Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Fort de Nacqueville, Le Bas de Rue Du Nez
(The Bottom of Street Of the Nose: a Babel Fish translation), situated about 10ks west of Cherbourg centre, this French fort was built to protect the western side of the naval dockyard from attack. Possibly built around the 1890's and then re-fortified by the Germans and incorporated into the Atlantikwall.
French fortress gun.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
240mm M1903 French coastal guns captured in 1940.
1 x French fire control post.
1 x R612.
1 x Vf/Skoda.
1 x MG Stand.
2 x Flak.
1 x 7.5cm F.K.
1 x 4.7cm Pak36(t).
R612 casemate for assault gun..
7.5cm F.K.
4.7cm Pak36(t).
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
240mm M1903 French coastal guns.
The Canon de 240 TR Mle 1903 sur affût-truck Mle 1914 was designed by Canet and manufactured by Schneider. It started life as a coastal defense gun called the Canon de 240 TR Mle 1884-1903 sur affût G Mle 1903. It was a typical built-up gun of the period made from steel with a rifled inner tube and reinforced by layers of external tubes. (Wiki)
French gun with new owners.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The forts landward side wall and main gate.
Plan.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Looking back at the gate from inside with French buildings and large mounds of earth for the storage of ammunition.
Ammunition cases.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The forts office where the commander would work from.
French fire control officer.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Looking down at western side of the fort.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
R612 casemate.
Set into the old earthen banks is an R612.
MKB Bunkertour 3D model.
details
A 7.5cm Field Kannon was used inside the bunker.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
R612 casemate.
A closer look at the back, still with its doors intact and a large air vent on the right side to extract the gases from the casemate when the gun is fired. Also its cement camouflage added all over.
200mm Rost.
How the extractor fan may have looked behind the Rost.
Extraction pipes set into the concrete.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
R612 casemate.
722P3 Door.
The doors came in three pieces. One large door on the left, two half doors on the right. If the area behind the bunker has been hit and rubble and earth has built up behind the door. The left and bottom right door will not open, but the top right can. Thus allowing escape. Also note the small square hole in the r/h top door, an eye hole to look out and even poke a rifle through.
722P3 door. MKB Bunker tour.
Detail of the window on the inside. MKB Bunker tour.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
R612 casemate.
The bunker covers the eastern approaches to the beach area and a flanking wall on its left to protect it from direct fire from the sea.
How the embrasure may have looked when the gun was inside.
Plan.
In action.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
R612 casemate.
A set of pre formed concrete strips have been laid down as a sort of glacis plate for the gun. Something I have never seen anywhere else.
MKB Bunkertour.
On the front there would have been wooden doors, just to keep out the weather.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
First search light.
Carrying on around the seaward side of the fort we come to the first of two search light bunkers.
Plan.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
First search light.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
First search light.
There are two search lights in the fort, set into the outer wall and they were used to illuminate targets out at sea so that guns inland could fire on sea targets. They were not used against aircraft.
A picture of a searchlight on the Island of Alderney , like this one it could retreat back inside the bunker on rails.
60cm search light.
Elizabeth Castle Jersey's searchlight on rails..
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Gun Position.
Probably a 95mm French gun.
Plan.
95mm Canon de Cote de 95 M93. French.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Something hidden in the grass.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The second searchlight.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The second searchlight.
This could be a French searchlight, pre war. The light would have been quite small, 10cm? and only access was through the front.
Plan.
It could be a smaller type like this one,
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The second searchlight.
Looking inside there is a hook on the wall to hang, maybe the wiring.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The second searchlight.
Looking out of the lamp room.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
The second searchlight.
There is a small chimney in the roof to let out the heat generated by the light.
Having the lights low down, if there was low cloud or mist, the lights could shine under it. If they had been on the hills behind they could not penetrate through the fog or cloud.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
A double fire control post sitting on the top of the old forts earth bank. This post may have been used as Wn225, Luftwaffe station 'Castor' Funk Horch Stellung. Funk Horch was a monitoring intercept receiver Fu.H.E.c built in 1938 high accuracy monitoring receiver to intercept enemy radio traffic. This could be an ideal spot where the monitoring of allied aircraft flying in the this area of France.
Me playing around with a Hawker Hurricane flying low over the beach at Nacqueville. Well Hurry bombers with a Spitfire protection did come in at very low level and bombed Querqueville aerodrome, many times.
Plan.
Low flying Blenheim.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Bofors 40mm Anti Aircraft gun.
