RuleOfThirds
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2023
- Messages
- 950
Yeah, it's a sobering view when you think about what lies behind it.
This is something the museum displays suggested; their recreation of a German segment was relatively clean, with wooden floor/walls:Then you enter the German trenches, much better build, even narrower and confusing like a labyrinth. They are further up the mountain, partly carved out of the stone, and all the trenches are stone walled. There are also bunkers, carved out in the mountain.
Because it is quite far away from everything the whole walk it is peaceful silent with only sounds of nature. Very few fellow visitors. For most of the time we had the feeling of walking alone there.
First two pictures are from the French side, last one is German. But I think it depends also on geographic location. I.E. in this case the Germans were up the mountain, with much more rock, and could carve into the mountain, while the French were more on the side with dirt. And France/Beglium where the WW1 has great differences in landscape, so I do not think that this one spot is synonymous for all. But the German side looked better engineered, yes.How does that match up with the reality you saw? I’d expect wood, sandbags, etc. to have mostly rotted away by now, but you mention the German walls carved out of stone?
Thanks so much for posting your photos of the WWII Luxembough American Cemetery and Memorial. As I've mentioned previously, my late father was one of the first medics to arrive at the scene of Gen. Patton's December 9, 1945 car crash in Mannheim, Germany. Earlier this year my family donated 250 of my father's WWII photos to the National WWII Museum in New Orleans. (We also donated to the museum hundreds more WWII photos and artifacts collected by one of my late uncles, and by my late father-in-law.) For more details, refer to the notes my father wrote (in cursive) on the backs of his photos, my map, and the photo filenames. Cheers.Yesterday was our last vacation trip day, and we traveled home.. via Luxembourg. We visited the city and the American War cementery (from the Battle of the Bugle), where General George Patton is also buried.
View attachment 14212View attachment 14213View attachment 14214
Thank you! I knew some member like to see those pictures but I was not expecting this! Really loved to read/see the background story of this! Much appreciatedThanks so much for posting your photos of the WWII Luxembough American Cemetery and Memorial. As I've mentioned previously, my late father was one of the first medics to arrive at the scene of Gen. Patton's December 9, 1945 car crash in Mannheim, Germany. Earlier this year my family donated 250 of my father's WWII photos to the National WWII Museum in New Orleans. (We also donated to the museum hundreds more WWII photos and artifacts collected by one of my late uncles, and by my late father-in-law.) For more details, refer to the notes my father wrote (in cursive) on the backs of his photos, my map, and the photo filenames. Cheers.
View attachment 14224
View attachment 14225
View attachment 14226
View attachment 14227
View attachment 14228
View attachment 14229
Very nice Jayne. What lens did you use?Few more from my BF walks.
Motivated to only have drinks that match her hair
View attachment 14258Matching Drinks by Jayne Booton, on Flickr
Brown or Blue
View attachment 14259Sweet Little Pup by Jayne Booton, on Flickr
Hot air
View attachment 14260One Very Big Egg by Jayne Booton, on Flickr