Army Flying Museum Ticket Portal

The Fall of Eben Emael

in Northern Europe had no reason to suspect that this day would be any different from any other since Sunday 3 September 1939. They were in for a terrible shock.

Join Tony Bray in the Museum to hear about the catastrophic defeat of the fortress of Eben Emael. This huge fortress, with numerous heavy guns and machine guns, had a garrison of 1,000 Belgian soldiers, secure in an underground barracks, some 65 metres below the upper surface.

It had taken 2,500 workers three years to construct – yet 70 German engineers neutralised it in less than 30 minutes, using two new secret weapons.

Find out how the attack unfolded, and how quickly the fortress was disabled. The gliders were the first secret weapon deployed that day, but then the second was then used with devastating effects, combat engineers were put into the fortress to disable the huge, thick concrete cupolas.

Within 30 minutes the battle was effectively over. The fortress was unable to fire on the German forces attacking over the Albert Canal and so the allied defence line was overwhelmed.

Soon the British Expeditionary Force would be pushed back to Dunkirk and evacuated to Britain. France would quickly fall and mainland Europe would be under Nazi rule until June 1944.

The raid on Eben Emael motivated the allies to develop assault gliders of their own.

Ticket options

  • The Fall of Eben Emael - 21/09/26
    The Fall of Eben Emael - 21/09/26
    £13.00
    0 30 max
  • Pre-Lecture Dinner - The Fall of Eben Emael - 21/09/26
    Pre-Lecture Dinner - The Fall of Eben Emael - 21/09/26
    £12.00

    Enjoy a pre-lecture dinner of Chilli and Rice in our Apache Café at 6pm (Vegetarian option available)

    0 30 max

    Enjoy a pre-lecture dinner of Chilli and Rice in our Apache Café at 6pm (Vegetarian option available)

The Fall of Eben Emael

in Northern Europe had no reason to suspect that this day would be any different from any other since Sunday 3 September 1939. They were in for a terrible shock.

Join Tony Bray in the Museum to hear about the catastrophic defeat of the fortress of Eben Emael. This huge fortress, with numerous heavy guns and machine guns, had a garrison of 1,000 Belgian soldiers, secure in an underground barracks, some 65 metres below the upper surface.

It had taken 2,500 workers three years to construct – yet 70 German engineers neutralised it in less than 30 minutes, using two new secret weapons.

Find out how the attack unfolded, and how quickly the fortress was disabled. The gliders were the first secret weapon deployed that day, but then the second was then used with devastating effects, combat engineers were put into the fortress to disable the huge, thick concrete cupolas.

Within 30 minutes the battle was effectively over. The fortress was unable to fire on the German forces attacking over the Albert Canal and so the allied defence line was overwhelmed.

Soon the British Expeditionary Force would be pushed back to Dunkirk and evacuated to Britain. France would quickly fall and mainland Europe would be under Nazi rule until June 1944.

The raid on Eben Emael motivated the allies to develop assault gliders of their own.

0 items selected £0.00