A 40mm Bofors AA gun chassis, possibly German, could also be allied after the landings or later French. Most forces in WW2 used the 40mm Bofors guns, probably one of the most prolific AA guns made and still in use today.
British Bofors team after D-day in France.
4omm Bofors on its chassis.
Mechanism to screw down one of the four foot pads.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Bits lying around.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Bits lying around.
Barbed wire, concrete and a screw picket post, probably left over from the first world war.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
View along the seaward side.
Plan.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Cim postcard of the fort.
Heavy machine gun mounting..
Observation.
MG.34.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Cim postcard enlarged to show the Vf/Skoda casemate and a small observation/machine gun bunker set int the forts wall.
To allow the Skoda gun to fire, part of the forts wall has been removed.
The gun was a 4,7-cm-PaK 36(t) Škoda 4.7cm Model 1938.
This area now has a brand new sailing club built over the top.
4.7cm Skoda gun.
4.7cm Skoda gun showing its ball mount for the barrel.
4.7cm shell.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Plan originally of a Vf/Skoda casemate on the Island of Alderney and drawn by TGD. It shows a gun room, a spent shell case pit. The gun took up the centre of the front of the casemate and a viewing slit for the guns commander next on its right. The
Crew in place.
Gun commander using his viewing slot.
The ball mounting on the casements outside.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
These two photos are from StP10 Hameau Mottet where there is a Vf/Skoda gun casemate, of roughly the same design.
Between the two hornes on this casemate, there is a tree meter square hole, where
The yellow trace line, is where the spent case travels down a tube to the pit out in the front of the casemate..
Ammunition.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
Pôle Nautique Hague.
The wall has been repaired, windows and a door have been fitted in.
And how it looked in around 1945.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
View from the top of the R612.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
After the capture of Cherbourg, the clear up of the battle field commenced. The mines off the coast and in the harbour. Mines on the beaches and inland. Booby traps in and around the dock yard. It was a massive task. Although this was US area of responsibility, US forces did not have the spare capacity in mine clearing in the water that the British had. No ports in the British responsible are had been captured and until Caen was captured, these naval parties had very little to do. After Cherbourg, they went on to clear Granville and most of the Brittany ports that were captured.
Naval Command Western Task Force (NCWTF) put Commander M/S West in charge of the operation of clearing mines from Cherbourg. Intelligence data available, as to the extent of mining in and off the harbour, was of great assistance in framing for this difficult clearance. Before Cherbourg was taken, during the northward advance of the U.S. Army along the Cotentin Peninsula, channel "L" was extended along the east and north coasts to protect bombarding ships employed in support of the Army's advance. During these operations, the minesweepers repeatedly came under fire of shore batteries. Within 24 hours of the silencing of the last battery, "H" and "L" channels had both been established and an area off the harbour entrance cleared to seaward of the 10-fathom line. The clearance of moored mines, within the 10-fathom line outside the harbour was effected by the two U.S. Yard Minesweeper (YMS) squadrons, the 167th British Yard Mine Sweeper (BYMS), and 206th His Majesty's Motor Minesweeper (HMMS) Flotillas. I think this is right.
U.S. Yard Minsweeper-143.
His Majesties BYMS 2023.
His Majesties MMS
John Payne of P Party naval divers clearing Antwerp docks.
Forces Net.
After training, Mr Payne was assigned to the American sector of the invasion front in Normandy and arrived in northern France about a fortnight after D-Day. His unit was sent to Cherbourg, the first major port taken by the Allies. The men frequently carried out two dives a day and were so exhausted by the experience and lack of sustenance – they normally lived on sandwiches – that they could collapse through fatigue.
German Mk6 sea mine.
Wn225 Fort de Nacqueville Hout,
Luftwaffe station 'Castor' Monitoring Unit
Two American soldiers watching mine sweepers clearing the extensive mine fields that were laid all around the Normandy coast.
As the Allies gradually expanded their hold on Normandy and – eventually - broke out, the minesweepers steadily shifted their area of operations to clear the approaches to the vital ports that were being liberated. This saw our sweepers - particularly the MMS and BYMS flotillas with their better inshore capability - working off Cherbourg. Their efforts inshore were supplemented in the harbors and docks themselves by the ‘P Parties’ – diving teams trained to locate and make safe or destroy the innumerable mines and booby traps left in the docks and wharves. (HMS Vernon).
This looks like either a small radar or a monitoring device.
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville
British soldiers watching the action from the top of the fort..
Wn224 Fort de Nacqueville