Haven’t been but I saw a TV report about a memorial park dedicated to Welsh servicemen and servicewomen. Think it might have been this one: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wels...al_Park,_Ypres
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I should have my motorhome done by next year, so looking at some plans for next year, happy to take a few trips over ( with and without the family, Auschwitz will be one i do on my own, the girls found the 9/11 memorial in NY too hard to take, so i shouldnt think they will be able to cope with Auschwitz )
The beaches / area around the D day landing at Normandy with the family
The Somme Fields
Auschwitz without the family
Oradour Sur Glane Village with the family
while not WW based, going to do the Wolfsburg VW museum aswell
anyone done anything that i need to add to my list ? ? ?
Haven’t been but I saw a TV report about a memorial park dedicated to Welsh servicemen and servicewomen. Think it might have been this one: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wels...al_Park,_Ypres
I've been to Oradour. Here's a tip for you. You can gain free entrance to the village by avoiding the gift shop where you are led to believe the booklet they sell you is for entering the place. It's actually free to get in. It's an incredible place and so moving to see the graves and the church where the population were lined up against the wall and shot. You can actually see many of the bullet holes with bullets lodged in the wall. As you are a motorhomer there is a free Aire a few hundred yards from the town. Some of the cemetries around the northern coast are very moving. The American cemetry especially is in a beautiful location close to one of the landing beaches.
Ive also done Oradour which is well worth visiting as mentioned above. I also did Auschwitz 2yrs ago, Nov/Dec time, it was snowing and really brought home what the poor prisobers went through. Again a must to visit but very very poignant.
Never understood why people want to go to the 9/11 memorial. And I especially don't get why people would want to go to Oradour-sur-Glane. It's like going to Aberfan.
Memetz Wood is very poignant
as is Thiepval
The Passchendaele museum in Zonnebeke is excellent, with Tyne Cot & Artillery Wood (Hedd Wyn) close by.
thanks folks, keep em coming
NYCBlue, we went to 9/11 with a sense of remembrance, somewhat like remembrance Sunday ( we go every year )
Sure we did not know anyone who was effected by 9/11, that did not matter, the only bit of the memorial that felt that we were intruding was the center square bit where family member / friends read bits about people they had lost ( it was recorded readings ) , I felt this could have done with a polite notice to say that it was a private space for family members / friends of the deceased / effected
Auschwitz is a 'good' trip. very eductional and emotional. it's a professional area so the guides, tours and locations are preserved very well. A lot of the emotion comes from your mind trying to comprehend what happened there.
Our guide was a Pole who was very anti Nazi (felt she was anti German as well) and she gave her view of events but the whole story of how Poland was taken over was incredible. How Krakow became German overnight was really interesting.
I went to the 9/11 site last year. It's like an atttraction that you must go to.
I felt I needed to take a minute there and absord the enormity of the history. I paid my respects and moved on.
Gdansk is definitely worth a visit but obviously a long way from the places you are mentioning. Westerplatte, where the first shots of WW2 were fired, is very interesting with the story that surrounds it.
Plaszow, which is on the outskirts of Krakow, is worth a look too. Am sure Schindler's Enamel factory is already on your list!
A walking tour of Prague, looking at Heydrich and the preserved Jewish section is also both equally fascinating/disturbing.
Lviv (Ukraine) is also a fascinating place for WW2 history and the fact that they seem to have airbrushed their Jewish past.
A long way to go in a van, I guess but thought I’d put them in the mix.
This.
Plus if you want to WW2 the Normandy beaches are a must. Avoid the tourist traps though, the French are definitely after your cash! Recommend Pont du Hoc, Omaha Beach + USA Cemetery, German Cemetery near La Camme, Commonwealth Cemetery outside Bayeux (also pop in to see the Tapestry, really good!), and then over to Pegasus Bridge. You can easily spend 3-4 days there.
I agree. Have been to Oradour and also stopped at several WW1 cemeteries when travelling in Northern France. Remember one where the road goes right through the middle and [nearly] every driver slows to a crawl as they go through it. However -and this isn't a go at the original poster - seems that there's a section of society that thinks it's good for people - children especially - to be confronted by these horrific images [Auschwitz] etc. Personally if I were a 16yr old I'd rather go skiing...
I have done the 9/11 memorial, Belsen, Dachau and Auschwitz and all serve as a poignant indicator as how horrible the human race can be. Each was a moving and educational experience with Auschwitz the stand out 'memory' as I find it fascinating that a 'Death Factory' of such extent can run by 'people' that were not prehistoric but the age of many of our Grandparents. I would suggest if you do visit to read a few books on the camp before you go.
I did an organised day tour of the WW1 sites in France/ Belgium which included the Irish memorial site, the claimed trenches that featured in the xmas football game and concluded with the last post ceremony at the Meniem Gate which was very moving. Not sure about the concentration camp visits as my grandparents fled the Netherlands but lost many relatives in these places. May just be a bit too close to home for me.
Thiepval and Tyne Cot are very moving and really bring home the enormity of the number of casualties during WW1, especially Thiepval when you realise all the names there are of men whose bodies were never found. The whole area around the Somme is dotted with WW1 cemeteries, some very small.
As has already been mentioned Monte Cassino is definitely worth a visit. You really need a tour guide there to appreciate the whole battle - we had a good one and we never would have realised the whole story without him. My father was with the Eighth Army there but he never talked about it. After he died I found a poem that he had written about it (A lament for Liri plain) which brings tears to my eyes every time I read it.
once again, this place comes up trumps
I think i will print out a map and look at the places mentioned and marked them down
where do you book a guide from ? ? ? If i just google one, i might end up with a buffoon who just wants to take my money
Whilst over in France for the euros, I’d taken my two boys ages
6 and 8 at the time around the WW1 sites. I also took them to my great uncles grave who was killed in WW1 aged 18. We did the Newfoundland memorial park which is a memorial to the Canadian troops, strange to say but an amazing place.the fields still have the bomb craters and even barb wire fence post from WW1 still standing. Your also able to walk the trenches. Not far from around Albert is the Lochnagar Crater where the British tunnelled under the Germans and blew them up.
i revisited this thread as now in serious planning mode for trips this year ( i need something to work towards )
do the sites get busy ? ? ?
Basically the same as this, our guide was male so obviously not the same as Mike's guide but he wasn't shy in letting his feelings known, the site is basically two sites divided by a road, the Birkenau site for me was the real sad site if it's possible to rate them. Glad I went, doesn't really matter how old or how tough you are it's emotional. I've been to the 9/11 site and of course it's another reminder of a terrible event in history, but it didn't have the same feeling as Auschwitz and I'm not sure why, I'd like to go the9/11 site again but doubt if i will ever go back to Auschwitz unless someone in my family wanted me to accompany them.