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Gravelotte

The Hall of Remembrance ©Jwh at Wikipedia Luxembourg

It is mid-August 1870 and Napoleon III has declared war on Prussia. Moselle is set to be the scene of three bloody battles, including the Battle of Gravelotte.

Resource page: Musée de la Guerre de 1870 et de l'Annexion
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The Battle of Gravelotte (to the Germans) or Saint-Privat (to the French) took place on 18 August 1870, west of Metz. It paved the way for the French army’s capitulation and Napoleon III’s surrender, on 2 September 1870, at Sedan.


Musée de la Guerre 1870 et de l'Annexion - 11, rue de Metz - 57130 Gravelotte
- Tel.: +33 (0)3 87 33 69 40 -
contact.musee-guerre-70@moselle.fr
 
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Gravelotte

Fort de Metz-Queuleu

©Fort de Metz-Queuleu


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 The Fort de Queuleu was part of the first chain of fortifications around Metz. Its construction, begun by the French between 1867 and 1868, was largely resumed by the Germans following the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine.

 

Between October 1943 and August 1944, a camp spécial (‘special camp’) run by the Gestapo was installed in Barracks II/Pillbox A. The camp was used for the internment of Resistance fighters, saboteurs, smugglers, hostages and those who tried to avoid the compulsory labour camps in Germany.

 

Conditions were horrific: the prisoners were interrogated under torture, and cooped up blindfolded with their hands and feet bound. Thirty-six people died here, while four managed to escape.

 

Between 1 500 and 1 800 prisoners were held here before being sent to concentration camps or prison, or sentenced to death. After Liberation, the camp was used as a centre de séjour surveillé (‘guarded residence centre’) between December 1944 and March 1946.

A French fort adapted by the Germans which was part of the first line of defences around Metz (1867-1918)

 

The Fort de Queuleu was part of the first chain of defensive fortifications around the city of Metz. Its construction, begun by the French under the Second Empire, in 1867, was largely resumed by the Germans following the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine after the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). The fort had been occupied by French troops during the siege of the city between August and October 1870. The barracks, powder magazines, artillery positions, adjoining batteries, galleries of countermines and shelters all bear witness to the changes in military architecture and the advances in weaponry between the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Meanwhile, the central cavalry barracks constitutes a very fine example of Séré de Rivières architecture in Metz.

 

However, with the construction of Metz’s second chain of fortifications, beginning in 1899, the Fort de Queuleu lost its strategic importance and only minor alterations were made to it. As a result, the fort remains as it was in the second half of the 19th century.

 

During the First World War, it may well have been used by the Germans as a camp for French prisoners of war, although there is little information available on the subject. A complex network of trenches preserved outside the fort is evidence of the defences built by the Germans to safeguard Metz between 1914 and 1918.

 

A Nazi concentration camp in Metz (1943-1944)

 

During the Second World War, the fort served as a barracks for the soldiers of the Maginot Line. Following the defeat of 1940, it was briefly used as a detention camp for prisoners of war (a Stalag). Between March 1943 and September 1944, it went on to be used as a KZ-Außenkommando, or ‘subcamp’, subordinated to the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp, in Bas-Rhin, mainly for use by the SS. A hundred prisoners were held here, mostly German common-law criminals and Poles. Some were put to work on building the Metz-Frescaty airbase. It was one of the Reich’s westernmost concentration subcamps.

 

A special camp at the centre of Nazi repression in Moselle (1943-1944)

 

Between October 1943 and August 1944, a Sonderlager, or ‘special camp’, run by the Gestapo was installed in Barracks II. Between 1 500 and 1 800 prisoners (men and women) were interrogated and interned there before being sent to concentration camps (Natzweiler-Struthof, Dachau, etc.), ‘re-education’ camps (Schirmeck) or prisons. Among them were Resistance fighters, saboteurs, smugglers, hostages, those who tried to avoid the compulsory labour camps in Germany, and Russian prisoners. Most were held in overcrowded cells, unable to wash and not allowed to speak or move, under the brutal supervision of SS guards and camp commandant Georg Hempen. Resistance leaders were kept in solitary confinement - dark, dank dungeons to which only the commandant had access. The SS officers ‘industrialised’ interrogation and used torture. The conditions in which the prisoners were held were horrific, and most were cooped up blindfolded with their hands and feet bound. Thirty-six people died in the fort, while four managed to escape, in April 1944.

