| |
D-Day Wrecks Museum - Port en Bessin (France) |
Important note Photos provided on this website are not an endorsement of any political idea or of war. War is one of the most regrettable human activities. All photos on this page are copyright Robert Mary and may only be reproduced with my express permission. You may contact me here |
THE MUSEUM One such team was led by Jacques Lemonchois, who founded this museum in the 1970s when, realising the historical importance of many of the items he was retrieving for scrap, made a conscious decision to preserve them and open a museum in which the wrecks could be displayed. The museum now houses a staggering array of American tanks brought up from the sea-bed on the Omaha Beach sector. These range from Sherman DD tanks (from 741 Tank Bn US Army) swamped as they came in through rough seas on D Day, to M7 Priests and Sherman bulldozers which were knocked out and sunk in LSTs. Many other items from ships and landing craft of all types are on display, along with personal items of soldiers found in some of the vehicles. This includes the artifacts of PFC John H. Glass, of 58th Armoured Field Artillery, who left behind his kit inside an M7 Priest on D Day. Lemonchois and his team found the items in perfect condition and traced Glass, still alive in the US! His remarkable story is related in the museum. The museum is open from 10.00am to 12.00pm, and 2.00pm to 6.00pm every day from 1st June to 30th September. During May it is only open at the weekends. Located on the main road from Bayeux into Port-en-Bessin, it is easily found and is well signposted. There is parking, and an entrance fee is charged. The museum has a shop in which certain items found on the sea bed are for sale. . The museum has
no website. A list of all museums in Normandy can be found there Location information The museum is located
at: Open daily from
10.00 AM to 18.00 PM This is a small museum, the video is quite emotional when a veteran comes back in France to see his vehicle in which he sank and miraculously survived during the landing. |
Year
of Visit: June 2009 |