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Great job on these videos. Had a tour at the site at Longues-sur-Mer. Loving your Normandy series. Shivers just observing the beaches and the cliffs. The only other place I have ever been that was more spiritually overwhelming than the American Cemetery was the Arizona Memorial. You can certainly feel the weight of those that sacrificed at both. Keep up your great work. Wonderful job by the French maintaining access to these sites so all can remember.
@@TheHistoryUnderground Only too bad that right after the war people wanted to forget and a lot of these places were demolished. The historic significance of these sites only became clear much, much later. Now they are being maintained by the French and even new excavations still take place today. The unbelievable sacrifice of all the soldiers who lost their lives on the beaches for our freedom can never be forgotten! Love your tour by the way.
Hello from Canada! Love your Utube videos! Planning a trip to France next year! Taking my 11 year old son with me! He's going to have a field day exploring all bunkers along the beach! We can't wait to visit Normandy 😍!
The holes you called damage on the top of the observation bunker are actually recessed holes with rings for attaching camouflage netting. Notice all the bunkers you see all over a Europe have them. Great work on your videos, we were at all those places from Normandy, Bastogne and Munich and the Eagles nest last June for D-day 75
The Firing Forward Control Bunker was not complete at time of D Day. There was a lot of soil still in front of it blocking the view to the sea. This was only cleared for the making of The Longest Day film. Great videos though. Very informative for people who will never get the chance to visit Normandy.
Another addition to this extraordinary series of video. To walk here and see this place and time in history is a phenomenal experience. I do however have to dock you some points for not carrying a flashlight😊 Thanks for providing these videos. Always wanted to travel there but these videos are a welcome and appreciated alternative.
Thank you very much for also visiting the British/Canadian sectors of the beach. I really appreciate your the videos thank you for sharing them. Talking of the naval bombardment it wasn't until I saw it on a map how close the brave sailors of the battleship USS Arkansas came close to Omaha, beach this was 1/3rd of the distance from the shore to the naval bombardment area to really rain fire down from her 12" guns to turn the situation around for the guys on the beach along with French cruiser Montcalm & French light cruiser George Leygues, it was a dangerous manoeuvre but it paid off!
@@TheHistoryUnderground Yeah.Did get a lot of done but not that. Ended the last mornign with an early breakfast served my Mdm Gondree herself at her café though. I believe she was 4 years old or something when the Brits popped in with the Gliders? That was pretty huge..
My fave story about Longues-sur-Mer is the blind local lad who paced out the distances between the gun emplacements and passed the details to the ressistance. enabled the Royal Navy to place fire
Great job, sobering to think of all the lives lost that day & in the battles that followed. As a kid growing up my neighbour Neil MacEachern landed at Juneau beach. He passed away a few years ago. Wish now I had talked to him about D-Day. He never really talked much about his war experience. Thanks for doing this.
I've been there a few times and its amazing to imagine the place teeming with Germans before the invasion. Imagine the noise and bedlam on the morning of the 6th.
"If you have someone in your house who uses too much toilet paper...."- priceless. You've been married long enough to comment on such a travesty. Great videos- I'm very jealous of everywhere you've been. The closest I've been to WWII stuff in while stationed on Okinawa- went into some of the caves down by Shuri Castle and down to Suicide Cliffs. Very cool, indeed- please keep them coming and thanks.
@@TheHistoryUnderground I can guarantee that you would love it- a lot of stuff to see. The cave that I went into had the entrance flanked by machine gun nests and there was a big cavern where some Japanese nurses were gunned down by their own Army rather than be captured by the U.S.. It's a shrine now. Plus, the location is a great jump off point for Ie Shima, where Ernie Pyle was killed and Iwo Jima. If you need any other "crew" to go with you, I'm game!
First visited the battery as a kid with my parents in 72. At that time all of this stuff was just left as. To the rear of one of the casemates we found, still stacked, a whole pile of shells, transport rings in their nose ends, half buried in sand with but some broken chicken wire surrounding. Long gone, probably as part of the 84 celebrations clean up.
JD we were told by our escort guide that what looked like pock marked concrete were actually man made recesses used for foliage. It would make sense given the uniformity of the indentations. Have you been able to confirm this? Really enjoyed these visits and you make them come alive again for me and my sons as I always forward the videos. Thank you so much for the dedication to this on behalf of all those who fought and fell during this campaign.
The holes in the observasionbunker are no damage. The Germans puth dirt in it so there can grow weeds in for natural camouflage. The bunker is also a location for the film "the longest day" a gide told me that the special roof was made just for the film... I like to see some pictures from the bunker in war time. Never found some. Sorry for my English 😉
And I forgot to mention that I love your work! I gi to Normandy every year but never went to wn62! Next time, I'm going! Unfortunately not this year... Keep up the good work man!!!
If I remember rightly, HMS Ajax supposedly hit one of these casemates, with the shell going right down the barrel of the gun that was housed there. When I went there, the back of the casemate was obliterated, so it made me think that this was possible. Great videos by the way. Keep up the fantastic work!