 

An important monument from the Battle of Metz (1944)

 

During the liberation of Metz, the fort had its baptism of fire between 17 and 21 November 1944, in fighting between the US army and German troops aided by the Volkssturm (armed civilians, First World War veterans, members of the Hitler Youth, etc.), who were entrenched here. The fort was severely damaged in the bombardment, before finally surrendering.

 

 

One of the biggest ‘guarded residence centres’ (1944-1946)

 

 

The fort was used as a centre de séjour surveillé, or ‘guarded residence centre’, by the French government between December 1944 and March 1946. Initially reserved for German civilians and their families, the site went on to serve as a detention centre for administrative internees arrested on charges of collaboration, propaganda, anti-patriotism or informing (up to 4 400 people were interned here). It was one of the largest centres of its kind in France. People of various nationalities were interned here, including French, Germans, Italians, Luxembourgers, Poles, Spaniards and Yugoslavs.

 

A camp for German prisoners of war (1946-1947)

 

Between 1946 and 1947, the Fort de Queuleu was a camp de prisonniers (‘prisoner camp’) for German soldiers. Assigned this purpose on 1 June 1946, it was subordinated to Depot 211 for prisoners of war in Metz. Run by Monsieur Massu, the camp was visited by the Red Cross on 13 February 1947. One hundred and forty-five prisoners were being held there at the time, in Barracks II/Pillbox A. The accommodation was heated, the rations were adequate and there was hot water for washing. An infirmary was run by Dr Dietrich Ostler. The prisoners were assigned to unloading goods trucks, clearing a canal and carrying building materials.

 

A camp for Indochinese workers (1948-1950)

 

To replace the mobilised workforce, the ‘Mandel Plan’, drawn up in 1938 by the then Minister for the Colonies, Georges Mandel, provided for colonial workers to be brought to France to take the place of those men who had been called up to fight. Around 20 000 workers from French Indochina arrived in France at the beginning of the Second World War. The labour ministry’s indigenous, North African and colonial labour service (MOI) was put in charge of recruiting the necessary colonial workers, shipping them to France and allocating them to the national defence industries. Most were recruited by force from among the poor peasantry of the protectorates of Annam and Tonkin and the colony of Cochinchina. These unskilled workers were used mainly as forestry, agricultural and industrial labour, in particular in the armaments factories and powder magazines. After the French defeat, they were lodged in huge camps in the Free Zone, where they were subjected to military discipline as well as very harsh living conditions. At Liberation, the majority wanted to return home as soon as possible, but their repatriation was delayed due to postwar disorganisation and events affecting French Indochina. As a result, several hundred Indochinese workers occupied the Fort de Queuleu between 1948 and 1950: 537 in October 1948, 438 in December 1948, 323 in March 1949, 296 in April 1949, 188 in May 1949, 163 in August 1949, 176 in September 1949, 213 in October 1949, 156 in December 1949, 191 in January 1950, 35 in April 1950 (repatriations to Vietnam gathered pace in this period) and 79 in May 1950. The suffering of exile gave way to exasperation and anger. Echoing the Vietminh independence movement in Indochina, the Indochinese workers in metropolitan France called for emancipation and equal rights with other workers. Graffiti on the walls of the Fort de Queuleu is a sign of their presence here.

 

A remembrance site (since 1971)

 

At the entrance to the fort stands a memorial to resistance and deportation, inaugurated on 20 November 1977, which marks the entrance to the remembrance site. The monument, containing the ashes of an unknown deportee, was designed by Metz-born architect Roger Zonca, who was involved in the reconstruction of the area.
 

Since 1971, the protection and promotion of the Fort de Queuleu in Metz has been the task of the Association du Fort de Metz-Queuleu pour la mémoire des internés-déportés et la sauvegarde du site (formerly the Amicale des anciens déportés du fort de Queuleu et de leurs familles), made up of volunteers.

  
 
  

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From left to right: Entrance gate and entrance to the Nazi special camp - Cells
- Area damaged by the bombardments of 1944 - The commandant’s office
- Corridor of the camp - Main access bridge to the Fort de Queuleu.

