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Couple find Nazi bunker underneath their home with eerie words scrawled on wall

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A couple discovered a World War IINazi bunker - underneath their home.

Shaun Tullier, 35, and wife Caroline, 32, moved into their new house and began a renovation. They were stunned to discover a large bunker with two large rooms and a hallway - with German writing on the walls. One of the phrases written was "achtung feind hort mit" - which translates to "beware, the enemy is listening".

The couple from Torteval, Guernsey, moved into their home in October 2021. Shaun said they knew about the site being used as a German gun emplacement, but always had "a suspicion" there was something else there.

German forces occupied the Channel Islands from 1940 until 1945 and, under Adolf Hitler's orders, turned the the islands into an "impregnable fortress".

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Shaun said: "I was born in Guernsey, so I always knew about bunkers, but when Guernsey people came back to Guernsey after the war, they wanted to fill all the bunkers up. A lot of people still have bunkers here, but they are down the road and in gardens - not underneath the house!

"You just never knew what state these bunkers are in - where they are, how deep they are - you can't start digging all round just to try and find out. We knew the actual foundation of the house had been utilised as a German gun storage - but what we didn't know is if there were any rooms.

"We always thought, 'imagine that!' but we had no factual information around it." Shaun explained how initially they pair wanted to convert their front garden into a turning point - so they dug it up, and gravelled it over during works.

As Shaun works as a carpenter, he made some chopping boards to sell on Facebook marketplace - when the old owner of the house got in touch with him and gave him a tip off about a wartime building lying underneath the property.

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He said: "The old owner of the house got in touch with me - as she recognised the very pink kitchen in the photos.

"She said, oh did you find the rooms below your house. I then replied, 'oh, so there are rooms!' to which she said, 'yes, we used to play in there when we were kids, my dad filled it in - I know they're at the front of the house.

"It was very interesting - so I then said to my wife, we're going to have to dig up the drive again - a week after putting it down. I told my friend about the news, and he thought it sounded ace - so replied, if you get the digger, I'll dig it up!"

They ended up digging up 100 tonne of ground and discovering the entrance to the bunker. The bunker consisted of two main rooms measuring 17ft by 10ft and 17ft by 20ft, and a hallway which is 30ft by four ft wide.

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From ground level to floor level of bunker is 26ft down. Some of the features the family discovered were lots of old bottles, rubble, water, tiled floor, an escape hatch and German writing on the walls.

Shaun labelled the discovery as "completely wild".

He said: "You can't really put it into words. It is history and it's good to have but I couldn't have imagined going through that - it really puts you back, especially when you go down.

"It's cold and damp. The people doing it, they didn't have a choice. It's not just rooms for us, it's a part of history."

During the work, the family ended up putting 80 tonne of concrete in for the walls and steps, and they are still converting the bunker into a games room - fitted with a snooker table and a gym.

They are keeping the German writing on the walls too, and are hoping to have floor down and the bunker painted by November this year. Shaun added: "It's not something you find everyday!

"We are definitely keeping the writing - and might get someone that can calligraphy it back on, otherwise it gets lost. Even the air getting to it has faded it a bit. So in that way we can kind of frame it.

"My wife is not great, she wants the house done - not the bunker!

"But I have promised everyone a halloween party down there for the last three years, so fingers crossed it's happening this year - it's my duty to uphold."

During the Occupation, hundreds of islanders were deported to prisons in Europe and many who remained on the islands nearly starved. Guernsey and Jersey were liberated when occupation ended on 9 May 1945.

Sark was liberated a day later, while Alderney, where most of the islanders had been forced to leave their homes, could not return until 15 December 1945.

Islanders now celebrate the end of the German occupation with Liberation Day events in Guernsey, Jersey and Sark, along with Homecoming Day in Alderney.

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