If it was the engineers, then there’s something odd that has gone on. I have visited the site. The first gun casemate is obliterated and parts of the gun are scattered outside. That would have taken a huge explosion and it doesn’t explain why further along the line the guns are generally ok. It certainly looks like gun one took a direct hit from shelling from the sea. It is an amazing place to walk around, and try to imagine being back there on 6/44.
Great video and like your channel. Have been binge watching it for the last days. I have been countless times on all these spots and I always find new things. My first tour was with my grandfather who landed in August with the Dutch Princess Irene Brigade at Arromanches. There are so many hidden places. Go for example to the cigar shop in st Marie du mont and ask for a Willys ride. The driver is very knowledgeable and brings you on great spots you would never find yourself including his own 'operational' FLAK gun in his backyard. Keep up the good work. Maybe interesting to take a route around the filmping locations of 'the longest day'. A great way to have a different tour than the regular popular ones. Greetings from Belgium
The next time you come back to Normandy, you could start from the British sector to see the Merville battery. For me it's one of the most heroic feat of the D Day, but surprisingly little known, or may be because this has never been made into a film.
That is exactly my plan. I really feel bad that I didn’t have the time to devote to more of the British and Canadian sites. Got a few in, but not enough.
Found two Brit rounds theere with a tiny Treasure Seeker m d, in second run in on and by, in 85... Akso US deadstopped rounds agin the sea facing wall of that jerry bunker wall afacing edge just below the Omaha graveground, the one with the Engineer monument then atop.
If anyone is visiting Normandy I IMPLORE you to go visit the Maisy Battery. It's still an active site, so the owners are digging up and unearthing relics from it constantly, as it was pretty much left alone and overgrown after WW2. Great collection of artefacts and you can walk through the entire labyrinth of trench systems and gun emplacements.
Thanks for sharing Buddy. I spent a day doing the beaches a week ago not knowing the effect it would have on me. I’m going back for a week this Thursday and plan to re visit and spending more time at each location. I’ve made the decision to wild camp along the coast , sleeping under my Harley. I’ve watched all your Normandy movies at least twice and feel a lot more prepared this time.. a great channel 👏👏👏
7:30 Those 'damaged' pieces are actually camouflage and can be seen on lots of bunkers along the Atlantic Wall. It was created by putting newspaper or concrete bags behind the shuttering, when combined with camouflage webbing it gave the appearance of an overgrown rock. :>
To my knowledge, on D-day communication between the command bunker and the 4 casemates was interrupted due to heavy artillery fire so the Germans were firing just out in the open without any precision
Some buried telephone cables linking the observation tower with the gun emplacements had been cut by the first bombings, therefore the German soldiers inside the 4 casemates could not communicate anymore with the observation bunker in front of them.
It would take more than 2. You need one to load the shell, one to load the power and one to scrub or wash the tube. So you are looking for 4-6 per gun.
Hello, thank you for your videos. I be there too on 2020. The cracks and holes you see on the obs bunker are NOT from naval damage, but are a sort of "structure" to put camo over. It is present in all other obs bunker you see in Europe.
Great video. I've been to these locations a couple times. Interesting info I heard when I was there, is that the observation bunker was used in the film the longest day. It's the bunker where col. Pluzkat was
I actually didn't know that until after I'd left. Really wish that I would've had that information in my mental database so that I could've included it in the video.
I thought that shot of video looked familiar! lol -- The Longest Day is a beautiful war film. Some errors of course, but many scenes could have been made for a documentary. My fave of all time.
Your channel is great! And you are not so damned over excited like you Americans sometime gets on TV. You are coooool! Keep up that great work! I so want to get back to Normandie!
I'm so glad I finally got to visit the WWII sites of Normandy France, I really cried when I visited the American cemetery, they are true heroes that never came home. I served 21 Years in the Air Force and saw many different battlegrounds in real time.
At 8:08 the ladder behind the piece of wood was the normal entry. Wood bridge and stairs were built after 2000 because of some tourist's leg broken... In the 'longest day', we can see germans using this original iron ladder... i used this many times when i was a kid 😊
A great video I have just discovered your channel and this is the second video I have watched, nicely put together, the indents in the roof were for placing soil for natural growth an locating sockets for hooks where they would also connect camouflage nets to hide the position, some of the holes have broken stud bases still in them.It was indeed the bunker used in the film The Longest Day where Pluskat was rumoured to have been. However there is a story that the story was made up by him to Cornelius Ryan for some artistic licence and was in fact further in land at an airbase at the time of the invasion, not sure how true that story is. Thanks for sharing the information and video.
Yep, was going to comment on the indents, when I was watching, but see that you now have a better understanding. Great work though, I really enjoy them.
Visited this site on a beautiful September day in 2008. So cool and what a nicely done video to re-live the visit. Superb. On a side note, how in the world can anyone give a thumbs down to this?
Ha! Who knows. I’ve had people complain about the music, my tattoo, my hat, the way I talk, the way I mispronounce French words, the way I look at the camera. So it could have been any one of those reasons 😅
I stumbled across your videos and they’re so engaging and well presented. Just one small point I’d make about the fire bunker - the holes you said were caused by shell fire were actually made by the Nazi’s and then they put camouflage nets over the bunker. They didn’t use metal pins to secure the nets as they could be seen by the air so the Germans put holes in the bunker and secured the net with soil and rocks
Yes, I completely bungled that one up. I put a note in the description to correct the error. Thank you for the kind words and for pointing out the error.
