WW2 areas of interest

WW2 areas of interest

Author
Discussion

SlimRick

Original Poster:

2,258 posts

165 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
My parents are coming to stay with us over Christmas, and the chances are this might be my dad's last Christmas so I'd like to spend some time with him.

He's always had a strong interest in WW2 history, so if I could find somewhere to take him in the Wiltshire area he might enjoy it.

Anyone have any suggestions?

Lofty999

288 posts

127 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
imber village is open over xmas.Seems to be popular although I wasn't too impressed when we went!Church will be open if that's of interest.

cptsideways

13,545 posts

252 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
Tyneham Village is much more WW2 on the Dorset coat, nice walks around the area.

A few WW2 airfields about, The one at Zeals the lookout tower is now a house, (would love to own that place), most of the peri tracks are still visible & very nearby on the small hill to the east is a memorial to an American coloured bomber crew that went down in unfortunate training circumstances, remarkably a chap I work with is related to one of the crew members. The big hill overlooking the airfield is White Sheet Down, has nice walks with its own cold war ROC nuclear bunker hidden in the grass at the top & just below is Ye Olde Red Lion pub at Kilmington, a good halfway point. This is also within spitting distance of Stourhead house & gardens.




davebem

746 posts

177 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
The tank museum in bovington, Dorset is worth a visit.

GrumpyTwig

3,354 posts

157 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
davebem said:
The tank museum in bovington, Dorset is worth a visit.
First thing I thought of, planning a trip myself at some point.

alfaspecial

1,127 posts

140 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
Agree Tank museum - but Dorset.

I think the Monkton Farleigh museum at Box Tunnel has closed? I went 20 odd years ago and was pretty impressed - there was a huge storage area for all the ammunition for the D-Day landings. Trains would stop in Box tunnel and the shells etc were unloaded & stored in hundreds of miles of tunnels - had it gone 'bang' it would have been the biggest non-nuclear explosion ever (bigger than RAF Fauld explosion)

How about the Science Museum in Wroughton nr Swindon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_Museum_at_Wr...
https://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/researchers/libra...

wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_Museum_at_Wr...
Selected large objects at Wroughton[edit]
Douglas DC3 aircraft.
Ford Edsel motor car.
Boeing 247 aircraft.
Handley Page Gugnunc biplane.
Lockheed Constellation aircraft.
The Wood Press[edit]
The largest object at Wroughton is thought to be the Wood Press, part of the last working printing press in Fleet Street. The press was acquired in 2001 and weighs 140 tonnes. It is the size of two small houses.[6]

Important works in the Library and Archives[edit]
Charles Babbage's notebooks, engineering plans, certificates, social diary and letters.
Barnes Wallis’s plans for the bouncing bomb.
Pearson PLC engineering papers and photographs.
Walt Patterson nuclear collection.
Humphry Davy's letters.
George Parker Bidder's papers.
The New Cyclopaedia, or, Universal Dictionary of the Arts and Sciences. (Rees's Cyclopædia)[7]
See also[edit]


tog

4,534 posts

228 months

Monday 11th December 2017
quotequote all
alfaspecial said:
It's great, and I live locally and went often as a child, however it is sadly no longer open to the public.

alfaspecial

1,127 posts

140 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
tog said:
alfaspecial said:
It's great, and I live locally and went often as a child, however it is sadly no longer open to the public.
You are correct, (unfotunately!) the site is open to researchers but not the public. Sorry OP, my bad.




DavidY

4,459 posts

284 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Got to be Bovington Tank Museum, it has the big advantage of being weatherproof at this time of year, ie it's indoors!! Well worth a day out, plenty of interest for WW2 fans.

Tigers!


170620 Tiger Panorama by David Yeoman, on Flickr

SlimRick

Original Poster:

2,258 posts

165 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Thanks for the great suggestions.

Bovington is a good call, we went there when I was a kid so it would be nice to revisit.

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

186 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
SlimRick said:
Thanks for the great suggestions.

Bovington is a good call, we went there when I was a kid so it would be nice to revisit.
It's changed a lot in recent years. Worth a revisit.


alfaspecial

1,127 posts

140 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
DavidY said:
Got to be Bovington Tank Museum, it has the big advantage of being weatherproof at this time of year, ie it's indoors!! Well worth a day out, plenty of interest for WW2 fans.

Tigers!


170620 Tiger Panorama by David Yeoman, on Flickr
If interested in Tiger Tanks Haynes have published this:
https://haynes.com/en-gb/microsites/tigertank/
Available from 'The Works' for £6
https://www.theworks.co.uk/p/military-books/haynes...

DavidY

4,459 posts

284 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
SlimRick said:
Thanks for the great suggestions.

Bovington is a good call, we went there when I was a kid so it would be nice to revisit.
When I went as a child some 40 years ago, it was just a big shed with lines of parked tanks, it has changed a lot, and though it possibly has less tanks in it now, it is well ordered and actually leads you through the history.

AAGR

918 posts

161 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Bovingdon - Ah yes, and since your dear relative is elderly, I can also tell you that the loos are excellent, there are places to sit if you all get tired on the way round, and - even more important - the modern cafe (which overlooks the newest hall) is very high quality.

Much recommended - I live quite close by,and have often taken visitors, who all come away enthused.

[PS: In my village, one of the ex-Army REME maintenance volunteers who lived nearby, worked on rebuilding the museum's King Tiger tank - which is, I believe, the only working one in the world - and at the grand old age of 80-Plus he had the joy of driving it out on one of the demonstration days !]


Voldemort

6,144 posts

278 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Not Wiltshire, but the National Memorial Arboretum is an outstanding place to visit.

davebem

746 posts

177 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Theres also the RNAS museum at Yeovil.

-Dash-

16 posts

95 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Somerset & Dorest railway line running down from Green Park in Bath to the south coast was one of the major supply lines to the coast, and where the real invasion force snuck down whilst the blow up tanks were being sent elsewhere.

Loads of pillboxes along the former track route, there is a tiny museum at Midsomer Norton with loads of WWII stuff in it.

Yertis

18,046 posts

266 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
AAGR said:
Bovingdon - Ah yes
Bovingdon - Ah no... wrong place, wrong county, wrong part of England.


Bovington yes

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

186 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
Yertis said:
AAGR said:
Bovingdon - Ah yes
Bovingdon - Ah no... wrong place, wrong county, wrong part of England.


Bovington yes
Is that near the villages of Upper Pedant and Lower Pedant?

huwp

833 posts

175 months

Tuesday 12th December 2017
quotequote all
The old RAF Lyneham is now a REME facility. They have a REME museum there too.