Then and Now
Today I bring you some historic photos of St. Malo, all taken in the 1930s before the town was destroyed during the war. I follow each of these images with ones I've taken from the same spot. You can judge for yourself how closely the reconstruction followed the original.
I actually can't take a photograph from this location as the photographer in the 1930s was standing on a pier I do not have access to. Instead I attach a photograph of the place where the original photographer would have been standing, looking across the "basin" at the Grande Porte and towards the cathedral.
The pier in the distance is not open to the public. The warehouses store the cargo which comes and goes from the freighters that dock here temporarily (further to the right).
This shows the main stairway by the Grande Porte that leads from town up onto the ramparts.
This photo is taken on our side of town. The wave, in fact, is breaking right in front of our street. We haven't experienced a grande marée quite like this one. They can reach a coefficient of up to 120. The one we experienced a couple of weeks ago was 106.
My photo was taken at exactly high tide, so you can notice how much the grande marée tides increase the waves. Rick was my model, holding his hat against the wind. I am surprised to discover that the small porte leading to the Môle Beach was not there in the 30s. It must have been an addition of the post war architects. That passageway figures in the novel All the Light You Cannot See, so Marie-Laure's visit to the beach through this stairwell must have been an invention of the author. I did read somewhere that Anthony Doerr was just a tourist himself the first time he visited St. Malo and was so taken with it, and with its history during the end of the war, that the place itself was what inspired his very successful novel. The characters, which are so wonderfully vivid, were secondary.
Ferries from St. Malo to Dinard are a regular phenomenon, and have been for a hundred years, it seems.
Here is a bonus photo, one which thankfully I can't duplicate. It goes to show you how popular this place has been for the last 100 years. I don't think that, even in the height of summer, have I seen this kind of a crowd!













Very interesting enquiries. Always fun to see before and after. In fact the people on the last photo must have attended a special event. from the hats, dresses and clothes of the men, it is early 20th century, sure before the 1st world war.
ReplyDeleteIt is since 1936 that many people came for holidays. Before it was only wealthy people who cd afford vacancies. 1936 is a famous date in France meaning start of payed vacancies . The government at that time was socialist "front populaire" with Léon Blum and vote 2 weeks of "congés payés". Then we will have 3rd week in 1956, 4th week in 1968 and 5th one in 1982 with 39 hours of work per week by law. So a large number of people can go on holidays now.
Oh my goodness! What a fabulous post! These pictures are amazing! The first one seems near identical! I just love your ideas! Again, time to publish your book with these!
ReplyDeleteI'm with Elizabeth! Great to see these comparisons. Your earlier report seems totally verified. They really did do an excellent job of recreating what had been lost!
ReplyDeleteNancy, this is fascinating and so beautifully photographed! I love seeing both the continuity and the changes over the decades. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteSuch a great post! I love the before and after. And yes, it really is amazing how much has stayed the same--even with the complete reconstruction. Incredible!
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