Oh no problem at all. We visited there last year from Belfast, Northern Ireland and you bring a great perspective to things that we have seen. The only reason I know about the camouflage is that we had a guided tour and he pointed it out, otherwise I never would have realised.
JD, when I was there in 2019, besides the battle damage to the guns, I was awed to find hobnail boot imprints in the cement, inside the casemate, of the German conscripted soldiers who built the gun emplacements.
It’s kinda wild, how peaceful these locations are now. I visited this exact location as well, and what struck me..was how each of the bunkers, are just covered in shell craters. Very cool location. Great video. And in regards to the crew for the guns. This is what I heard. It took three. One to operate the traversing mechanisms; one to load the guns, and an ammo bearer.
I love your videos JD 👍. It is funny that you start by mentioning the rain. In France, we have a joke about that: « In Normandy it rains only twice a year (1st time between January and June, the second time between July and December :) » (It actually rains more in Brest, Brittany) When you filmed this in 2020 it rained even more than usual in Normandy compared to the last 30 years! When you showed the mortar emplacement near the observation bunker, one of the workers drew a horse with his finger on the fresh concrete back then and he even put the date : Dec 1942, did you see it?
This was a naval battery constructed to hit ships! The FOP had advanced instruments to point out specifik targets with high accuracy but as you mentioned this capability was seroius damages thanks to the bombers the night before the landing. So when the battery open fire (about 0600am) after HMS Ajax had engaged them (0530am) they could not hit any ships (for example HMS Bulolo). At 0800am the battery was silenced by to British ships and casement No4 got hit and knocked out period because it had an AA-gun deployed on the roof and the ammunition exploded and many got killed. The german repaired the other pieces and open fire again about 1200am which the allied ships once again responded and that silenced the battery ”for good” except for one piece that continued to be active in the afternoon but caused little impact. As you sad the Bristish 2.Devonshire reach the battery the 7th of June and the old german crew surrended after only open fire with about 100 rounds… The construction of the casements are similiar to Point Du Hoc and I wonder somethimes if the germans had a plan to put two naval guns there also but the invasion stoppad them!? The other four was open casements mentioned for field artillery pieces (PDH). Anyway as always it is a pleasure to see your movies, so well done, and I like your thougts about casements, tobruks etc. The bunker for battlefield lightning was really interesting and gives a clue it was ment to find ships during darkness. This battery is really a great place to visit in so many perpectives.
If you go to the playlist tab on the main page, I have a playlist entitled "History Traveler" where you can watch the sequentially. Thanks for watching!
My Grandfather was part of the 2nd Devonshires unit that was involved in the capture of this battery. Visited the battery last summer, took my mother, his oldest daughter, who was not aware that he had been involved. Thank you for showing this site.
This was one of the first "Atlantic Wall" bunkers that I visited about 25 years ago. Last time I came (2004 ish) they did a guided tour using a Golf Cart - if I could only remember the info the guide imparted - was well worth the cost of visiting (it was free to wander around the battery then) I haven't found it a vlog on it yet, but the Artillery Control Bunker in Ouistreham (near the ferry port) has great examples of the fire control equipment - including a fully working Range Finder optics which you can look through. Highly recommended if in the area.
@@PhiletMil - it was free 25 years ago :) Can’t say if that is still the case. They do seem to have done some work excavating the defenses around the battery. When I was there you could only see the top of the Tobruks and not enter them
Any idea where Major Werner Pluskats' bunker is? He overlooked Omaha Beach and was the first German Officer to call in the alarm about the invasion force. As I understand, in the movie; "The Longest Day" that the scenes about him were pretty accurate.
👍Longues was also the place for B11 advanced temporary airfield. RAF 602 sqdn use to operate from there. French Ace Pierre Clostermann mentions it in his book "the Big Show". If i remember well there must be a small stone monument about it not far away from the batteries.
Perhaps you would consider featuring the apparent "latent" contribution of the Maisy Battery to the defense of Utah and Omaha beaches as well as the attacks of the 5th Ranger Battalion at Pointe du Hoc and Maisy.
British Sergeant actually 'took' the battery. There used to be a brass plaque memorising this fact bolted to one of the casemates agin one of the three still in place guns but this vanished some years ago.
For others that are thinking of visiting the site...Look closely in one of the gun bunkers and you will see the shape of a hob nail bootprint of when the concrete was poured
I don’t comment much, but do give a thumbs up. I noticed in a lot of your videos you don’t have lighting with you. You need to carry a flashlight/torch! And careful where you’re stepping, puddles and dog waste, etc, seem to be a common occurrence.
at the first gun the entire back of the bunker has been blown away, all ammunition from the area was collected there until two canadians messed up miserably with some ignitions resulting in a large explosion
Another great video God bless are coalition that fought for are freedom they really are the greatest generation we all owe the allies so now with all this Corona virus stuff going on let's all work together and beat this 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸💪💪
@@robbertvangeel5139 yes the Canadians too gave a great portion of efforts! I shall never forget them . I studied at Tilburg. I am aware of your history. My heart goes out to the Dutch!
