Merville Gun Battery

Last updated
Merville Gun Battery
Part of Atlantic Wall
Normandy, France
Merville Gun Battery (6818465782).jpg
Largest casemate of the Merville Battery today
Type Artillery battery
Site information
OwnerFlag of Germany (1935-1945).svg  Nazi Germany
1942–44
Flag of France.svg  France
1944–present
Open to
the public
Yes
ConditionSeveral casemates and trench system
Site history
Built World War II
Built by Organisation Todt
In use1942-1944
MaterialsConcrete, steel, barbed wire
Battles/wars Normandy landings, Operation Tonga
Garrison information
Garrison Wehrmacht

The Merville Gun Battery is a decommissioned coastal fortification in Normandy, France, which was built as part of the Germans' Atlantic Wall to defend continental Europe from Allied invasion. It was a particularly heavily fortified position and one of the first places to be attacked by Allied forces during the Normandy Landings commonly known as D-Day. A British force under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Terence Otway succeeded in capturing this position, suffering heavy casualties.

Contents

Defences

The Merville Battery is composed of four 6-foot-thick (1.8 m) steel-reinforced concrete gun casemates, built by the Todt Organisation. Each was designed to protect First World War-vintage Czech-made leFH 14/19(t) 100 mm (3.93-inch) mountain howitzers with a range of 8,400 m. [1]

Other buildings on the site include a command bunker, a building to accommodate the men, and ammunition magazines. During a visit on 6 March 1944, to inspect the defences, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel ordered the builders to work faster, and by May 1944, the last two casemates were completed.[ citation needed ]

Side view of another casemate Merville2 web.jpg
Side view of another casemate

The battery was defended by a 20 mm anti-aircraft gun and multiple machine guns in fifteen gun positions, all enclosed in an area 700 by 500 yards (640 by 460 m) surrounded by two barbed wire obstacles 15 feet (4.6 m) deep by 5 feet (1.5 m) high, [2] which also acted as the exterior border for a 100-yard-deep (91 m) minefield. Another obstacle was an anti-tank ditch covering any approach from the nearby coast. [3]

Notes

  1. Zaloga and Johnson 2005, p. 29
  2. Ford, p.41
  3. Gregory 1979, p. 108

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References

Further reading

49°16′10″N0°11′52″W / 49.26944°N 0.19778°W / 49.26944; -0.19778