Day One we visited The Somme. It is hard to believe that everything that is there today has been totally reconstructed. The photos in the Museums we visited show a landscape that is decimated. Absolutely nothing left. Barbara told us that the German Government finished paying the reconstruction debt in 2010! The cemeteries are everywhere - a stark reminder of the thousands who lost their lives. Standing in these cemeteries on a freezing April day, you get the sense that the diggers must have been absolutely frozen solid both with fear and with the cold.
Barbara and Pete |
Snow in the trenches at the Canadian Memorial |
Day Three we ventured further afield to Fromelles.. On the way we returned to Pozieres to locate the graves of seven of the men of the 47th Battalion - Pete's Grandfathers Battalion. I really don't know how any of them survived. Charlie Arnall must have been one extraordinary soldier to have made it home! Later we went to the site of the Lost Diggers (Made into a TV series from which Pete got in contact with Barbara - dubbed the Internet Girlfriend ). There were so many diggers in the mass grave and many have been identified through DNA testing. There are however many who have not been identified including those that lay in the open fields for more than three years before their bodies were collected.
The 3 day tour ended with the Last Post at the Menen Gate in Ypres. A beautiful and moving ending to a fascinating and very freezing three days.
If you ever consider doing a tour of the battlefields of France, consider going with Barbara - a fabulous tour guide. www.trueblue-diggertours.com
The Lost Diggers |
1 comment:
Sounds Amazing - but looks FREEZING!!!! Now I know why Tess is complaining!! There are people reading your blog so keep it up. Seeing your girls tomorrow so will give them a hug for you!!
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