Looks like I’ll have to visit that site next june......and bring a flashlight and rubber boots. Did you need special permits to visit all of this, or is it publicly accessible? Thanks for the video. I’m making a 3D game environment for a D-day scene so this really helps.
It must be an amazing feeling walking and stamping on german and american maybe even british boot steps, the position your in right now, is were german soldiers were living preparing and had had confusion on D-Day, each step you take is you going back more than 70 years ago, waw man.. god bless you for the experience your giving the viewrs✌🏻✌🏻
Again another superb vlog. You have made the invasion that started the defeat of the Third Reich come alive. Please send us more to watch. I am Jewish and had relatives who died in the camps
That's not damage on the outside of the control bunker, it was built like that and bits of rags and paper was used to break up the profile, btw that's the bunker featured in the film " The longest day"
Ah - I've read that that was not damage. Those relatively evenly spaced indentations were to plant greenery so that a natural camouflage would build up over time. The same feature is visible on other defence works.
You missed a cool spot not many people know about, in the back left corner of the terrain, behind the last bunker (if you start from the parking lot) there are some stairs down, and you actually get in a personal accomodation bunker, pretty cool as it's also underground
If you've watched a few episodes and feel like I've earned it, be sure to subscribe so that you don't miss any new content when it comes out. Click here: ua-cam.com/users/thehistoryunderground
Thanks!
You're doing a very good job of filming the videos, I look forward to seeing more.
The bunker scenes from the movie “The Longest Day” were filmed in that observation bunker!
The German Officer went on to star in the Battle of the Bulge too
Honoured to walk in the footsteps of the greatest generation. Thank you for sharing. Excellent once again.
Thank you for showing us the remains of the atlantic wall. Great vidéo
Glad you enjoyed it
Great job on these videos. Had a tour at the site at Longues-sur-Mer. Loving your Normandy series. Shivers just observing the beaches and the cliffs. The only other place I have ever been that was more spiritually overwhelming than the American Cemetery was the Arizona Memorial. You can certainly feel the weight of those that sacrificed at both. Keep up your great work. Wonderful job by the French maintaining access to these sites so all can remember.
Glad you like them! Really regret that I didn't give the French credit for what they do to maintain those sites. Thanks!
@@TheHistoryUnderground Only too bad that right after the war people wanted to forget and a lot of these places were demolished. The historic significance of these sites only became clear much, much later. Now they are being maintained by the French and even new excavations still take place today. The unbelievable sacrifice of all the soldiers who lost their lives on the beaches for our freedom can never be forgotten! Love your tour by the way.
Hello from Canada! Love your Utube videos! Planning a trip to France next year! Taking my 11 year old son with me! He's going to have a field day exploring all bunkers along the beach! We can't wait to visit Normandy 😍!
The holes you called damage on the top of the observation bunker are actually recessed holes with rings for attaching camouflage netting. Notice all the bunkers you see all over a Europe have them. Great work on your videos, we were at all those places from Normandy, Bastogne and Munich and the Eagles nest last June for D-day 75
Yes, that is correct. I found that out afterwards and posted a correction in the description. Thanks for watching!
The Firing Forward Control Bunker was not complete at time of D Day. There was a lot of soil still in front of it blocking the view to the sea. This was only cleared for the making of The Longest Day film. Great videos though. Very informative for people who will never get the chance to visit Normandy.
It was complete, just buried after D-Day.
Another addition to this extraordinary series of video. To walk here and see this place and time in history is a phenomenal experience.
I do however have to dock you some points for not carrying a flashlight😊
Thanks for providing these videos. Always wanted to travel there but these videos are a welcome and appreciated alternative.
That Video was awesome so fascinating. It appears so peaceful and yet such a huge contrast to 80 odd years ago. Thank you for sharing your journey.
Glad you enjoyed it! It was definitely a lot more peaceful there than it was in 1944.
Thank you very much for also visiting the British/Canadian sectors of the beach. I really appreciate your the videos thank you for sharing them. Talking of the naval bombardment it wasn't until I saw it on a map how close the brave sailors of the battleship USS Arkansas came close to Omaha, beach this was 1/3rd of the distance from the shore to the naval bombardment area to really rain fire down from her 12" guns to turn the situation around for the guys on the beach along with French cruiser Montcalm & French light cruiser George Leygues, it was a dangerous manoeuvre but it paid off!
Another fantastic trip back in time. Thanks for taking us along.
You bet!
One of the many things I missed while visiting, and I knew it, there was just not enough time. Glad you show it!
I feel your pain. Glad I could fill in a few gaps.
@@TheHistoryUnderground Yeah.Did get a lot of done but not that. Ended the last mornign with an early breakfast served my Mdm Gondree herself at her café though. I believe she was 4 years old or something when the Brits popped in with the Gliders?
That was pretty huge..
