Author Topic: D-Day. On June 6, 1944, the Allies invade Western Europe in the largest amphibious attack in history.  (Read 1176 times)

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rangerrebew

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D-Day

On June 6, 1944, the Allies invade Western Europe in the largest amphibious attack in history.
 
http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/d-day

During World War II (1939-1945), the Battle of Normandy, which lasted from June 1944 to August 1944, resulted in the Allied liberation of Western Europe from Nazi Germany’s control. Codenamed Operation Overlord, the battle began on June 6, 1944, also known as D-Day, when some 156,000 American, British and Canadian forces landed on five beaches along a 50-mile stretch of the heavily fortified coast of France’s Normandy region. The invasion was one of the largest amphibious military assaults in history and required extensive planning. Prior to D-Day, the Allies conducted a large-scale deception campaign designed to mislead the Germans about the intended invasion target. By late August 1944, all of northern France had been liberated, and by the following spring the Allies had defeated the Germans. The Normandy landings have been called the beginning of the end of war in Europe.

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Preparing for D-Day

After World War II began, Germany invaded and occupied northwestern France beginning in May 1940. The Americans entered the war in December 1941, and by 1942 they and the British (who had been evacuated from the beaches of Dunkirk in May 1940 after being cut off by the Germans in the Battle of France) were considering the possibility of a major Allied invasion across the English Channel. The following year, Allied plans for a cross-Channel invasion began to ramp up. In November 1943, Adolf Hitler (1889-1945), who was aware of the threat of an invasion along France’s northern coast, put Erwin Rommel (1891-1944) in charge of spearheading defense operations in the region, even though the Germans did not know exactly where the Allies would strike. Hitler charged Rommel with finishing the Atlantic Wall, a 2,400-mile fortification of bunkers, landmines and beach and water obstacles.
Did You Know?

The Normandy American Cemetery, overlooking Omaha Beach and the English Channel, was established on June 8, 1944, as the first U.S. cemetery in Europe during World War II. It holds the graves of more than 9,300 U.S. servicemen who died in the D-Day invasion or subsequent missions.

In January 1944, General Dwight Eisenhower (1890-1969) was appointed commander of Operation Overlord. In the months and weeks before D-Day, the Allies carried out a massive deception operation intended to make the Germans think the main invasion target was Pas-de-Calais (the narrowest point between Britain and France) rather than Normandy. In addition, they led the Germans to believe that Norway and other locations were also potential invasion targets. Many tactics was used to carry out the deception, including fake equipment; a phantom army commanded by George Patton and supposedly based in England, across from Pas-de-Calais; double agents; and fraudulent radio transmissions.
A Weather Delay: June 5, 1944

Eisenhower selected June 5, 1944, as the date for the invasion; however, bad weather on the days leading up to the operation caused it to be delayed for 24 hours. On the morning of June 5, after his meteorologist predicted improved conditions for the following day, Eisenhower gave the go-ahead for Operation Overlord. He told the troops: “You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you.”

Later that day, more than 5,000 ships and landing craft carrying troops and supplies left England for the trip across the Channel to France, while more than 11,000 aircraft were mobilized to provide air cover and support for the invasion.
D-Day Landings: June 6, 1944

By dawn on June 6, thousands of paratroopers and glider troops were already on the ground behind enemy lines, securing bridges and exit roads. The amphibious invasions began at 6:30 a.m. The British and Canadians overcame light opposition to capture beaches codenamed Gold, Juno and Sword, as did the Americans at Utah Beach. U.S. forces faced heavy resistance at Omaha Beach, where there were over 2,000 American casualties. However, by day’s end, approximately 156,000 Allied troops had successfully stormed Normandy’s beaches.According to some estimates, more than 4,000 Allied troops lost their lives in the D-Day invasion, with thousands more wounded or missing.

Less than a week later, on June 11, the beaches were fully secured and over 326,000 troops, more than 50,000 vehicles and some 100,000 tons of equipment had landed at Normandy.

For their part, the Germans suffered from confusion in the ranks and the absence of celebrated commander Rommel, who was away on leave. At first, Hitler, believing the invasion was a feint designed to distract the Germans from a coming attack north of the Seine River, refused to release nearby divisions to join the counterattack. Reinforcements had to be called from further afield, causing delays. He also hesitated in calling for armored divisions to help in the defense. Moreover, the Germans were hampered by effective Allied air support, which took out many key bridges and forced the Germans to take long detours, as well as efficient Allied naval support, which helped protect advancing Allied troops.

In the ensuing weeks, the Allies fought their way across the Normandy countryside in the face of determined German resistance, as well as a dense landscape of marshes and hedgerows. By the end of June, the Allies had seized the vital port of Cherbourg, landed approximately 850,000 men and 150,000 vehicles in Normandy, and were poised to continue their march across France.
Victory in Normandy

By the end of August 1944, the Allies had reached the Seine River, Paris was liberated and the Germans had been removed from northwestern France, effectively concluding the Battle of Normandy. The Allied forces then prepared to enter Germany, where they would meet up with Soviet troops moving in from the east.

