Battery construction 1942-1943 (≈ 1943)
Encuments, shelters and casemates built.
11 septembre 1944
Taken by the Allies
Taken by the Allies 11 septembre 1944 (≈ 1944)
Released by the 51st Scottish Division.
28 octobre 1996
Registration historical monument
Registration historical monument 28 octobre 1996 (≈ 1996)
Protection of remaining elements.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
All remaining surface and underground elements (Box B 167, 149, 148, 147, 292): inscription by order of 28 October 1996
Key figures
51e Division Écossaise - Allied military unit
Got the battery in 1944.
Origin and history
The Monts-Trottins artillery battery is a military installation located in the commune of Fontaine-la-Mallet, Seine-Maritime department, Normandy. Built between 1942 and 1943, it belonged to the defence of the Fortress of Le Havre and the Atlantic Wall. Its infrastructure included encumbrances, a modified R 607 ammunition shelter, a R 646 well shelter, and an R 669 artillery casemate. It was positioned about 1 km behind the Octeville-Montivilliers defence line.
During World War II, this battery was a key element of German defences on the Normandy coast. It was taken on September 11, 1944 by the 51st Scottish Division, marking an episode of the region's liberation. After the war, all remaining surface and underground elements were listed as historical monuments by order of 28 October 1996, thus recognizing their heritage value.
Today, the Trottin Mountains battery bears witness to the German military architecture of the Second World War. Its inscription as a historic monument preserves this vestige of the Atlantic Wall, while offering a place of memory linked to the liberation of Normandy. The structures still visible, such as casemates and shelters, illustrate the fortification techniques used during the conflict.