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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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The Germans dredge sand for a Submarine Base

by Guernseymuseum

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Contributed by听
Guernseymuseum
People in story:听
Mr Donald Board interviewed by Margaret le Cras, Peter Balshaw.
Location of story:听
Guernsey
Background to story:听
Civilian
Article ID:听
A5821959
Contributed on:听
20 September 2005

Mr Donald Board interviewed by Margaret le Cras.
Edited transcript of tape recording of the interview

I鈥︹︹. Did you see anything of these propaganda leaflets that used to get dropped?
Mr Board. Oh yes. I had some of those. [ ] I have passed a lot of things on to Peter Balshaw, for his museum, and he鈥檇 come out every now and again, 鈥渉ave you found anything else鈥 in the way of antiques, antique tools, and he鈥檚 had a lot of stuff to the effect that I had free admission into there when my brother-in-law, one year when they came over from Canada, I took them down, and I used to tell the girl at the desk when we鈥檇 go in, and it isn鈥檛 a case of what you know it鈥檚 who, and I took them all around, because one of the rooms is one of the fuel tanks, now I remember, there was a big pipeline, that big, from by what was the Albert Caf茅, along the Albert Pier, along towards the slaughter house, and over that slip, along to the side, and there was a dredger that used to go to the South coast beaches to bring back sand, and they pumped that through into the beach to cover the rocks, because they intended making that a submarine base for serviceing and refuelling and that鈥檚 why the military museum has got that tunnel. But I鈥檝e never thought out and I鈥檝e never cycled really down there to see, and I鈥檝e never figured out how they gained access to Castle Cornet, with the pipe line, whether it was one they could hinge back, I don鈥檛 know, but they had to do that, to keep that open, to get down to Castle Cornet. I never took notice, it didn鈥檛 occur to me. But anyhow, of course, that sand stayed there for a while after the war, but within two years nature took its course and the rocks came back.

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