The Normandy invasion began to turn the tide against the Nazis. A significant psychological blow, it also prevented Hitler from sending troops from France to build up his Eastern Front against the advancing Soviets. The following spring, on May 8, 1945, the Allies formally accepted the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany. Hitler had committed suicide a week earlier, on April 30.
« Last Edit: June 06, 2016, 11:23:50 am by rangerrebew »

Offline flowers

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D-Day invasion: Reporter’s firsthand account on June 6, 1944

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/d-day-invasion-reporter-firsthand-account-1944-article-1.2243803

Quote
Originally published by the Daily News on June 7, 1944. This story was written by Donald MacKenzie.)

A B-26 MARAUDER BASE IN ENGLAND, June 6. - Riding in the van of the American air spearhead which covered the landing of American Rangers on the coast of France, this reporter had a panoramic view this morning of the D-Day invasion and saw the first Americans come ashore from smoking landing boats which had ridden through a curtain of German gunfire to reach the beach a few minutes before.

Deep behind the invaded beach, American paratroops and glider-borne Rangers were locked in battle along a wide, irregular front. Airborne units had landed soon after dawn and were engaged with the enemy when warships of the Unite Nations steamed in open order to within a few miles of the coast and commenced to pour in a steady fire.

Low wispy clouds down to 1,500 feet mottled the battlefield and the Marauder crews could discern only fragmentary glimpses of the struggle etched by the flat, splitting fire of mechanized guns and the spurting bursts of tracer bullets.

The Germans had damned or diverted waterways and flooded large sections of the countryside. Some sheets of water appeared to be anywhere up to 20 miles in diameter.

Rain Down Bombs From 2,000 Feet

The run of the Marauders down the invasion coast just as dawn broke was one of the most dramatic and amazing single episodes in the history of air warfare. The American bombers came down low as 2,000 feet to blast batteries of German guns with a rain of bombs in a little under 15 seconds.
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Scarcely a man who began that run expected to come out alive. Although the crews were briefed to bomb the target from 10,800 to 10,000 feet, they were told just before they took off in the dark that they must come down to 5,000 or even 1,000 feet to get under a lowering cloud curtain, and they realized that their assignment was a suicide parade.

At anything under 10,000 feet, the Marauder has a tough time with flak. At 5,000 feet, it theoretically has not even a 50-50 chance. But at 2,000 feet carbines and machine guns can stop it, let alone 88 mm. anti-aircraft shells.

But this target was considered vital to the first assault. It had been ordered blasted. Behind the shore batteries, a target impervious to anything less than blockbusters sheltered picked Nazi anti-invasion troops.

With airborne American troops fighting close to the target on the landward side and with other landing from barges to seaward, precision bombing was vital unless larger numbers of Americans were to be slaughtered. That is why the crack ground of bombers known as the “Silver Streaks” were briefed to come right down on top of the target if necessary for deadly accurate aim.

Hoped Concussion Would Stun Nazis

Gen. Omar Bradley’s intent, apparently, was to button up the German troops in the shelters and by the concussion of the 250-pound impact explosive bombs to stun them into insensibility, so they would fall easy victims to the inrushing invaders who were timed to arrive on the beach just as the Marauders passed over.
The New York Daily News covers D-day on June 7, 1944.
1 | 3 The New York Daily News covers D-day on June 7, 1944. (New York Daily News)

In order not to rear fresh obstacles before the landing tanks, 250-pounders were chosen instead of the 2,000-pound bombs these aircraft usually carry.

To protect the landing forces from enfilading fire and at the same time to mark clearly an invasion channel to the beach, American B-25 Billy Mitchell bombers dashed right down on the water and began a run to the beach at right angles to the bomb-run of the Marauders.

The timing of the smoke barrage, the landing and the bomber-run was excellent.

Race Onto Target With Throttles Wide

As we cut the French coast, a red ME-109 dived to the carpet, raced under the formation and zoomed to register our altitude for the gunners in the flak valley we were about to enter. But at tailgunner in the box behind me sent a few bursts skipping after him and he peeled off for an adjacent landing field apparently unhurt. Then the flak began.

We had dropped down so low that machine-gun tracer bullets were flying up through our formation like sparks out of a factory chimney, curving redly over and into us. But the Silver Streaks, attempting no evasion, raced down on the target strip with throttles wide open.
atx;
1 | 6 A U.S. Coast Guard landing barge, tightly packed with helmeted soldiers, approaches the shore at Normandy, France, during initial Allied landing operations. (AP)

The advance flights suffered heavy flak for the whole 15 seconds of their run, but with magnificent courage wavered neither to left nor right laying their loads along the whole length of the target.

As the last Marauder element was - moving in for its run an FW-190 jumped it, got in a burst, and one of the silvery streaks exploded. The stricken ship crashed in flames on the water’s edge.

(Only two of more than 350 Marauders on the mission failed to return, the Uniter Press reported.)

While the Marauders were making their run, the guns


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2 years earlier the Battle of Miday ended, next year will be the 75th anniversary of that event.

Not many left from those days.
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"It was only a sunny smile, and little it cost in the giving, but like morning light it scattered the night and made the day worth living" F. Scott Fitzgerald


rangerrebew

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Oh, that is so "hurtful" to young people to think they are wimpy, whiny, lazy, stupid young brats.