The Maginot Line – 11 Fascinating Facts About France’s Ill-Fated Fortifications

“Build a wall!” was more than just a 2016 presidential campaign slogan. It was in effect France’s military strategy for the years between the two World Wars.

“The Maginot Line has come to symbolize everything wrong with the Allied strategy in the years leading up to the Second World War… But was it really the disaster many have suggested?”

WORLD WAR ONE shattered France.

German troops invaded the country weeks after the opening of hostilities in 1914 and for the next four years, the enemy occupied roughly 8,000 square miles of French territory. That’s an area roughly the size of Massachusetts and one that contained a quarter of the country’s steel manufacturing capacity, 40 per cent of its coal reserves and a whopping 64 per cent of pig iron production.

Eight million citizens were mobilized to drive the Germans from France; an estimated 52 per cent of them became casualties. In fact, fully five percent of the country’s total population perished in the fighting. Many of the conflicts’s deadliest battles, like the Somme, Verdun and Germany’s 1918 Spring Offensive were fought on French soil.

Following the Armistice, France was obsessed with being ready for future wars. As the Weimar Republic began to rearm Germany in the late 1920s — a policy that later only accelerated under the Nazis — the French government set to work constructing an enormous defensive barrier along its eastern border to deter invasion. It was to be called the Maginot Line.

A map of the Maginot Line. (Image source: WikiCommons)

Named for André Maginot, the French war minister who during the 1920s pressed the government to spend vast sums on defences, this 280-mile long network of concrete bunkers, pill boxes and underground casemates certainly appeared formidable upon its completion. But it would turn out that France’s gamble on fixed fortifications, menacing as they were, would prove disastrous.

Famously outflanked by Germany’s Panzer divisions, which in 1940 invaded France by way of Belgium, the Maginot Line would come to symbolize everything wrong with the Allied strategy in the years leading up to the Second World War. But were France’s defences really the mistake many have suggested? Perhaps not. Check out these 10 facts about one of military history’s most impressive yet regrettable engineering feats and then decide for yourself. 

The Maginot Line was a 900-mile long network of underground bunkers, tunnels and concrete retractible gun batteries. Its heaviest defences were located along the 280-mile long border with Germany (Image source: WikiCommons)

It was one of the most formidable military projects in history

France’s Commission d’Organisation des Régions Fortifiées (CORF) spent 10 years designing, laying down, improving and extending the border fortifications that would eventually become known as the Maginot Line. Work began modestly in 1929 with a series of simple concrete gun emplacements along France’s frontier with the demilitarized Rhineland. Improvements and expansions would continue into the 1930s. Although the ultimate goal was to have the defences one day stretch the full distance of the border from the Swiss Alps to the English Channel, the most densely fortified section of the line sat on France’s 300-mile long frontier with Germany. The national government spent an estimated 3.3 billion Francs on the project. Its 142 bunkers, 352 casemates and 5,000 blockhouses were built using 1.5 million cubic meters of concrete and 150,000 tons of steel – enough to build 5,300 Char B1 tanks or five Richelieu-class battleships.

Retractible steel and concrete gun batteries were hallmarks of the Maginot Line. (Image source: WikiCommons)

The defences were many miles thick

At its broadest, the Maginot Line was more than 16 miles deep and was made up of a series of separate defensive layers. Up front were camouflaged observation points positioned right along the German border. To the rear were anti-tank, mortar and machine gun emplacements, along with underground infantry bunkers or casemates. Father to back was a patchwork of small and large ouvrages featuring retractable 75- to 135-mm gun steel domed cloches or bell turrets. In all, there were 142 artillery forts, 352 casemates and 5,000 smaller fortifications, many of which were laid out across the landscape to create interlocking fields of fire. Installations were also linked by a labyrinth of tunnels allowing personnel to move from position to position without exposing themselves to the enemy. Supporting the line was a network of mobile rail guns that could bring extra fire to bear where needed. Overseeing the entire chain was a string of 78 of hilltop fire control decks that enabled observers to direct artillery barrages onto enemy troop and vehicle concentrations at will. The whole system was linked by its own self-contained telephone and wireless communications infrastructure.

A field of tank obstacles. (Image source: Youtube)

It had a series of hidden surprises

If the Maginot Line’s guns, mortars and machine gun nests weren’t enough to break up an attack, engineers added a host of additional obstacles to stop the enemy outright or detour them into pre-sighted killing zones. Minefields dotted the approaches to the various strongholds, while fields of iron girders protruding vertically from the ground created wide impassable barriers for tanks. Elsewhere, dams and levees were built that could be opened in an emergency to flood large swaths of the countryside. Engineers designed the bunkers with forward-facing 12-foot thick concrete walls, but relatively thin defences in the rear, so that any positions captured in frontal assaults could be easily retaken by French counterattack.

French soldiers moved to their posts by way of a Maginot Line underground subway system. (Image source: Youtube)

Accommodations seemed lavish

Living conditions seemed quite comfortable for the half-million infantry, artillerymen and engineers who permanently manned the Maginot Line. The sprawling underground casemates were home to barracks, mess halls, hospitals and even recreation areas. Each ouvrage had its own power generator, hot and cold running water and was stocked with enough food and supplies to withstand a lengthy siege. Soldiers could even commute to and from their forward positions by way of a self-contained, narrow-gauge subway. The ventilation system kept the air in the in the passageways filtered and even pressurized to protect the soldiers within from gas attacks. Yet despite all the amenities, life underground was not always pleasant for the soldiers stationed there. The passageways were notoriously damp and cold and the sewage system was prone to backups.

