The Museum
The Museum The D-Day Museum was established in 1984 to tell the
story of Operation Overlord from its origins in the dark days of
1940 to victory in Normandy in 1944.
The Museum's centrepiece is the Overlord Embroidery. Inspired by
the Bayeux Tapestry, it is a moving tribute to the efforts and sacrifices
of the Allies in defeating Nazi Germany. The scenes depicted in
the Embroidery's 34 panels are vividly described in a multi-language
soundguide.
Within the Embroidery gallery is the audio-visual theatre, where
archive film footage, music, wartime images and the words of those
who lived through it combine to evoke the atmosphere of World War
II.
Then in the Museum's displays visitors experience the sights and
sounds of Britain at War - the air raid warden's living room in
the Blitz, the factory resounding to the strains of 'Music while
you work', and troops preparing for D-Day in their forest camp.
The climax of the displays is a dawn to dusk reconstruction of
the Allied landings by sea and air on D-Day itself - World War II's
'longest day'.
The last section of the exhibition, 'Portsmouth
Memories', features the recorded reminiscences of
local men, women and children who experienced life on the Home Front
or took part in D-Day.
The final image in the exhibition - a photograph of the rows of
gravestones in the war cemetery at Ranville in Normandy - is a reminder
of the price of victory, which must never be forgotten.
Click here to view
Portsmouth and D-Day
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