The Verlaine Message Museum or Museum of 5 June 1944 is a historical museum founded in 1991 in Tourcoing, France, near Lille. It is named after the message sent by the BBC's Radio Londres at 9:15 pm on June 5, 1944 announcing the imminent invasion of Normandy. The museum is housed in the concrete bunker where the German Wehrmacht intercepted the message.

1. History

Following the Battle of France, the German 15th Army established its headquarters at Tourcoing. The 15th Army was deployed in Normandy and the Netherlands. The headquarters consisted of thirteen concrete blockhouses. These protected the occupiers against air strikes and chemical weapons. German soldiers with small arms and machine guns controlled physical access to the bunkers. During Allied planning for Operation Overlord, the actual date of D-Day needed to be kept secret, but the Allies depended on cooperation with the French Resistance. On 1 June 1944, a message was broadcast over Radio London to inform the Resistance that the invasion could be expected within 2 weeks. The first message consisted of the first three lines of Paul Verlaine's poem Chanson d'automne: Les sanglots longs des violons d'automne ("The long sobs of autumn violins"). On 5 June, at 9:15 pm (London time), Radio London broadcast a second message: the next three lines from the same poem. Blessent mon coeur d'une longeur monotone, or "Wound my heart with a monotonous languor", meant that the invasion was to begin within 48 hours. The Resistance was supposed to increase its efforts against German supply lines, especially railroads, in anticipation of D-Day. At Tourcoing on 5 June, the 15th Army Headquarters intercepted the message. It was 23:45 (French local time).

1. The museum today

The largest of the thirteen blockhouses, a Type SK1 Bunker number 381, was converted to a museum. It is dedicated to the installations of the Nazi occupation of France and how those installations worked. The rooms most important to the bunker's wartime function — the generators, ventilators, telephone exchange and translation department, as well as the general's office, kitchen and guard post, are open for public view and are restored to wartime appearance. Other exhibits include methods used by the Gestapo to detect and locate radio transmitters used by the Resistance and a room dedicated to the landings in Normandy. For 2013–2014, the museum has an exhibition dedicated to the commandos who were the first French soldiers to land as part of the liberating force. The museum's stated objective is "to fight for remembrance and against all forms of revisionism."

1. Photos


1. References


1. External links

Official website of the museum (in French)

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25 m

Musée du 5 juin 1944

Le musée du 5 juin 1944 « Message Verlaine » est un musée historique, fondé en 1991 à Tourcoing, dans le département du Nord. Il est installé dans une ancienne casemate qui abritait un état-major allemand pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. C'est là qu'a été capté par les Allemands, le 5 juin 1944, la seconde strophe du poème Chanson d'automne de Paul Verlaine émis par Radio Londres sur la BBC à 21 h 15 annonçant aux résistants l'imminence du débarquement de Normandie du 6 juin 1944 : « Les sanglots longs des violons d'automne blessent mon cœur d'une langueur monotone... ». Les visites sont effectuées avec des guides bénévoles, qui font vivre ce lieu de mémoire.
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Carliers (métro de Lille)

La station Carliers est une station de la ligne 2 du métro de Lille, située à Tourcoing. Inaugurée le 18 août 1999, la station permet de desservir le quartier Gambetta.
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Église du Sacré-Cœur de Tourcoing

L'église du Sacré-Cœur est une église catholique de Tourcoing dans le département du Nord. Elle dépend du diocèse de Lille. L'église du Sacré-Cœur est réputée pour le son de ses cloches.
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Boulevard Gambetta (Tourcoing)

Le boulevard Gambetta est un boulevard dont le tracé a été décidé en 1872, reliant la ville de Tourcoing à Roubaix sur un axe nord-sud.
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Rue de Roubaix (Tourcoing)

La rue de Roubaix est une voie de la commune française de Tourcoing.