Under
her own power for the very first time, shepherded by a flotilla of tugs
and pilot boats, the great ship eased slowly seawards along the broad
estuary of the river Loire to begin the trials which would shortly
culminate in the raising of the red ensign and her acceptance by
Cunard. Towering some 200 feet above the sea, the aseptic whiteness of
her superstructure warmed by the setting sun, the sheer majesty of her
presence was sufficient to stop traffic on the sweeping Pont de
Saint-Nazaire and raise cheers from the thousands of expectant
'Nazairiens' who packed the quays, the jetties and the shoreline east
and south of the town.
Constructed by Alstom-Chantiers de l'Atlantique, Queen Mary 2 is
the latest and grandest creation of the various shipyards which, over
the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, have helped
transform Saint-Nazaire from the sleepy fishing village whose potential
was first recognized by Napoleon 1, into one of the most important
ports in France. Initially developed in conjunction with the Clydeside
firm of John Scott, these sweep along the right bank of the river,
their industry and bustle conjoining with that of the commercial port
and the facilities of Airbus. Encompassing much of the eastward
extension of Saint-Nazaire, the Chantier's slipways, docks and gantries
are isolated from the residential developments of the Second Empire by
the Saint-Nazaire and Penhoët Basins, huge wet docks which together
extend for almost a mile to the north of the Avant Port.
For
almost a century and a half these yards and basins have given life to
an enviable dynasty of vessels, both military and commercial; to
warships such as Strasbourg and Jean Bart, and to opulent liners such as Paris, Ile de France and the beautiful, inimitable Normandie, the
scale and grandeur of whose construction during the years immediately
preceeding the Second World War would serve to redefine not only the
engineering potential of the port, but also its physical form.
At 80,000 tons very much the giant of her day, Normandie entered
service in 1935 her speed and luxury speaking volumes for the
particular skills of the Penhoët Yard, the organization contracted to
build her for the 'French Line'. Designed for the singular purpose of
pampering the rich and famous as they travelled in style between Europe
and America, there was a certain irony in the fact that her own journey
to completion during the depression years had been characterized above
all else by acute shortages of cash: for in addition to the financial
strains imposed by her groundbreaking construction, the extent to which
Normandie would dwarf existing facilities required major, and
expensive, alterations to the structure of the port itself, giving
Saint-Nazaire the configuration that would become familiar to planners
of both sides during the war years. Prior to her keel being laid it was
necessary to construct a completely new building slip, in addition to
which excavations began at an early stage for the vast new lock by
means of which Normandie, having been launched into the river, would be able to reach her fitting out berth in the land-locked Penhoët Basin.
Completed
in 1932 this structure, amongst the largest of its kind in the world,
was officially named the Forme Ecluse Louis Joubert, after the then
President of the Saint-Nazaire Chamber of Commerce: however, because of
its intimate association with so famous a ship many would come to know
it simply as the 'Normandie' dock.
Truly massive by the
standards of the day, it was 350m long, 50m wide and 16m deep. Capped
at each end by hollow 1,500 ton steel caissons, which could be wound in
and out of sockets set into the western quayside, it had the very great
advantage of being able to act as passage lock or dry dock as required.
Capable of housing ships of up to 85,000 tons, the vast enclosure could
be filled in only fourteen hours by powerful impeller pumps hidden deep
beneath the Pumping Station next to the southernmost winding house.
Considering the ease with which it could accommodate the most powerful
warships then known, the 'Normandie' dock's strategic location and
scale gave it an obvious military value; however, the more sinister
implications of this were yet to be discerned in a world drifting only
slowly towards war.
On 29 October, 1932, Normandie was
launched to the strains of La Marseillaise and towed through the great
dock to begin the lengthy process of fitting out. In the event her
transformation into the ship whose honour it would be to win for France
the Blue Riband for the fastest passage between Old World and New, was
to take two and a half years; and it was not until 5 May, 1935, that
she was ready to meet her element as the last word in elegance, the
most beautiful ship afloat.
With Captain Rene Pugnet as master, she returned through the Forme Ecluse and, escorted by the destroyers Adroit and Foudroyant, made
her way along the narrow channel which wound its way through the
treacherous estuary shoals. As she slipped past the cheering multitudes
who had come to bid her Godspeed, her departure was attended by
ceremony such as would not be seen again until it was time for the new Queen Mary to make the same triumphant passage almost seventy years into the future.
Having
been, for so many years, the pride of Saint-Nazaire, the departure of
both great ships, despite their separation in years, would precipitate
the same emotional void and the same fears for the continued employment
of the multiplicity of skills which had contributed to their speed and
beauty. However, while the new Queen Mary stands at the threshold of a working career likely to encompass some forty years of peaceful service, Normandie's days
of glory were already numbered by the ignoble fate awaiting her in the
distant Hudson River: and as for all those who had come to cheer her passage,
who amongst the throng could possibly have foreseen the crushing,
demoralizing occupation that would all too soon follow defeat in war -
still less the bloody battle which, in March of 1942, would play itself
out amidst the very quays and jetties where they had stood at the
moment of their city's greatest triumph.
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CONTENTS: 'SAINT-NAZAIRE' Battlefield Guide
Foreword, by Major General Corran Purdon, CBE, MC, CPM, Legion d'Honneur
Introduction (quoted above)
Chapter 1: Festung Saint-Nazaire
Chapter 2: A Plague of Empires
Chapter 3: The Company of Kings
Chapter 4: Waiting to Excel
Chapter 5: A Whisper of Ghosts
Chapter 6: Steel Tide Running
Chapter 7: All Smoke: No Mirrors
Chapter 8: A 'Gift Horse' for Troy
Chapter 9: A Gauntlet of Guns
Chapter 10: A Shock of Arms
Chapter 11: Hard Rain Falling
Chapter 12: Threads
Epilogue
Touring the Battlefield
Advice for Visitors
Acknowledgements
Index
(224 pages: 160 illustrations, some in colour)