 

Membership form

 

 

Sources : ©Fort de Metz-Queuleu

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Rue du Fort de Queuleu/Allée Jean Burger - 57070
Metz
+33 (0)6 95 67 42 80

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Sunday afternoon, 2 pm to 5 pm/6 pm (according to season) http://www.fort-queuleu.com/visites/

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Late December to early January Office de Tourisme de Metz - 2 place d’Armes - CS 80367 - 57007 Metz Cedex 1 - Tel.: +33 (0)3 87 39 00 00 - Fax: +33 (0)3 87 36 59 43 - Email: contact@tourisme-metz.com

The Gosselming national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Gosselming. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Gosselming

 

The Gosselming national cemetery, which adjoins a German cemetery, was created in 1914 by the German army during the Battle of Sarrebourg in August 1914. It brings together 346 French soldiers, including 293 buried in two ossuaries, and 256 German soldiers, 188 of whom lie in an ossuary. The cemetery was developed in 1924, when the bodies of soldiers exhumed in the surrounding area were brought there. The Gosselming cemetery is typical of military cemeteries from the start of World War I, and of the way in which the dead were treated by the French and German military authorities. At this time, officers were generally buried in individual graves, whereas troops were buried in a shared grave. It is also the case here, with the graves of Krémer, the battalion commander of the 56th infantry regiment (grave 43), and those of several officers and non-commissioned officers. The principle of shared graves remained until 1915, but individual graves quickly became widespread for both armies.

 

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Gosselming
Au nord-est de Sarrebourg

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Belles-Forêts - Bisping National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Belles-Forêts - Bisping. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Bisping

 

After the Battle of Sarrebourg, in August 1914 the German army buried the bodies of French and German soldiers in the same cemetery. At the end of the war, the site was expanded by the French government to take the bodies of soldiers exhumed from temporary military cemeteries around Bisping, Fribourg, Hertzing and Saint-Georges. Today, close to a German military cemetery containing 528 bodies, the Belles-Forêts – Bisping National Military Cemetery holds the remains of 380 French soldiers, fifty of whom are buried in individual graves. A monument was erected at this cemetery dedicated to the fallen from the 16th army corps engaged at Bisping from 18 to 20 August 1914.

 

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Belles-forêts
Au nord-ouest de Sarrebourg, D 27

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The "La Valette" national cemetery in Abreschviller

La nécropole nationale de La Valette. © ECPAD

 

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The La Valette national cemetery brings together the remains of 455 French soldiers, including 372 buried in two ossuaries, who died during the Battle of Sarrebourg in August 1914. It adjoins a German cemetery holding 274 bodies, 70 of whom are in individual graves and 204 in an ossuary. These German soldiers belonged to military units whose garrisons were in Bade, from Bavaria, Wurtemberg, Lorraine and Alsace and the Rhineland.

Created in 1914 following the Battle of Sarrebourg, it was developed in 1925 by bringing together the bodies exhumed from the surrounding areas, in particular Vasperviller, Voyer, Nitting, Landange, Bébing... Nearby, on the forest track between the Biberkirch and Voyer forests, an isolated grave preserves the memory of an officer, second lieutenant Petermann from the 149th infantry regiment (RI). This young graduate of the Saint Cyr military academy had on him a letter in which he expressed his desire to be buried at the spot where he fell.

 

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Abreschviller
Au sud de Sarrebourg, D 44

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Walscheid National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Walscheid. © ECPAD

 

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Built in 1914 at the end of the battles fought to the south of the scene of the Battle of Sarrebourg, Walscheid National Cemetery contains the bodies of 404 French soldiers, 345 of whom are buried in two ossuaries. This cemetery was then redeveloped in 1924 and contains primarily the bodies of soldiers from the 21st Army Corps, mainly from the 5th and 6th Colonial Infantry Regiments (CIR).

 

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Walscheid
Au sud-est de Sarrebourg, D 96

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National Necropolis of Plaine-de-Walsch

La nécropole nationale de Plaine-de-Walsch. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Plaine_de_Walsch

 

The Plaine-de-Walsch National Necropolis contains the bodies of 361 Frenchmen, including 319 who were previously buried in two ossuaries. After the battle of Sarrebourg (August 1914), thousands of bodies were strewn across the battlefield. With the officially recorded loss of 20,000 men, 20 August 1914 remains the deadliest single day of the First World War.

