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leaving port and lighthouse |
Because we left Poole later than scheduled on Saturday, we
did not dock in Dunkrk until about 1300 instead of 0800 and so we had a much
reduced time ashore. We spent the
morning reading and being lazy! It was a
lovely, sunny mild day and so the lack of time available was a pity.. We had an
early lunch before being quickly off the boat and onto a “wartime memories”
coach excursion.
The departure from Dunkirk quay side
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the Dunkirk beach memorial |
was not very
picturesque (very industrial) but we were soon on the outskirts of the town and
made our way to the memorial at the top of the beach where the 1940 evacuation
(operation “dynamo”) took place. Our guide had photographs of the original events
and we could see how it all unfolded in the area around us.
Our next stop was the fort created in the dunes during the
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part of the fort in the dunes |
19th century to protect France from attack from the east. It was one of a series of forts from the
Swiss border to the North Sea. It was
very solidly constructed but had suffered from bombing in the 2nd
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the fort in the dunes |
world war and some French soldiers were killed by a German bomb. After invading the area, the Germans
installed radar on part of the fort. It
is now a museum/exhibition destination and had information about operation
dynamo.
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English portion of Dunkirk cemetery |
We then went to a corner of Dunkirk
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the engraved glass window |
cemetery which was
allotted to British forces and maintained by the war graves commission. It had a small chapel with an engraved window
depicting the beach struggle. There were
hundreds of graves including several of Battle of Britain pilots.
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the barn with the oak trees |
Our fourth destination was to a field several miles away
where some British soldiers had been captured during the 1940 retreat to
Dunkirk. 100 of them had been herded
into a
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the peace memorial |
cowshed by German SS troops and then murdered. The site has become a memorial and also has
oak trees grown in England planted in avenues plus a peace sculpture and a
mound dedicated to reconciliation.
We then made our way back to the Astoria which then began
its long departure out of Dunkirk. So
the tour went well but we felt cheated that we could not spend more time in the
town.
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