rthstewart: (Default)
rthstewart ([personal profile] rthstewart) wrote2026-01-11 01:12 pm

Pegasus Bridge, Normandy

The spousal unit and I spent 5 days in Normandy, France last year touring D-Day sites as well as Mont Saint Michel and a bit of Paris. We stayed in Bayeux (Tapestry!) and spent two days touring the British and Canadian becahes and sites, and then the American sites. We were able to go back and spend a full day at Pegasus Bridge and the Merville Gun Battery.

We had lunch at the Ham and Jam creperie right across the street from the sadly closed Gondree Cafe. It's so sad now to think of the US going to war with its French and British allies because Drump psychologically needs to invade Greenland.


NGL it was awesome to see the inspiration for my stories in real life and to realized that yeah, I got pretty damned close. I cried a few times, thinking of how much I wrote, how hard I worked at it, and wondering if I would ever get that again. Wonderful. And so personally devastating too.

A few pics below.

Château de Bénouville


Posters on Av. du Commandant Kieffer, Bénouville, France which crosses the Caen Canal where the original Pegasus Bridge stood and Operation Tonga







Major John Howard Avenue, Pegasus Bridge Sign, and Marker where Horsas crashed




Wally Parr's Number 1 gun "I didn't know it was going to be a quiet war."


Ultra report on Operation Tonga


And last, the gravesite of Lt. Den Brotheridge (maybe not the first casualty of D-Day). As it turns out, there's a very different tradition between American vs Canadian/British fallen. Americans are collected in single, solemn, uniform sites; Canadian and Britsh are interred where they fell. So Normandy is dotted with scores of tiny church graveyards with Canadians and British who died there.


The stained glass windows throughout Normandy churches, including the cathedral in Bayeux, are a mix of traditional Catholic iconography and signs and insignias of the D-Day operations, including parachutes, flying horses, St George and the Dragon, eagles, and service insignia, all in stained glass.







brokenallbroken: (Default)

[personal profile] brokenallbroken 2026-01-11 07:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Lovely pictures! I'm glad you found the time to take a vacation with all the [gestures around vaguely], and that it was a meaningful one.
oracne: turtle (Default)

[personal profile] oracne 2026-01-11 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
What an amazing trip. I love the detail about the stained glass.
adaeze: (Default)

[personal profile] adaeze 2026-01-11 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh wow. Normandy is definitely on my bucket list - Wellinghall says "and on mine" - so glad you were able to make it, and that it lived up to expectations. How was Mont San Michel? I have managed its Cornish counterpart. Any sign of giants?

(Anonymous) 2026-01-12 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
These are beautiful pictures and it sounds like a wonderful experience. I appreciate you sharing your travel. It really sounds like you had a lovely time.
grey_wonderer: (Default)

[personal profile] grey_wonderer 2026-01-12 03:41 am (UTC)(link)
This is actually me. For some reason, I thought I was signed in and I wasn’t so I wasn’t trying to be anonymous. It just happened.