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Our Island Kitchen

Our Island Kitchen

An island steeped in history

From Victorian forts and WWII bunkers, to an ancient burial site and the best preserved small Roman fort in Western Europe, our small island is packed with history. Find out more visitalderney.com/heritage

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DISCOVER

The best preserved small Roman Fort in Western Europe

Explore Victorian Forts

Visit a 12th Century Watermill

Visit ‘The Odeon’, a WWII Naval range-finding tower

Walk the Blue Plaque Trail

THE ODEON WWII NAVAL RANGE FINDING TOWER

HOUMET HERBÉ NUNNERY ROMAN FORT

Step into the past

Wherever you are on the island you don’t have to travel far to step into the past.

Here you can touch the walls of a Roman Fort, climb the steps of a World War II German naval range-finding tower, explore a 12th century Watermill, all for free!

Find out how the Victorian period brought massive change to the island’s landscape when the British heavily fortified the island. See the extensive breakwater built to create a ‘harbour of refuge and observation’ for a British Fleet and explore the forts and gun batteries built to defend against a potential invasion by the French.

In WWII the Channel Islands were the only part of the British Isles to be occupied by the Germans. In June 1940 Alderney’s population were mostly evacuated to the UK. German troops fortified the island, using forced labour, building bunkers and tunnels and adapting existing defences, most of which can still be visited today.

The five-year German occupation came to an end on 16 May 1945 but it was not until the December that islanders were allowed to return to their now devastated island, overrun with rats and imposing concrete fortifications.

This part of our history is still a living memory for some of our island’s residents and December 15 is known as Homecoming Day, an event still celebrated in Alderney with an annual Bank Holiday.

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