires et les groupes. Office de tourisme - 2 Route de Tence / 43400 Le Chambon-sur-Lignon - 04.71.59.71.56

The Lafayette Escadrille Memorial

 

Erected in Marnes-la-Coquette to honour the memory of American pilots who gave their lives during the First World War, wearing French uniforms even before the United States joined the war, which happened in 1917.

 

The idea for the monument came from a former pilot, Edgard Guerard Hamilton, who helped the Allies to locate the bodies of their dead after the war. He believed it would be a good idea for the American pilots to lay side by side in a memorial that would keep alive the memory of the engagement alongside the French.
 
This project received a warm welcome from French and American personalities who came together in 1923 to form the "Lafayette Escadrille Memorial" association to turn this dream into reality.
 
While significant donations were made by wealthy American families, smaller donations came from families all over France and the US.
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Practical information

Address

5 Bvd R. Poincaré - 92430
Marnes-la-Coquette
01 47 95 34 76

Fort de Metz-Queuleu

©Fort de Metz-Queuleu


? Dates for your diary > Latest news ? Guided tours  ?Conferences & film screenings  Fort de Queuleu website


 

 The Fort de Queuleu was part of the first chain of fortifications around Metz. Its construction, begun by the French between 1867 and 1868, was largely resumed by the Germans following the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine.

 

Between October 1943 and August 1944, a camp spécial (‘special camp’) run by the Gestapo was installed in Barracks II/Pillbox A. The camp was used for the internment of Resistance fighters, saboteurs, smugglers, hostages and those who tried to avoid the compulsory labour camps in Germany.

 

Conditions were horrific: the prisoners were interrogated under torture, and cooped up blindfolded with their hands and feet bound. Thirty-six people died here, while four managed to escape.

 

Between 1 500 and 1 800 prisoners were held here before being sent to concentration camps or prison, or sentenced to death. After Liberation, the camp was used as a centre de séjour surveillé (‘guarded residence centre’) between December 1944 and March 1946.

A French fort adapted by the Germans which was part of the first line of defences around Metz (1867-1918)

 

The Fort de Queuleu was part of the first chain of defensive fortifications around the city of Metz. Its construction, begun by the French under the Second Empire, in 1867, was largely resumed by the Germans following the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine after the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). The fort had been occupied by French troops during the siege of the city between August and October 1870. The barracks, powder magazines, artillery positions, adjoining batteries, galleries of countermines and shelters all bear witness to the changes in military architecture and the advances in weaponry between the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Meanwhile, the central cavalry barracks constitutes a very fine example of Séré de Rivières architecture in Metz.

 

However, with the construction of Metz’s second chain of fortifications, beginning in 1899, the Fort de Queuleu lost its strategic importance and only minor alterations were made to it. As a result, the fort remains as it was in the second half of the 19th century.

 

During the First World War, it may well have been used by the Germans as a camp for French prisoners of war, although there is little information available on the subject. A complex network of trenches preserved outside the fort is evidence of the defences built by the Germans to safeguard Metz between 1914 and 1918.

 

A Nazi concentration camp in Metz (1943-1944)

 

During the Second World War, the fort served as a barracks for the soldiers of the Maginot Line. Following the defeat of 1940, it was briefly used as a detention camp for prisoners of war (a Stalag). Between March 1943 and September 1944, it went on to be used as a KZ-Außenkommando, or ‘subcamp’, subordinated to the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp, in Bas-Rhin, mainly for use by the SS. A hundred prisoners were held here, mostly German common-law criminals and Poles. Some were put to work on building the Metz-Frescaty airbase. It was one of the Reich’s westernmost concentration subcamps.

 

A special camp at the centre of Nazi repression in Moselle (1943-1944)

 

Between October 1943 and August 1944, a Sonderlager, or ‘special camp’, run by the Gestapo was installed in Barracks II. Between 1 500 and 1 800 prisoners (men and women) were interrogated and interned there before being sent to concentration camps (Natzweiler-Struthof, Dachau, etc.), ‘re-education’ camps (Schirmeck) or prisons. Among them were Resistance fighters, saboteurs, smugglers, hostages, those who tried to avoid the compulsory labour camps in Germany, and Russian prisoners. Most were held in overcrowded cells, unable to wash and not allowed to speak or move, under the brutal supervision of SS guards and camp commandant Georg Hempen. Resistance leaders were kept in solitary confinement - dark, dank dungeons to which only the commandant had access. The SS officers ‘industrialised’ interrogation and used torture. The conditions in which the prisoners were held were horrific, and most were cooped up blindfolded with their hands and feet bound. Thirty-six people died in the fort, while four managed to escape, in April 1944.

