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In this July 8, 2018 photo, two visitors pause close to an
information board outside a row of ruined cottages in Tyneham, Dorset,
south-west England. The residents of the tiny village were compulsorily
evacuated in late 1943 to provide extra land for military training,
ahead of D-Day, and were never allowed back. In the years since, their
homes have fallen apart as weather has rotted the timbers and nature has
reclaimed the land. Tyneham is still in military hands but it is open
to visitors most weekends. (AP Photo/Jerry Harmer)
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TYNEHAM, England (AP)
Explore Britain’s southern coast carefully enough and you can still
find relics of the dark years when the country awaited Nazi invasion:
abandoned radar stations; tank-traps lost in farmers’ fields;
half-hidden concrete bunkers overlooking wide, shingle beaches.
“This is like Pompeii!” my young son exclaims, as we stand in front of what had once clearly been a row of cottages.
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This July 8, 2018 photo, shows the remains of a fireplace
and a missing window, in a ruined cottage in Tyneham, in Dorset,
England. The village was commandeered by the military in 1943 and the
people evacuated. They were never allowed back and Tyneham remains in
the hands of the Ministry of Defense. The village dwellings have slowly
fallen apart, as waether rotted the roof beams and upper floors and
nature reclaimed the interiors. (AP Photo/Jerry Harmer)
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In this July 8, 2018 photo, a visitor inspects the
interior of a ruined cottage in the abandoned village of Tyneham, in
Dorset, England. The British War Department took over the tiny
settlement in late 1943 to provide more land for training ahead of
D-Day. The residents have never been allowed back and the now ruined
village remains in military hands but is opened to tourists most
weekends. (AP Photo/Jerry Harmer)
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This July 8, 2018 photo, shows a row of ruined cottages at
the entrance to Tyneham, in Dorset, England. The tiny village was taken
over by the British military in late 1943, to provide more land for
training ahead of D-Day. The people were never allowed to return and the
houses have slowly fallen apart. It remains in the hands of the
Ministry of Defense, which allows tourists to visit most weekends
through the year. The village is a poignant reminder of the sacrifices
made by ordinary people during World War II. (AP Photo/Jerry Harmer)
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Her niece, Lesly-Anne Meader, 60, from nearby Hampshire, is on her first visit.
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If You Go...
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In this July 8, 2018 photo, St Mary’s Church in Tyneham
stands beneath a brilliant blue sky. The tiny settlement in Dorset,
England, was taken over by the British military in late 1943 to provide
more land for training, ahead of D-Day. When the residents left, one of
them pinned a note to the church door asking that the homes and
buildings be treated with respect, as they fully expected to return. But
they never did, and Tyneham remains in military hands. The church has
been maintained but time and nature have overwhelmed the dwellings,
earning Tyneham the nickname of the “ghost village.” (AP Photo/Jerry
Harmer)
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