Ouvrage Ferme Chappy
Ouvrage Ferme Chappy is a petit ouvrage of the Maginot Line in northeastern France. It is located at the western end of the Fortified Sector of the Crusnes near Longuyon in the Meurthe-et-Moselle département, facing Belgium. The gros ouvrage Fermont borders Ferme Chappy's artillery coverage to the east. A wide gap existed to the west in the direction of Longuyon, covered only by blockhouses and natural obstacles such as rivers. Ferme Chappy was assaulted by German forces during the Battle of France in June 1940, fending off the attack with artillery support from Fermont. Chappy surrendered with its neighbors on 27 June. It was abandoned after the war and is now private property.
Design and construction
Ferme Chappy was approved for construction in April 1932. It was completed at a cost of 11 million francs. The ouvrage was named for the adjoining farm whose buildings sit nearly on top of the underground barracks and entry.The ouvrage is immediately to the east of Longuyon and the valley of the Crusnes river, with a considerable space between Ferme Chappy and the next ouvrage to the west, Ouvrage Vélosnes. A gros ouvrage was planned immediately to the rear of Longuyon in the direction of Verdun, along with two casemates just to the south of Ferme Chappy, but were replaced by a dense series of blockhouses closer to Longuyon.
Description
- Block 1: Entry block with two machine gun/anti-tank gun embrasures, two machine gun embrasures, two automatic rifle cloches (GFM) and one machine gun cloche (JM). The block also served as an observation post for Fermont.
- Block 2: one machine gun turret, one GFM cloche and one JM cloche.