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Unread 07-18-2013, 03:13 PM   #17
NoncomRetired
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Originally Posted by Olle View Post
This was in the late 80's, and I don't remember that lake. I do remember the sight of that bridge though, and the street view in your picture looks exactly like what we saw when we turned onto that street. I have seen a lot of pictures, so there was a lot to take in while slowly driving across the bridge. The movie was shot in a different location, but even if I have seen it numerous times I still couldn't tell much of a difference.

There was also a great museum somewhere in that area, IIRC close to a war cemetary. It was an old mansion with a Sherman sitting in the driveway, and they had a lot of neat stuff. One thing that stood out was a display that showed soldiers and equipment from Germany, USA and England. Seeing the differences between the German's well made hi tech gear and the Allied's somewhat dated and utilitarian looking stuff was probably the most memorable part, and it sure made you wonder how the Germans would have done under a different commander.
This was the place.................it was used as the Cmd Hdqs and a hospital. It is the museum today. Foxholes were all over the place around it and the famous photo and film of a mortar crew was dug-in the front yard. Those three guys survived the war and when they went back for the making of that film, they dug up that mortar tube that they had buried and it's now in the Border Regt Museum in Carlyle. There is a legend that there was a bounty on their heads because of their accuracy.

The other photo is of the famous 'Crossroads' just down the street from the museum. Most fought over place in Oosterbeek. Two of the corner places were field hospitals, one german, one british. I met up with my dutch buddies in the british one which was and is still a coffee shop. Turn left at the crossroad and it takes you to that cemetery which is the same cemetery about in the photos. You can still see bullet holes in the bricks inside and a mural covers one wall of the inside wounded during the battle.



http://www.pegasusarchive.org/arnhem...rderMortar.htm

I had their autographs in the book "The History of the Border Regt", sadly I don't have that book anymore, it was filled with autographs and a gift from the Border Regt for my contribution to the museum of the helmet that belonged to a Pvt Stanley that was KIA and is still MIA. I corresponded with his hole mate when he was shot through the head by a sniper. Stanley was buried in that foxhole and is still there. I corresponded with his sister also and even though his foxhole could be pinpointed by his holemate, Stanley's brother wanted him left there. Benny and I never got the chance to search the ground for him, family wishes. His sister sent me a war time photo of her brother which I gave to the museum also.
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