C_B_2015_05_

(Wang) #1
JEAN-MICHEL ENAULT

ANTIQUAPRINTGALLERY.COM

CLASSIC BOAT MAY 2015 59

ONBOARD


T


he last time I was in Port Chantereyne,
Cherbourg was thirty years ago. I
vaguely remembered a dirty grey
industrial town with nothing to do but
play pinball next to moody dock
workers in acrid cafés. People seemed to
have pudding for breakfast, drank coffee from cereal
bowls and it always rained. For sailors it was a place
to stop to refuel and grab some sleep and provisions
before the sailing holiday started with heading along the
coast. This time, I could have been forgiven for thinking
I had somehow got on the wrong ferry and arrived
in a completely different place.
Vauban, the Marshal of France and famed designer
and engineer of fortifications, first realised the
importance of Cherbourg as a defensive naval base
against the English during a visit in 1686. The
harbour’s main sea dyke began construction a hundred
years later and took over 70 years to build. Then the
entire project of Cherbourg harbour began during the
reign of Louis XVI and ended in 1860 although you
could argue that this project never actually ends. The
vast outer sea defences, some 2^1 / 2 miles long with forts
all the way along them were originally constructed by
Napoleon. The Titanic made her second-to-last stop
here and passengers boarded from Cherbourg, never to
be seen again. It played a pivotal role in the Second
World War, being the stage for the artificial harbours
floated across the Channel and a strategic landing place
for 2.3 million tonnes of GI gear and 110,000 men to
support the landings at Juno, Gold, Sword, Utah and
Omaha. One harbour wall fort was used as an ammo
dump but was blown up so as not to let it fall into the
hands of the Germans. On the hills above Cherbourg is
the 19th-century, gunned hill fort cemented ominously
into the Montagne du Roule like a huge grey limpet.
The protection of the harbour is so safe that it
allows for schoolchildren in Optimists to be racing and
training all year round and we often saw long duckling
lines of them being towed back and forth inside the
embrace of the walls that act as a huge lagoon and
have Blue Flag recognition for cleanliness. No mean
feat, this being the largest port in France, with a vast
marina of 1,556 berths, 1,300 of which are annual, and

Left: Etretat in
Normandy.
Below:
Cherbourg
vintage map
available from
antiqua print
gallery.com

CB323 Cherbourg.indd 59 24/03/2015 14:19

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