France hoped the Maginot Line would prevent a frontal assault by Germany and instead divert an attack through Belgium. (Image source: WikiCommons)

The Maginot Line masked a somewhat underhanded strategy

On the surface, the Maginot Line was engineered to blunt a direct German attack into France, while safeguarding vital industries situated in the contested Alsace and Lorraine regions. But the Maginot strategy also concealed a hidden agenda worthy of Machiavelli. Defence planners imagined that the menacing barrier might compel Germany to avoid a frontal assault altogether and instead attack by way of Belgium. Such a move would no doubt draw other European powers, namely Great Britain, into a conflict and arouse world opinion against Berlin. It was hoped that in such a scenario, the invaders would be defeated by an Allied army in Belgium.

A fanciful cutaway of one of the Maginot Line’s underground complexes.

Maginot Mania gripped France

The Maginot Line quickly became the pride of the French people. Newsreel footage of its impregnable bunkers and powerful guns contributed to feelings of national invincibility. Tragically, the defences so impressed voters, many questioned the need to strengthen the country’s field army to match Germany’s modern mechanized war machine.

A segment of Germany’s “Westwall.” (Image source: WikiCommons)

Many nations followed France’s lead

Maginot Line propaganda made an impression on more than just the people of France – other world powers took note as well and were soon investing in their own copycat fortifications. Beginning in 1936, Greece began work on a 100-mile long Maginot knock-off along its frontier with long-time foe Bulgaria. It was dubbed the Metaxas Line after the country’ prime minister. Similarly, Czechoslovakia assembled its own network of bunkers, pillboxes and artillery forts on its border with Nazi Germany as early as 1935. Even the Third Reich constructed fortifications opposite the Maginot Line in the two years leading up to the outbreak of the war. Dubbed the “Siegfried Line” by the Allies, Hitler’s “Westwall” as it was officially known was far less ambitious than its French counterpart, consisting mainly of fortified gun emplacements and tank obstacles including, ditches, concrete dragon’s teeth and steel hedgehogs.

Charles de Gaulle (right).

Not everyone was impressed with the Maginot Line

Despite the stock France placed in its fortifications, the entire concept was not without its critics. The hawkish and thoroughly anti-Nazi politician Paul Reynaud lobbied his party to abandon the works and invest instead (like Germany) in a strong air force and tanks. It was an opinion shared by a young up-and-coming French officer by the name of Charles de Gaulle. The First World War veteran and author of the 1934 book Vers l’Armée de Métier  or “Toward a Professional Army” proposed France depart from strategies of defence and build its army around the principles of mobile warfare and the decisive use of tanks. Few in France paid much attention to de Gaulle. Ominously, his book was remarkably successful in Germany.

Germany never launched a full-fledged frontal assault on the Maginot Line. They drove around it. (Image source: WikiCommons)

The Maginot Line was easily outflanked

Despite the time, effort and money that went into the Maginot Line, it saw relatively little action during the war. Hitler’s army bypassed it entirely in May of 1940 and (as predicted) invaded France by way of Belgium. By June, Nazi panzers had swept south from the Ardennes, outmaneuvered the French army and its British allies and cut off the Maginot Line from the rear. Early in the invasion, Wehrmacht guns bombarded one of the isolated Maginot fortifications along the Belgian border known le petit ouvrage La Ferté for four days. By the time it was overrun, the entire garrison of 107 were dead. Most suffocated when fire tore through the interior of the casemate. Its damaged turrets remain a national monument to this day. Further south, German units attempted to storm various points along the line in a series of frontal assaults throughout June of 1940. In most cases, the troops inside the Maginot Line held out and only emerged after France surrendered.

Parts of the Maginot Line have been preserved as historic landmarks. (Image source: WikiCommons)

It continued to be manned after World War Two

Blitzkrieg didn’t spell the end for the Maginot Line. French troops reoccupied it after VE Day and many of the fortifications were repaired and even upgraded. In the years following 1945, a number of the largest and deepest bunkers became NATO command centres. By the time France withdrew from the alliance in the late 1960s, most of the facilities had been closed, abandoned and auctioned off to wine makers, farmers and housing developers. A number of installations remain as historical landmarks and tourist attractions.

American GIs retake a section of the Maginot Line. (Image source: WikiCommons)

Historians have reconsidered the Maginot Line

Some argue that despite being outflanked by the German army, the Maginot Line did actually fulfil its mission. It kept the German army from invading directly and safeguarded the coveted AlsaceLorraine territories. Defenders of the fortifications point out that it was France’s field army that failed to stem the Nazi onslaught through the Ardennes. It’s this fiasco that ultimately led to the fall of France.

14 thoughts on “The Maginot Line – 11 Fascinating Facts About France’s Ill-Fated Fortifications

    1. When referring to the Maginot Line defences in terms of “depth,” we were talking about horizontal depth (as in they were a belt of trenches, earth works and bunkers that were 16 miles *deep*) not vertical subterranean depth. Sorry for the confusion.

  1. The operation was a success, but the patient died. The Maginot Line held up, but the overall objective did not. “Fixed fortifications are a monument to the stupidity of ….oh, you get the idea. And the Kola Superhole was drilled to depth of 7.6 miles, but who’s counting? I guess I am.

  2. I have heard that there were some French soldiers who were trapped in the Maginot Line for the length of German occupation of France. They were supposedly freed when the Allies advanced through the area. Did this actually happen or is it just another tall tale?

    Thanks!
    Jason

  3. This did happen. Whilst, one year after the war declaration* , the Germans where occupying one half of France, the Maginot Line was still resisting. Once the ‘capitulation’ signed, the troops where ordered by the HQ to surrender and, despite usual convention on war, considered as war prisoners by the German,
    This was one infamous condition in the ‘convention d’armistice’ signed by the Frenchs

Leave a Reply to MarkCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.