I just randomly found your channel and love it!! Thank you for showing a s much as you can and the history behind it.
Glad you enjoy it! Appreciate the kind words.
@@TheHistoryUnderground Most definitely. Keep the videos coming! I'm trying to catch up on older vids. Lol.
Looks so picturesque and scenic and trying to imagine it being the hell-on-earth that it must of been that day.
This has quickly become my favorite channel on UA-cam….thanks for this
Awesome! Thank you.
My fave story about Longues-sur-Mer is the blind local lad who paced out the distances between the gun emplacements and passed the details to the ressistance. enabled the Royal Navy to place fire
Interesting. Never heard that one.
Wow! Amazing! Oh to have been a fly on the wall on June 6, 1944! Well done!
Wow! What an episode! I am truly impressed!
Thank you. I really appreciate that. Glad that you liked it.
Great job, sobering to think of all the lives lost that day & in the battles that followed. As a kid growing up my neighbour Neil MacEachern landed at Juneau beach. He passed away a few years ago. Wish now I had talked to him about D-Day. He never really talked much about his war experience. Thanks for doing this.
Thanks. Man, I'd love to talk with some of those Canadian soldiers who fought. That'd be something else.
I've been there a few times and its amazing to imagine the place teeming with Germans before the invasion.
Imagine the noise and bedlam on the morning of the 6th.
L g
"If you have someone in your house who uses too much toilet paper...."- priceless. You've been married long enough to comment on such a travesty. Great videos- I'm very jealous of everywhere you've been. The closest I've been to WWII stuff in while stationed on Okinawa- went into some of the caves down by Shuri Castle and down to Suicide Cliffs. Very cool, indeed- please keep them coming and thanks.
Oh man. I would LOVE to visit Okinawa. One of these days.....
@@TheHistoryUnderground I can guarantee that you would love it- a lot of stuff to see. The cave that I went into had the entrance flanked by machine gun nests and there was a big cavern where some Japanese nurses were gunned down by their own Army rather than be captured by the U.S.. It's a shrine now. Plus, the location is a great jump off point for Ie Shima, where Ernie Pyle was killed and Iwo Jima. If you need any other "crew" to go with you, I'm game!
Your adventures are the greatest! Thank you for taking us along.
👍🏻
First visited the battery as a kid with my parents in 72.
At that time all of this stuff was just left as. To the rear of one of the casemates we found, still stacked, a whole pile of shells, transport rings in their nose ends, half buried in sand with but some broken chicken wire surrounding. Long gone, probably as part of the 84 celebrations clean up.
You need to get over to Calais area, some superb bunkers there.
I'd very much like to visit that area. Thanks
JD we were told by our escort guide that what looked like pock marked concrete were actually man made recesses used for foliage. It would make sense given the uniformity of the indentations. Have you been able to confirm this? Really enjoyed these visits and you make them come alive again for me and my sons as I always forward the videos. Thank you so much for the dedication to this on behalf of all those who fought and fell during this campaign.
Yes. That is true. Learned that myself after visiting.
The holes in the observasionbunker are no damage. The Germans puth dirt in it so there can grow weeds in for natural camouflage. The bunker is also a location for the film "the longest day" a gide told me that the special roof was made just for the film... I like to see some pictures from the bunker in war time. Never found some. Sorry for my English 😉
Yes, someone else told me about the holes in the observation bunker. I'm going to go make a few notes in the description to clarify. Thanks!
And I forgot to mention that I love your work! I gi to Normandy every year but never went to wn62! Next time, I'm going! Unfortunately not this year... Keep up the good work man!!!
Ken De Coster - Thanks!
Very interesting fact about the holes in the concrete bunker. Never knew that. Also thanks for posting this video.
If I remember rightly, HMS Ajax supposedly hit one of these casemates, with the shell going right down the barrel of the gun that was housed there. When I went there, the back of the casemate was obliterated, so it made me think that this was possible.
Great videos by the way. Keep up the fantastic work!
HMS Ajax played a major part in the battle of the river plate re: the "pocket battleship Graf Spee
Yup! The Ajax landed a hit on the casemate you saw.
i believe that theory has been debunked; later allied soldiers put explosives down the barrel to disable it.
@@jonesandy31 indeed, as all the equipment, it was permanently put out of action by engineer troops that put charges in the barrel.
If it was the engineers, then there’s something odd that has gone on. I have visited the site. The first gun casemate is obliterated and parts of the gun are scattered outside. That would have taken a huge explosion and it doesn’t explain why further along the line the guns are generally ok. It certainly looks like gun one took a direct hit from shelling from the sea. It is an amazing place to walk around, and try to imagine being back there on 6/44.
Great video and like your channel. Have been binge watching it for the last days. I have been countless times on all these spots and I always find new things. My first tour was with my grandfather who landed in August with the Dutch Princess Irene Brigade at Arromanches. There are so many hidden places. Go for example to the cigar shop in st Marie du mont and ask for a Willys ride. The driver is very knowledgeable and brings you on great spots you would never find yourself including his own 'operational' FLAK gun in his backyard. Keep up the good work.