 

An important monument from the Battle of Metz (1944)

 

During the liberation of Metz, the fort had its baptism of fire between 17 and 21 November 1944, in fighting between the US army and German troops aided by the Volkssturm (armed civilians, First World War veterans, members of the Hitler Youth, etc.), who were entrenched here. The fort was severely damaged in the bombardment, before finally surrendering.

 

 

One of the biggest ‘guarded residence centres’ (1944-1946)

 

 

The fort was used as a centre de séjour surveillé, or ‘guarded residence centre’, by the French government between December 1944 and March 1946. Initially reserved for German civilians and their families, the site went on to serve as a detention centre for administrative internees arrested on charges of collaboration, propaganda, anti-patriotism or informing (up to 4 400 people were interned here). It was one of the largest centres of its kind in France. People of various nationalities were interned here, including French, Germans, Italians, Luxembourgers, Poles, Spaniards and Yugoslavs.

 

A camp for German prisoners of war (1946-1947)

 

Between 1946 and 1947, the Fort de Queuleu was a camp de prisonniers (‘prisoner camp’) for German soldiers. Assigned this purpose on 1 June 1946, it was subordinated to Depot 211 for prisoners of war in Metz. Run by Monsieur Massu, the camp was visited by the Red Cross on 13 February 1947. One hundred and forty-five prisoners were being held there at the time, in Barracks II/Pillbox A. The accommodation was heated, the rations were adequate and there was hot water for washing. An infirmary was run by Dr Dietrich Ostler. The prisoners were assigned to unloading goods trucks, clearing a canal and carrying building materials.

 

A camp for Indochinese workers (1948-1950)

 

To replace the mobilised workforce, the ‘Mandel Plan’, drawn up in 1938 by the then Minister for the Colonies, Georges Mandel, provided for colonial workers to be brought to France to take the place of those men who had been called up to fight. Around 20 000 workers from French Indochina arrived in France at the beginning of the Second World War. The labour ministry’s indigenous, North African and colonial labour service (MOI) was put in charge of recruiting the necessary colonial workers, shipping them to France and allocating them to the national defence industries. Most were recruited by force from among the poor peasantry of the protectorates of Annam and Tonkin and the colony of Cochinchina. These unskilled workers were used mainly as forestry, agricultural and industrial labour, in particular in the armaments factories and powder magazines. After the French defeat, they were lodged in huge camps in the Free Zone, where they were subjected to military discipline as well as very harsh living conditions. At Liberation, the majority wanted to return home as soon as possible, but their repatriation was delayed due to postwar disorganisation and events affecting French Indochina. As a result, several hundred Indochinese workers occupied the Fort de Queuleu between 1948 and 1950: 537 in October 1948, 438 in December 1948, 323 in March 1949, 296 in April 1949, 188 in May 1949, 163 in August 1949, 176 in September 1949, 213 in October 1949, 156 in December 1949, 191 in January 1950, 35 in April 1950 (repatriations to Vietnam gathered pace in this period) and 79 in May 1950. The suffering of exile gave way to exasperation and anger. Echoing the Vietminh independence movement in Indochina, the Indochinese workers in metropolitan France called for emancipation and equal rights with other workers. Graffiti on the walls of the Fort de Queuleu is a sign of their presence here.

 

A remembrance site (since 1971)

 

At the entrance to the fort stands a memorial to resistance and deportation, inaugurated on 20 November 1977, which marks the entrance to the remembrance site. The monument, containing the ashes of an unknown deportee, was designed by Metz-born architect Roger Zonca, who was involved in the reconstruction of the area.
 

Since 1971, the protection and promotion of the Fort de Queuleu in Metz has been the task of the Association du Fort de Metz-Queuleu pour la mémoire des internés-déportés et la sauvegarde du site (formerly the Amicale des anciens déportés du fort de Queuleu et de leurs familles), made up of volunteers.

  
 
  

Click on the photo of your choice to expand it 

 

From left to right: Entrance gate and entrance to the Nazi special camp - Cells
- Area damaged by the bombardments of 1944 - The commandant’s office
- Corridor of the camp - Main access bridge to the Fort de Queuleu.

 

Membership form

 

 

Sources : ©Fort de Metz-Queuleu

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Practical information

Address

Rue du Fort de Queuleu/Allée Jean Burger - 57070
Metz
+33 (0)6 95 67 42 80

Weekly opening hours

Sunday afternoon, 2 pm to 5 pm/6 pm (according to season) http://www.fort-queuleu.com/visites/

Fermetures annuelles

Late December to early January Office de Tourisme de Metz - 2 place d’Armes - CS 80367 - 57007 Metz Cedex 1 - Tel.: +33 (0)3 87 39 00 00 - Fax: +33 (0)3 87 36 59 43 - Email: contact@tourisme-metz.com