To prevent epidemics, the burial of these victims was of major importance. So, the German army requisitioned all men aged 16 to 60 to act with speed to bring the remains of all those killed in the sector to this cemetery. Without always stopping to identify the bodies, these men collected the fallen and buried them in deep common graves.

In 1924, under the supervision of the French War Graves Department, other bodies from the provisional cemeteries of Schneckenbusch, Troisfontaines, Hommarting, and Niderviller were transferred to this site.

Nearby is a German cemetery containing the remains of 277 German soldiers, most of whom also fell on 20 August 1914.

 

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Plaine-de-Walsch
Au sud-est de Sarrebourg, D 96

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The Brouderdorff national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Brouderdorff. © Guillaume Pichard

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Brouderdorff

 

The Brouderdorff national cemetery holds the bodies of 466 Frenchmen, including 390 buried in two ossuaries. Following the Battle of Sarrebourg (August 1914), this cemetery was developed by the German army in order to bring together the remains of soldiers killed in this sector. In 1924, under the control of the French graves authorities, other bodies were transferred here. A large number of these soldiers belonged to the 139th, 121st, 92nd and 16th infantry regiments (RI).

 

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Brouderdorff
Au sud-ouest de Sarrebourg, D 96

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The Sarrebourg national prisoners of war cemetery

La nécropole nationale des prisonniers de guerre de Sarrebourg. © ECPAD

 

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The Sarrebourg national cemetery - which was created in 1922 - underwent alterations until 1926 in order to welcome the bodies of soldiers who died during captivity in Germany between 1914-1918. Buried in temporary cemeteries linked to the internment camps, their bodies were exhumed and then repatriated to Sarrebourg. This national cemetery brings together, in individual graves, 13,389 Frenchmen, of whom 54 lie in two ossuaries.

At the centre of the cemetery, a monument was created by Swiss artist Frédéric-Balthazar Stoll, also known as Frédy Stoll (1869-1949) - a volunteer during the war - whilst he was a prisoner at Graffenwöhr. In 1928, this monument was dismantled then returned to France. In June 1930, it was definitively installed in Sarrebourg. Frédy Stoll sculpted the statue from a granite block, with the help of his comrades. This monument represents a kneeling, desperate warrior, like a beaten Hercules; a symbol of the prisoners' plight. After the war, Frédy Stoll also created the war memorials in Soulac-sur-Mer, Caillac, Le Verdon-sur-Mer in Gironde, Nadaillac in Dordogne and Bessancourt in the Val d'Oise.

Following the armistice of 11 November 1918, the return of the 477,800 French prisoners of war took place very quickly.

Around 25,000 French prisoners died in Germany from their injuries, diseases caught, accidents or ill treatment. The restitution of the bodies of these prisoners who had died in captivity was decided upon in 1922 - at the same time as they were granted the title "Died for France" - thus ensuring that they were regarded as the equals of those soldiers who had fallen at the front.

This is the only cemetery that exists for French prisoners, soldiers or civilians from invaded areas who died in captivity.

 

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Sarrebourg
Sortie ouest de Sarrebourg, D 27

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Eléments remarquables

Monument de la captivité 1914-1918

The Marxberg national necropolis, Sarrebourg

La nécropole nationale Le Marxberg. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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The Marxberg national necropolis mainly contains the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Battle of Sarrebourg in August 1914 or in the town’s hospitals. Created during the First World War by the German army, it was redesigned between 1925 and 1930 to bring together bodies exhumed from other cemeteries in Sarrebourg and the region. In September 1945, the bodies of French service personnel who died during the occupation of the Rhineland were repatriated and today the necropolis contains 1,608 bodies, including 1,119 Frenchmen lying in individual graves. Two ossuaries contain the remains of 315 and 257 soldiers respectively. From the Second World War, the cemetery contains the bodies of 266 Frenchmen, 77 Poles, 69 Yugoslavs, two Bulgarians and one Czech. A monument inside the cemetery honours the memory of soldiers from the Polish army who died in June 1940: “The town of Sarrebourg and Polish veterans in France, to the memory of the Polish army that fought on the land of Lorraine for our freedom in June 1940. Za wolnosc Nasza i Wasza – For our freedom and yours”.

 

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Sarrebourg
À la sortie ouest de Sarrebourg, N 4

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Plaque commémorative "Aux grenadiers polonais de 1940".