Maybe interesting to take a route around the filmping locations of 'the longest day'. A great way to have a different tour than the regular popular ones.
Greetings from Belgium
The next time you come back to Normandy, you could start from the British sector to see the Merville battery. For me it's one of the most heroic feat of the D Day, but surprisingly little known, or may be because this has never been made into a film.
That is exactly my plan. I really feel bad that I didn’t have the time to devote to more of the British and Canadian sites. Got a few in, but not enough.
Found two Brit rounds theere with a tiny Treasure Seeker m d, in second run in on and by, in 85...
Akso US deadstopped rounds agin the sea facing wall of that jerry bunker wall afacing edge just below the Omaha graveground, the one with the Engineer monument then atop.
@@TheHistoryUnderground It wouldn't fit the yank narrative of them winning the war by themselves. 😄
If anyone is visiting Normandy I IMPLORE you to go visit the Maisy Battery.
It's still an active site, so the owners are digging up and unearthing relics from it constantly, as it was pretty much left alone and overgrown after WW2. Great collection of artefacts and you can walk through the entire labyrinth of trench systems and gun emplacements.
Very high on my list of places to see. Thanks.
Grandecampe Maisey, in bloody deed.
Thanks for sharing Buddy. I spent a day doing the beaches a week ago not knowing the effect it would have on me.
I’m going back for a week this Thursday and plan to re visit and spending more time at each location. I’ve made the decision to wild camp along the coast , sleeping under my Harley.
I’ve watched all your Normandy movies at least twice and feel a lot more prepared this time..
a great channel 👏👏👏
Nice video, you are covering areas that I've never seen in doc videos. I really didnt need to know about the dog poo tho, lol. Focus man, focus! ;-)
Ha! Sorry. I’m kind like a dog chasing a squirrel some days.
@@TheHistoryUnderground A squirrel?!! Where?! Where?!
Imagine being stationed in the bunkers? You had to know you weren’t going to survive the day. And yet the fought. Amazing courage.
we were there today. a must stop in Normandy
7:30 Those 'damaged' pieces are actually camouflage and can be seen on lots of bunkers along the Atlantic Wall. It was created by putting newspaper or concrete bags behind the shuttering, when combined with camouflage webbing it gave the appearance of an overgrown rock. :>
To my knowledge, on D-day communication between the command bunker and the 4 casemates was interrupted due to heavy artillery fire so the Germans were firing just out in the open without any precision
Some buried telephone cables linking the observation tower with the gun emplacements had been cut by the first bombings, therefore the German soldiers inside the 4 casemates could not communicate anymore with the observation bunker in front of them.
It would take more than 2. You need one to load the shell, one to load the power and one to scrub or wash the tube. So you are looking for 4-6 per gun.
Thanks for that extra info! I should have made that more clear in the video.
Hello, thank you for your videos. I be there too on 2020. The cracks and holes you see on the obs bunker are NOT from naval damage, but are a sort of "structure" to put camo over. It is present in all other obs bunker you see in Europe.
Great video. I've been to these locations a couple times. Interesting info I heard when I was there, is that the observation bunker was used in the film the longest day. It's the bunker where col. Pluzkat was
I actually didn't know that until after I'd left. Really wish that I would've had that information in my mental database so that I could've included it in the video.
I thought that shot of video looked familiar! lol -- The Longest Day is a beautiful war film. Some errors of course, but many scenes could have been made for a documentary. My fave of all time.
How long ago was this? Is everything still right there to be viewed including the old gun that was taken out? Remarkable!
Yep! This was in February 2020.
observation bunker was used for film-the longest day..
Your channel is great! And you are not so damned over excited like you Americans sometime gets on TV. You are coooool! Keep up that great work! I so want to get back to Normandie!
I'm so glad I finally got to visit the WWII sites of Normandy France, I really cried when I visited the American cemetery, they are true heroes that never came home. I served 21 Years in the Air Force and saw many different battlegrounds in real time.
At 8:08 the ladder behind the piece of wood was the normal entry. Wood bridge and stairs were built after 2000 because of some tourist's leg broken... In the 'longest day', we can see germans using this original iron ladder... i used this many times when i was a kid 😊
A great video I have just discovered your channel and this is the second video I have watched, nicely put together, the indents in the roof were for placing soil for natural growth an locating sockets for hooks where they would also connect camouflage nets to hide the position, some of the holes have broken stud bases still in them.It was indeed the bunker used in the film The Longest Day where Pluskat was rumoured to have been. However there is a story that the story was made up by him to Cornelius Ryan for some artistic licence and was in fact further in land at an airbase at the time of the invasion, not sure how true that story is. Thanks for sharing the information and video.
I learned about the indents after I left. Really wish that I would've known that at the time. Corrections have been made in the description. Thanks!
Yep, was going to comment on the indents, when I was watching, but see that you now have a better understanding. Great work though, I really enjoy them.
Visited this site on a beautiful September day in 2008. So cool and what a nicely done video to re-live the visit. Superb. On a side note, how in the world can anyone give a thumbs down to this?
