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Testimonials
Dear Carlton: One week later and my head is still swimming from the fabulous tour of Normandy you conducted for the Georgia Historical Society. We were all impressed by your knowledge of the events and terrain, your presentation skills, and most of all your equanimity in the face of occasional grumbling from a very few whose enthusiasm tended to lag at times. Everyone even those few had a lot of fun and we have you to thank for it. The trip was all I had hoped it would be. It was a pleasure to spend the time with you and I look forward to doing it again soon. Your fellow WWII warrior, Todd Groce, PhD ------------------------------ RE: Normandy-Bulge Battlefields Tour To Whom It May Concern, In March of 2003, I accompanied a group of 23 Hamilton College students (who were enrolled in my course on World War II) to Paris, where we were met by Carlton Joyce, of Normandy Battlefield Tours, who had put together for us a tour of D-Day and the Battle of the Bulge sites in Normandy and Belgium. After our ten days together, I had decided (and my students agreed) that Carlton was the ideal guide to take us to these sites. Carlton proved himself a master of tour logistics, with an encyclopedic knowledge of the battlesites we visited, and an engaging manner that made him a pleasure to travel with. We visited all the major American, British, and Canadian sites such as Utah and Omaha Beaches, Ste Mere Eglise, the American military cemetery, Pointe du Hoc, etc. Carlton surprised and delighted us with a series of off-the-beaten track and incredibly interesting side-trips. In Normandy, at la Fiere causeway, scene of a significant 82nd Airborne 3rd-day battle, Mr. Poisson, a local French farmer, gave us a tour of his land and dozen buildings showing us German machine gun nests and bullets embedded in the stone walls. His collection of helmets, weapons, and assorted militaria relics found in the buildings, hedgerows, and fields filled his basement. The two hundred plasma bottles conjured the casualty scenes in the home and courtyard. In Belgium, we drove to a hillside overlooking the village of Foy, outside of Bastogne, and in an overgrown wood lot, found the foxholes dug by American paratroopers during the Battle of the Bulge - the very site depicted in on of the episodes of “Band of Brothers”. All of this made the war come alive for the students, in the kind of leap of historical imagination that’s very difficult to obtain from textbooks and documentary films alone. I highly recommend Normandy Battlefield Tours for any history class or alumni group thinking of touring European battle sites. Maurice Isserman
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