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IN SEARCH... OF THE WESTERN FRONT
Flanders, Picardy & the Somme
‘In Flanders fields the poppies blow between the crosses….'
9 days including arrival/departure days
Ypres, the Somme, Vimy Ridge. Names that have entered the English language
and now represent something more than simply a place name.
Nearly ninety years on, the scars of these, the greatest land battles fought
on European soil, are still evident. Not only are there still trenches, gun
emplacements and bunkers lying in fields and wood of Northern France and
Belgium, but there are lakes left by the giant mines, half sunken tunnels, and
huge tracks of land unsafe because of unexploded ordinance.
Hardly a day goes by without a farmer turning up some sad reminder, including
unknown soldiers, of the great sacrifices made in Flanders fields where ‘the
poppies blow between the crosses row on row’.
This tour explores the battlefields by foot and vehicle. We visit the best of
the museums, the most poignant of the memorials. Actions fought by the gallant
and heroic lads of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, India and
Britain the mother country herself are remembered and discussed.
Your tour is led by one of our specialist guides.
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Arrive London |
Depart London |
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Saturday |
Sunday |
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27-Jul |
04-Aug |
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12-Oct |
20-Oct |
Price: US$1,749.00
Single Supplement: US$315.00
TENTATIVE ITINERARY
Day One - Saturday
Arrival London where you’ll be met by your guide-companion. Today is
generally a day for recovering from your travels but this afternoon we’ll be
visiting the Army Museum. In this excellent museum we’ll be focusing on the
Great War section to obtain an overview of World War One.
Day Two - Sunday
We have an early start and a drive to the Channel Port for our crossing to
France.
Loos
Our destination, and base for three nights, is near Arras. En route, we’ll
visit the site of the Battle of Loos. This is a particularly good place to
commence our tour as much of the ground remains little changed and it allows us
to follow the battle in some detail. Loos has the particular ‘distinction’ of
marking the first use of gas.
A feature of this tour will be to visit particular graves of those decorated
for conspicuous gallantry (mainly Victoria Cross winners) at various battle
sites, and to hear a full account of the action that won them their honour.
Day Three - Monday
The Somme
For sheer carnage there has never been a battle to compete with the four and
a half months that encompass The Somme. Sixty thousand casualties on the first
day, Four hundred thousand by the end. The flower of the Empires manhood
perished here.
Our tour today begins in Albert, where there was fierce fight from the
earliest months of the war. We’ll next see the huge mine crater at la Booisselle,
then the South African museum and memorial at Delville Wood. Then on to Mametz
Wood, High Wood and the tank memorial at Pozieres. This will be followed by the
Ulster Tower, and nearby preserved battlefield and, finally, the Newfoundland
memorial at Beaumont Hamel
Day Four - Tuesday
Cambrai, The Kaiser’s Offensive &Breaking the Hindenburg Line
Cambrai was the first massed tank attack in history. Approaching 400
attempted to smash a hole in German defences. After two weeks of fighting, and
80,00 dead on both sides, the allies were back where they started.
In March 1918 nearly one million men attacked along a front of almost 50
miles. It can become known as the Kaiser’s Offensive. It was the first tank v
tank battle in history. Weather (and farming crops) permitting, we’ll find some
original German trenches in the woods near Fayet. We’ll also be visiting the
Australian National memorial, Fouilloy Cemetery and the Villers Bretoneux School
Museum.
Finally, we’ll view events around the breaking of the Hindenburg Line in
September 1918. The Tennessee Memorial, 46th Division Memorial, the Bellicort
American Memorial and tunnels, and the American National Cemetery at Bony will
be visited.
Day Five - Wednesday
Vimy Ridge and Neuve Chapelle
Leaving the Arras area, this morning we dedicate to the battle at Vimy
Ridge. Here there is an excellent memorial run by the Canadian Government with
preserved trenches and tunnels to visit. We’ll also visit the French National
Memorial at Notre Dame de Lorette and the striking memorial at La Targette. Our
drive takes us through the battlefields of Neuve Chapelle, then into Belgium and
our second main visit of the day, Cloth Hall at Ypres for the Ypres Salient
Museum, ‘In Flanders Field’. This is undoubtedly the finest of all Great War
local museums with exhibitions including recreated trenches and an excellent
photographic collection. Images from this last will certainly help understand
the full horror experienced by the soldiers at the battlefields we’ll be
visiting over the next days. We’ll also visit St George’s Memorial Church.
Day Six - Thursday
Ypres, 1st, 2nd & 3rd Battles
Names of places featuring in the Ypres Salient offensives are branded into
our collective memory. Messines Ridge, Polygonn Wood, the Menen Road, Hellfire
Corner, Hooge and Kemmel Craters, Hill 60, Sanctury Wood and, the one word that
seems to stand for it all, Passendale.
We’ll be visiting each of the important sites of all three offensives during
our day. The Tyne Cot cemetery, the preserved trenches at Sanctury Wood, Lt Col.
John McCrae memorial, Langemarck German cemetery and the Brooding Soldier
memorial are amongst the sites.
The day’s sombre climax, and perhaps in many way the whole tour’s, will be
the Last Post Ceremony that we’ll witness tonight at the Menem Gate Memorial.
Day Seven - Friday
Leaving Ypres, we visit Popperinge, a town just behind the front lines that
afforded soldiers the opportunity of some much needed R&R. We'll visit Talbot
House, a Christian centre that stood like an island sanctuary of peace, and
where we can still visit the tiny attic chapel that gave comfort to so many. The
same town also contains the cells and execution post where deserters where
imprisoned before being 'shot at dawn'. This is perhaps the saddest sight of all
knowing as we do now that many supposed cowards were simply shell-shcoked.
Then via the hiill-top town of Cassel, (an army HQ site) and St Omer to
Calais and our Channel crossing. We return to London via Kent. En route, we’ll
look at a few village war memorials and particularly at some church regimental
memorials. These, found in every village, town and even factory across the UK,
demonstrate the loss of a generation almost more than anything else. If time,
we’ll also visit the grave of Sir John French.
Day Eight - Saturday
London’s Imperial War Museum is on today’s schedule. We’ve also included
some rather special and poignant Great War reminders including Stanley Spencers
remarkable paintings at a mediaeval church and a VC winners grave and memorial
in a quiet Thames-side churchyard. This will involve our driving out of London
into the Buckinghamshire countryside and it’s here that we’ll enjoy our farewell
dinner in an historic country pub.
Day Nine - Sunday
Our tour is at an end. You’ll be transferred to the airport of your choice.
It has been a remarkable week and the sombre places we’ve visited and stories
we’ve heard will, undoubtedly, stay imprinted on our minds for a long time to
come.
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