Many thanks, Tom, for taking the time to post all of these pictures. Brilliant displays. I would love to know what the German fort is that is depicted, as well as the western front fortification that was displayed in the before and after condition. Too bad they provided no info. -- Al
Thanks for the response. They are very impressive displays and important for the viewer to understand what 'fort' meant in WW1. -- AlHi Al, I think that before and after is Fort de Vaux at Verdun. The photos at the beginning of Tom's sequence of posts show the interior typical of those forts that comprised the network of fortifications around Verdun. Many of these are open to the public and worth the visit. Jack and I did that tour last year.
WOW.......thanks Tom, very impressive, I must see these when I visit NZ.
Outstanding effort Tom posting all of that lot!!:salute::
I'm still looking through them mate, you got some very good snaps of the big Gallipoli Dio and love the pic's of the colourised WW1 photographs.
Did you manage to spot the figure of Peter Jackson in the big Gallipoli dio??
He's kneeing down taking photographs near a command post wearing his famous shoulder braces? {sm4}
Thank you for all the great pics.Some really outstanding work by the artists who made all this happen.
Mark
Many thanks, Tom, for taking the time to post all of these pictures. Brilliant displays. I would love to know what the German fort is that is depicted, as well as the western front fortification that was displayed in the before and after condition. Too bad they provided no info. -- Al
Tom,
Great pictures. Saw some as you were putting them up and thanks for taking the time. NZ tourism guys should pay you a fee for your effort. I particularly liked the colour pics and the captions and the ones showing the Turkish Major being escorted behind the lines. Now I have to go back again to see if I can spot Peter Jackson in there{sm2}
Brett
Like where's 'Wally'..:wink2: did spot him.........Tom & Brett.......go to #66 post and scan down to the fourth photograph. It's a busy scene, but if you scan roughly halfway up the photo you'll see a small group of Kiwi's sitting to the right on their own, preparing to move off up the ridge. If you look slightly below that small group to the left, you'll see two figures. One is standing and walking, while the second one is kneeling with his back to the camera. He's wearing a blue/grey shirt, no hat, light coloured braces, dark hair, brown boots. You can't see it but he's holding a box-brownie camera taking photographs.
Let me know if you locate Peter Jackson?
Tom,
Great pictures. Saw some as you were putting them up and thanks for taking the time. NZ tourism guys should pay you a fee for your effort. I particularly liked the colour pics and the captions and the ones showing the Turkish Major being escorted behind the lines. Now I have to go back again to see if I can spot Peter Jackson in there{sm2}
Brett
Tom & Brett.......go to #66 post and scan down to the fourth photograph. It's a busy scene, but if you scan roughly halfway up the photo you'll see a small group of Kiwi's sitting to the right on their own, preparing to move off up the ridge. If you look slightly below that small group to the left, you'll see two figures. One is standing and walking, while the second one is kneeling with his back to the camera. He's wearing a blue/grey shirt, no hat, light coloured braces, dark hair, brown boots. You can't see it but he's holding a box-brownie camera taking photographs.
Let me know if you locate Peter Jackson?
Enjoyed your photos and the museum tour very much . . . . . I have always thought that 1:1 scale displays really bring the subject into perspective . . . .
:smile2: Mike