Saturday, October 14, 2017

Guernsey - Underground Hospital

Photos taken in the tunnels of the German underground Hospital - more or less from the camera to show the extraordinary range of colours. (Last one for Matt and Ellie.)

Between the years of 1940 and 1945 hundreds of slave laborers working under the direction of German occupying forces dug 7,000 square meters in underground tunnels. 
The  men and women of numerous nationalities, many of whom died in the tunnels’ construction, used explosives, drills, hand tools, and their bare hands to carve these tunnels from solid rock. The subterranean complex was intended for use as a German military hospital and ammunitions storehouse. 
By the time construction ceased at the onset of the D-Day invasion the hospital complex was large enough to house 500 patients. In addition to the three main entrances, the ventilation shafts were equipped with stairs and ladders so they could double as emergency exits.

For all its planning, after three years of construction the hospital was only in use for around three months during the summer of 1944 when German casualties of the D-Day invasion filled all available wards. Hospital operations were eventually moved above ground when it became clear that the tunnels’ damp, dark atmosphere was not conducive to recovery. The ammunitions storage facilities were used for around nine months.

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