Defence and Garrison Museum

Part of the exhibition in the hangar at Aalborg Defence- and Garrison Museum

The Aalborg Defence and Garrison Museum (Danish: Aalborg Forsvars- og Garnisonsmuseum) is a military museum in Aalborg, Denmark that covers all branches (except naval) of Danish defence organizations.[1][2]

History

The museum is located in a seaplane hangar, built by German occupation forces during World War II.[2] The German seaplane base Seefliegerhorst Aalborg was established there in 1940. Following the war, the hangar was used as a storage depot for equipment of the Danish Civil Defence Forces.[2] In August 2001, the hangar was provided to the Garrison Historical Society of Aalborg for the creation of a military museum.[2] The building was renovated and the museum opened on 22 June 2002. In 2009 a second exhibition hall was opened creating a total exhibit area of approximately 15,000 square metres (160,000 sq ft).

Exhibits

The museum covers most branches of Danish defence organizations -- the Danish Navy was excluded because it was already represented in the city's maritime museum.[2] The branches include the Royal Danish Army, the Royal Danish Air Force, the Home Guard, the Police, and the Danish Emergency Management Agency with an emphasis on their activities during and after World War II to the present. There are also exhibitions of Denmark during World War II 1940-45, and about Aalborg as a garrison city since 1779.[3][4]

In the original command bunker of the seaplane base are exhibitions on the three German airbases in Aalborg during WW II and the camps for German refugees after the end of the war.[5][6][7]

The museum renovated and exhibits major parts of a Heinkel He 219 WW II German fighter aircraft which was uncovered by a storm off the coast of Jutland in 2012. The only previously known example is in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.[8]

Funding

The museum is a private institution that does not receive government grants for the operation. The museum is almost exclusively run by volunteers, who have served in the Danish armed forces. Defence authorities provided most of the museum's exhibits, especially the heavy equipment such as vehicles and fighter jets, thus the museum contains a large portion of stockpiled equipment during the Cold War.[9]

The museum is open daily from 1st of April to 31st of October. Because the hangar is unheated, the museum is open only by special arrangement from 1st of November to 1st of April. However the museum is open in week 7 and 8 (Danish winter vacation period.[10] The museum had more than 18,500 visitors in 2012.[10]

References

  1. Caroline Osborne; Lone Mouritsen; Roger Norum (1 June 2010). The Rough Guide to Denmark. Rough Guides Limited. pp. 250–. ISBN 978-1-84836-663-3.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Aalborg får garnisonsmuseum i gammel flyhangar" [Aalborg gets garrison museum in old airplane hangar]. Politiken (in Danish). July 10, 2001.
  3. Ebbe Gotfredsen (1996). Aalborg og garnisonen. Selskabet for Aalborgs Historie. ISBN 978-87-87409-11-7.
  4. Ole Neimann (1992). Besættelsestiden i Nordjylland 1940-1945 (in Danish). Aalborg, Denmark: Aalborg Universitetsforlag. pp. 37–. ISBN 978-87-7307-450-3.
  5. Westpreussen-Jahrbuch (in German) 55. Prussia, West (Poland): Westpreussen-Verl. 2005. p. 125.
  6. Per Bo Christensen; Jens Topholm (1990). Aalborg under stilstand og fremgang fra 1814 til 1970 (in Danish). Ålborg (Denmark): Aalborg Kommune. pp. 343–. ISBN 978-87-982530-1-3.
  7. Henrik Havrehed (1987). De Tyske flygtninge i Danmark 1945-1949 (in Danish). Odense, Denmark: Odense Universitetsforlag. pp. 90–. ISBN 978-87-7492-638-2.
  8. "Seltenes deutsches Jagdflugzeug gefunden", T Online, 26 April 2012 (German).
  9. Henrik Teller (2007). Køretøjer i den danske hær, 1945-2005 (in Danish). Devantier. ISBN 978-87-90975-05-0.
  10. 1 2 "Ny rekord på forsvarsmuseum". www.nordjyske.dk. Retrieved 20 February 2015.

External links

Coordinates: 57°3′22″N 9°52′58″E / 57.05611°N 9.88278°E / 57.05611; 9.88278

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