Ha! Who knows. I’ve had people complain about the music, my tattoo, my hat, the way I talk, the way I mispronounce French words, the way I look at the camera. So it could have been any one of those reasons 😅
@@TheHistoryUnderground Do me a favor - ignore and keep up the good work! History buffs appreciate.
I stumbled across your videos and they’re so engaging and well presented. Just one small point I’d make about the fire bunker - the holes you said were caused by shell fire were actually made by the Nazi’s and then they put camouflage nets over the bunker. They didn’t use metal pins to secure the nets as they could be seen by the air so the Germans put holes in the bunker and secured the net with soil and rocks
Yes, I completely bungled that one up. I put a note in the description to correct the error. Thank you for the kind words and for pointing out the error.
Oh no problem at all. We visited there last year from Belfast, Northern Ireland and you bring a great perspective to things that we have seen.
The only reason I know about the camouflage is that we had a guided tour and he pointed it out, otherwise I never would have realised.
This one favorite video out of them all
Thanks!
I wish your videos were a little bit longer. I really enjoy your way of telling the story.
JD, when I was there in 2019, besides the battle damage to the guns, I was awed to find hobnail boot imprints in the cement, inside the casemate, of the German conscripted soldiers who built the gun emplacements.
Great video !! So well done 🤩🤩
Glad you liked it!! I was hoping to show a little more than what people typically see with the guns.
It’s kinda wild, how peaceful these locations are now. I visited this exact location as well, and what struck me..was how each of the bunkers, are just covered in shell craters. Very cool location. Great video. And in regards to the crew for the guns. This is what I heard. It took three. One to operate the traversing mechanisms; one to load the guns, and an ammo bearer.
It is pretty jarring how peaceful it is when you consider what it was like in 1944. That peacefulness came at a high price.
The toilet paper thing though? 🤣🤣🤣🤣 too funny!!
I love your videos JD 👍. It is funny that you start by mentioning the rain. In France, we have a joke about that: « In Normandy it rains only twice a year (1st time between January and June, the second time between July and December :) » (It actually rains more in Brest, Brittany) When you filmed this in 2020 it rained even more than usual in Normandy compared to the last 30 years! When you showed the mortar emplacement near the observation bunker, one of the workers drew a horse with his finger on the fresh concrete back then and he even put the date : Dec 1942, did you see it?
This was a naval battery constructed to hit ships! The FOP had advanced instruments to point out specifik targets with high accuracy but as you mentioned this capability was seroius damages thanks to the bombers the night before the landing. So when the battery open fire (about 0600am) after HMS Ajax had engaged them (0530am) they could not hit any ships (for example HMS Bulolo). At 0800am the battery was silenced by to British ships and casement No4 got hit and knocked out period because it had an AA-gun deployed on the roof and the ammunition exploded and many got killed. The german repaired the other pieces and open fire again about 1200am which the allied ships once again responded and that silenced the battery ”for good” except for one piece that continued to be active in the afternoon but caused little impact. As you sad the Bristish 2.Devonshire reach the battery the 7th of June and the old german crew surrended after only open fire with about 100 rounds… The construction of the casements are similiar to Point Du Hoc and I wonder somethimes if the germans had a plan to put two naval guns there also but the invasion stoppad them!? The other four was open casements mentioned for field artillery pieces (PDH). Anyway as always it is a pleasure to see your movies, so well done, and I like your thougts about casements, tobruks etc. The bunker for battlefield lightning was really interesting and gives a clue it was ment to find ships during darkness. This battery is really a great place to visit in so many perpectives.
VERY INTERESTING STUFF!! Is there a way to watch these episodes sequentially?
If you go to the playlist tab on the main page, I have a playlist entitled "History Traveler" where you can watch the sequentially. Thanks for watching!
My Grandfather was part of the 2nd Devonshires unit that was involved in the capture of this battery. Visited the battery last summer, took my mother, his oldest daughter, who was not aware that he had been involved. Thank you for showing this site.
Awesome! Hope that other people can watch and learn a bit about what your grandpa did there.
Great video, man
This was one of the first "Atlantic Wall" bunkers that I visited about 25 years ago. Last time I came (2004 ish) they did a guided tour using a Golf Cart - if I could only remember the info the guide imparted - was well worth the cost of visiting (it was free to wander around the battery then)
I haven't found it a vlog on it yet, but the Artillery Control Bunker in Ouistreham (near the ferry port) has great examples of the fire control equipment - including a fully working Range Finder optics which you can look through. Highly recommended if in the area.
I will certainly put that on my list. Thanks!
It is still free to walk there
@@PhiletMil - it was free 25 years ago :) Can’t say if that is still the case. They do seem to have done some work excavating the defenses around the battery. When I was there you could only see the top of the Tobruks and not enter them
1:57 that slender man or Micheal Myers left of bunker?
Excellent. Thank you.
Any idea where Major Werner Pluskats' bunker is? He overlooked Omaha Beach and was the first German Officer to call in the alarm about the invasion force. As I understand, in the movie; "The Longest Day" that the scenes about him were pretty accurate.
👍Longues was also the place for B11 advanced temporary airfield. RAF 602 sqdn use to operate from there. French Ace Pierre Clostermann mentions it in his book "the Big Show". If i remember well there must be a small stone monument about it not far away from the batteries.
