Ouvrage Aumetz | |
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Part of Maginot Line | |
Northeast France | |
Coordinates | 49°24′50″N 5°57′33″E / 49.41389°N 5.95917°E |
Site information | |
Owner | Private |
Controlled by | France |
Condition | Abandoned |
Site history | |
Built by | CORF |
Materials | Concrete, steel, deep excavation |
Battles/wars | Battle of France, Lorraine Campaign |
Ouvrage Aumetz | |
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Type of work: | Small infantry work (Petit ouvrage - infantry) |
sector └─sub-sector |
Fortified Sector of the Crusnes └─Sub-sector of Aumetz |
Work number: | A7 |
Regiment: | 128th Fortress Infantry Regiment (RIF) |
Number of blocks: | 3 |
Strength: | 2 officers, 112 men |
Ouvrage Aumetz is a small work, or petit ouvrage of the Maginot Line. It is part of the Fortified Sector of the Crusnes and is located near the community of Aumetz in the Moselle département of France. The petit ouvrage flanked by the gros ouvrages Bréhain and Rochonvillers, all facing the France-Luxembourg border. Aumetz was initially planned as a gros ouvrage of six combat blocks, but only three infantry blocks were built. Aumetz saw limited action during the Battle of France. In the 1970s it was the first Maginot position to be offered for sale to the public.
Aumetz was planned as part of the second series of Maginot fortifications, with planning beginning in 1930 and construction in 1931. Initially planned as a gros ouvrage with three infantry blocks and three artillery blocks, the project was scaled back to just the infantry blocks, with entry blocks and artillery to come at a later date. Construction cost was 9.5 million francs. The contractor was Verdun-Fortifications.
Aumetz is a compact ouvrage with three closely grouped infantry blocks with underground galleries converging on a central underground barracks. The entry is immediately behind the junction, with no special degree of fortification, as it was intended to be extended some hundreds of meters to the south in the second phase.
Three additional blocks were planned for one 135mm and two 75mm retracting gun turrets, to be placed behind the infantry combat blocks as part of a compact ensemble of positions. A long gallery was planned to extend to the rear to open into a personnel entry and a munitions entry, with an underground barracks and a magazine. The completed gros ouvrage would have resembled its neighbor Bréhain.
A series of detached casemates and infantry shelters extend in the direction of Rochonvillers, including
None of these are connected to the ouvrage or to each other. The Casernement de Ludelange provided peacetime above-ground barracks and support services to Aumetz and other fortifications in the area.
The 1940 manning of the ouvrage under the command of Lieutenant Braun comprised 112 men and 2 officers of the 128th Fortress Infantry Regiment. The units were under the umbrella of the 42nd Fortress Corps of the 3rd Army, Army Group 2.