Musée de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Forges-les-Eaux

The Musée de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Forges-les-Eaux (Forges-les-Eaux Museum of Resistance and Deportation) presents the history of resistance and deportation in the town and region during the Second World War.

Collections include military and civilian objects are assembled from both large private collections and individual donations and are presented in two major exhibition spaces, one on each floor of the two-story building. The ground floor space presents war, occupation, and resistance, and displays items including:

Musée de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Picardie

The Musée de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Picardie (Museum of Resistance and Deportation in Picardie) in Tergnier presents the history of resistance and deportation in the region during the First and Second World Wars. The museum presents the region’s wartime experiences through three permanent exhibitions on the Second World War:

Mémorial de la Résistance en Vercors

The Mémorial de la Résistance en Vercors (Memorial of Resistance in Vercors) commemorates the actions and the fallen of the French Resistance, notably the Maquis, in the region of the Vercors Massif during the Second World War. A geographically imposing and fairly remote plateau populated by scattered villages, the Vercors Massif provided an opportunity for members of the French Resistance to evade German and Vichy authorities and to organize unmolested.

Musée de la Libération

The Musée de la Libération (Museum of Liberation) in Cherbourg-en-Cotentin presents the history of Cherbourg during the Second World War. Beginning with the Battle of France and German occupation of Cherbourg in 1940, the museum describes the city’s crucial strategic importance as a deep-water channel port and as a main Allied objective during the Battle of Normandy. Occupied by German forces in June 1940 as part of the coastal militarized zone, Cherbourg served for the next four years as an important element in coastal defenses.

Musée de la Résistance de Châteaubriant

The Musée de la Résistance de Châteaubriant (Châteaubriant Museum of Resistance) is installed within a converted farmhouse located near the former entrance to Choisel Internment Camp (Centre de Séjour Surveillé de Choisel). Initially established in 1940 by the French Third Republic to serve as a prisoner of war camp, it was ultimately employed by the German Army to detain approximately 45 000 French and a small number of British soldiers in the aftermath of the Battle of France.

Musée de la Résistance Nationale

The Musée de la Résistance Nationale (Museum of National Resistance), based in Champigny-sur-Marne and including 18 other locations throughout metropolitan France, administers a vast collection of objects and artifacts relating to war and resistance in France before, during, and following the Second World War. The collection includes more than 5000 objects and hundreds of thousands of documents acquired through more than 4000 separate donations, for a total of approximately 1 million individual items. These are held in partnership with the Archives Nationales (National Archives).

Musée de la Résistance, de l'Internement et de la Déportation

The Musée de la Résistance, de l'Internement et de la Déportation (Museum of Resistance, Internment, and Deportation) in Chamalières records the history of resistance, internment, and deportation in the region and in France from 1939 to 1945 as well as the broader history of the Second World War. The museum describes the period through three key themes: the Rise of Nazism; Resistance, Occupation, and Daily Wartime Life; and Internment, Ghettos, Deportation, and the Nuremberg Trials.

Centre Régional de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Castelnau-le-Lez

The Centre Régional de la Résistance et de la Déportation de Castelnau-le-Lez (Castelnau-le-Lez Regional Centre for Resistance and Deportation) is a centre for research and learning on the local history of resistance and deportation in Castelnau-le-Lez. It is intended "to perpetuate the memory of resistance and deportation, especially among young people, and to serve as a pedagogical tool for public knowledge" of resistance and deportation during the Second World War.