Yes, I wish that I would have included that. Thanks for the added info.
Perhaps you would consider featuring the apparent "latent" contribution of the Maisy Battery to the defense of Utah and Omaha beaches as well as the attacks of the 5th Ranger Battalion at Pointe du Hoc and Maisy.
Another great video - thanks so much. Just wondering if you went to the Maisy Battery as well.
Ha ha ha the toilet paper dispenser though! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
I could only imagine the bloody mess the soldier found after the took over the bunkers once the ships were done silencing them.
There aren’t words.
British Sergeant actually 'took' the battery. There used to be a brass plaque memorising this fact bolted to one of the casemates agin one of the three still in place guns but this vanished some years ago.
For others that are thinking of visiting the site...Look closely in one of the gun bunkers and you will see the shape of a hob nail bootprint of when the concrete was poured
Oh wow!
Amazing!!
Bottom room was the map room, observers "Observed from the roof and the viewing room...Radio room was off to the side of the map room
Chills.......I wonder if you went up enough with the drone you can still see the depressions where missed ship rounds detonated?
Awe inspiring!
In some areas, yes. Thanks for the kind words!
Awesome! I can feel ya man!
👍🏻
I don’t comment much, but do give a thumbs up. I noticed in a lot of your videos you don’t have lighting with you. You need to carry a flashlight/torch! And careful where you’re stepping, puddles and dog waste, etc, seem to be a common occurrence.
Amazing video! Thanks
Thanks!
Another great video!!! 🇺🇸
great video ... Thanks....
Glad you liked it! Thanks!
Thanks for posting. Need a head lamp for the dark area’s.
Yeah. Stupid me. I left my light in the car. Thanks for watching!
at the first gun the entire back of the bunker has been blown away, all ammunition from the area was collected there until two canadians messed up miserably with some ignitions resulting in a large explosion
Another great video God bless are coalition that fought for are freedom they really are the greatest generation we all owe the allies so now with all this Corona virus stuff going on let's all work together and beat this 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸💪💪
Amen to that.
SportCardCollector959 Such a nice comment with such terrible grammar. I don’t know what to think.
God bless the Brits and the Russians !
@@williamacheson3569 and the Canadians who all volunteered. Respect to the greatest generation from the Netherlands
@@robbertvangeel5139 yes the Canadians too gave a great portion of efforts! I shall never forget them . I studied at Tilburg. I am aware of your history. My heart goes out to the Dutch!
Looks like I’ll have to visit that site next june......and bring a flashlight and rubber boots.
Did you need special permits to visit all of this, or is it publicly accessible?
Thanks for the video. I’m making a 3D game environment for a D-day scene so this really helps.
Nope. All public access. Very cool place. Glad that the video helped!
In the week we were out there, there's so much we missed 😒🤦♂️🇬🇧🏴
The holes in the concrete of the observaties bunker are there to put green plaats for camouflage in, so they Will not be steen from the sea
It must be an amazing feeling walking and stamping on german and american maybe even british boot steps, the position your in right now, is were german soldiers were living preparing and had had confusion on D-Day, each step you take is you going back more than 70 years ago, waw man.. god bless you for the experience your giving the viewrs✌🏻✌🏻
Hmmm interesting 🤔😉
The mighty thousands...!!🙏🙏
The "Damage" you have described from Allied Naval Gunfire is actually built into the bunker face to allow vegetation to adhere to the concrete
That was my error. It has been noted in the description.
Thanks.
As always..👍👍
Again another superb vlog. You have made the invasion that started the defeat of the Third Reich come alive. Please send us more to watch. I am Jewish and had relatives who died in the camps
Thanks. That means a lot. I've got a lot more videos from Normandy coming down the pipe.
Another interesting video!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching. Got a lot more coming down the pipe.
You need to up your flashlight game. Lol.
That's not damage on the outside of the control bunker, it was built like that and bits of rags and paper was used to break up the profile, btw that's the bunker featured in the film " The longest day"
Unfortunately, my dumb butt learned about that after I left. I’ll make a note in the description to correct myself. Thanks!
Ah - I've read that that was not damage. Those relatively evenly spaced indentations were to plant greenery so that a natural camouflage would build up over time. The same feature is visible on other defence works.
You missed a cool spot not many people know about, in the back left corner of the terrain, behind the last bunker (if you start from the parking lot) there are some stairs down, and you actually get in a personal accomodation bunker, pretty cool as it's also underground
Doh! Thanks. The rain really messed us up that day and I got in a hurry. Next time.
i bet that was really cool
I’m glad thi s background music is rare.
I am sure another vid tells me. But what if the gun encasement were directly hit with a big bomb would some of the concrete become rubble?
Guns knocked out were the completely destroyed casemate, and the one at 11:10
i had the honor to hear my grandfather's tell story's about the war. Until i fully understood the war and what they had to face,
The observation bunker is actually the bunker used in the film "The Longest Day"
Yes, I wish I would've mentioned that in the video. Guess that I have an excuse to go back now :)