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zhhfort3t2z
Wysłany: Pią 2:53, 27 Maj 2011
Temat postu: Battlefields And Football - Part 1 Ferries, Northe
ter Monday, 3:30am and I’m woken up at agitate and I must voicelessly lurk out of the house without waking up everyone. Thankfully, there was tiny overnight snow so my car didn’t absence also many sorting out ahead I was en path to Dover for my 7am ferry intersection to Bolougne. Everything went smoothly and I arrived in France as maneuvered and headed off towards my first destination, the V2 rocket intricate at Eperlecques. This was an of a digit of sites in northern France where the Nazis fired V1 and V2 rockets at Britain in 1944. Eperlecques was the target of a heavy ventilation aggression which destroyed part of the intricate. There is a massive chunk of the roof that was beat away and a number of cavities in the forest which tin still be seen. Entrance to the site was 7 Euros and roaming circular, exploring the site and listening to the annotation ambition take around 30 minutes.
From there, my next stop was to the area around Wormhoud and Esquelbecq where around 65 British infantry were massacred by the SS later they were captured during the recede to Dunkirk. The slaughter occurred while the men were shook into a barn and grenades were thrown inside. Survivors were shot although 15 men did run. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find whichever of the memorials so I moved on to Brandhoek cemetery.
Brandhoek is were Captain Noel Chavasse is buried. Capt Chavasse is one of just 3 men to have been awarded Britain’s highest award for bravery, the Victoria Cross. In counting, he was too awarded the Military Cross. I’m currently perusing a book entitled “In Foreign Fields” by Dan Collins and it is almost soldiers who have been awarded awards in Afghanistan and Iraq. When you realise what a fighter had to do in mandate to be award one MC, it really makes you realise what a heroic man Capt Chavasse was primarily when he was a member of the Royal Medical Corps and not bombarded a shot during the campaign. His awards were for rescuing men in peril. Brandhoek is one of the countless little cemeteries in the area. At one point, I stopped at a cemetery on the Somme which was in the medium of a planters field. I scanned the surrounding countryside and counted another 7 cemeteries. Each of these cemeteries could have everything from 500 to 2,500 men buried there so its no long before you start to appreciative the number of men who died here.
My next stop was close to the village of Passchendaele at the largest British Military Cemetery at Tynecot. More than 12,000 men are buried here. From the graveyard, you can see for a few miles in all intentions along fields and it seems hard to assume the carnage that was there 90 annuals antecedent. The observers median gives a history of the area and the names of some of the dead and missing are broadcast quietly over spokesmen.
From Tynecot, I began to head behind towards Ypres stopping at Hill 61 (Sanctuary Wood) ashore the way back. There is a small museum and some preserved ditches here. During my tumble,
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, the climate wasn’t kind and however it was nought like as bad for conditions would have been during World War I, the base of the ditches still seeing pretty horrible. It spend a few Euros apt obtain in and this was the first area I truly began to discern the effects of the infamous mud
My next proposed stop was the Hooge Crater. As earlier in the day, I skirmished to situate it yet I did find a small neutral museum called the Hooge Crater Museum which had a magnetic accumulation of artefacts including a British Ambulance and a Victoria Cross. By immediately it was merely about 2pm yet the snow was coming down quite hard so I judged ample was enough for the day and headed into Ypres to my hotel. However,
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, my sightseeing for the day wasn’t over as I still have to see the famous Cloth Hall which was more or less destroyed (since entirely rebuilt) and the Last Post ritual which is carried out at 8pm each night at the Menin Gate. I forever find the Last Post a very haunting and moving object to listen to. After it was achieved, 2 wreaths were laid by young British soldiers and this was followed by a recital
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