ARGONNE - Haute Chevauchée
Year of visit: 2005
We visit the Haute Chevauchée, a forest west of the Butte de Vauquois, along the D 38b. Near Vauquois we take a side road from the D38 to the left into the forest of the Haute Chevauchée.
We visit the memorial at the summit of Hill 285, covering an ossuary.
Behind this monument we find again a huge mine crater of about 30 meters deep.
Nearby you will find traces of exits of the comprehensive German underground "Kaisertunnel".
During the Battle of Verdun
the Germans started to dig in April 1916 three long and wide tunnels for the supply of soldiers, who help them to recapture the heights of the Morth Homme and Hill 304 at the end of May.
The Kaisertunnel was one of these.
The Kaiser tunnel is part of a series of three tunnels. In the north the Ortlieb tunnel, in the middle the Kaiser tunnel and in the south, the closest to the front line, the Verbindungs or Bataillon tunnel.
The Kaiser Tunnel was first constructed by the Prussian infantry in late 1915, early 1916, with the intention of connecting the valley of Meurisson to the front. The tunnel is 350 m long, but with all adjacent spaces and side tunnels, the length becomes 455 m. When evacuating the tunnel in September 1918, the German troops themselves blew up the entrances. During the evacuation, all installations such as generators and telephone exchange were included and reused in the Siegfried line. Unfortunately, guided tours in the tunnel are no longer possible due to safety.
These exits ended in trenches, which now look like overgrown ditches.
We return downwards the hill to the junction with the D 38, to find and locate the nearby lair of the German Crown Prince.
Continue to: " The Crown Prince's Bunker " .










