Normandy Invasion 69 Years Ago Today


AtomicGT

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69 years ago today, my father landed on Utah Beach in the 1st wave, soldiers to his rigth and left died. My mother's brother landed on Omaha. At 5:30 AM June 6th, Col James E. Rudder and 225 Army Rangers scaled the 500 ft cliffs of Pointe du Hoc, hand to hand combat on top, knocked out the German guns and observation posts and drove the Germans back. The Rangers held the Pointe against 5 assaults over the new 3 days until relieved, 98 Survived. The European continent's liberation began with this assault.

This was the Greatest Generation of Americans. Remember this Day! I visited the Normandy beaches with my daughter one year ago. Spectacular effort undetaken by the Americans, British, Canadians and Australians. One of the greatest places I have ever seen.

God Bless Them!
 
Thanks for posting. Thank you too for your dad's service, (my dad was in the 9th AAF providing bomber support).
Here's Ike's D Day speech:

Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force! You are about to embark upon a great crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you. In company with our brave Allies and brothers in arms on other fronts, you will bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.
Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well equipped and battle hardened, he will fight savagely.
But this is the year 1944! Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of 1940-41. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats, in open battle, man to man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground. Our home fronts have given us an overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and placed at our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men. The tide has turned! The free men of the world are marching together to victory!
I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle. We will accept nothing less than full victory!
Good Luck! And let us all beseech the blessings of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.
 
Just got chills reading that Atomic. Thanks.

Vince H
 
Never to be Forgotten!
 
Hard to add anything that Dr Eric but a thank you to all that served on that momentous day . God Bless the Greatest Generation.
 
True true heros......
 
The greatest generation. My grandfather landed on Omaha with the 5th Rangers. In 2011 I spent a few days with a local guide retracing his first 48 hours after landing. Very emotional. Here are a few pics:










 
Pointe Du Hoc

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointe_du_Hoc

Battle for Pointe du Hoc

The costliest part of the battle for the Rangers came after the cliff assault. Determined to hold the vital ground, yet isolated from other Allied forces and outnumbered by the German garrison on the point, the Rangers fended off several counterattacks from the German 916th Grenadier Regiment. Rudder's men were finally relieved after units of the American 29th Infantry Division's 116th Infantry Regiment broke through to the Rangers from Omaha Beach on June 7.
 
All the graves at Colleville-sur-Mer NORMANDY AMERICAN CEMETERY AND MEMORIAL
of fallen American soldiers face west to America, 9387 Soldiers.

http://www.abmc.gov/cemeteries/cemeteries/no.php
 
 
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My father's WWII photo

JayHillJohnsonWWII_zps6850b3c8.jpg
 
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President Ronald Reagan's speech at the 40th Anniversary of the taking of Pointe du Hoc.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEIqdcHbc8I
 
Atomic - thanks for your family's service. For me...hard to look at the pictures and not see ghosts.
 
Very moving. I had one uncle go in on gliders that day. Another uncle on a bazooka team at the Battle of the Bulge. My dad was a gun mount captain on the USCGC Taney dodging kamikazes at Okinawa and other major Pacific engagements including the occupation of Japan. He will turn 97 years old on July 28th.

Truly the Greatest Generation.....
 
My father brought back an entire steamer trunk of items like this from the Pacific, including his M1 Carbine, bayonet and helmet. Those that knew my father before the War said he was profoundly different when he came home. His sister always said he never really came home.

DSC_2438.jpg
 
Sinovac :thumbsup
 
I asked some folks today, one who should have known, what today was. Noone could come up with the right answer. People are forgetting. That is not good.

To my WWII friends

Dick, Normandy
Frank, Iwo Jima
Sgt Allen Dale June, one of the original code talkers.

They helped save civilization as we know it.
 
Ernie Pyle's column about D Day:

NORMANDY BEACHHEAD, D Day Plus Two—(by wireless, delayed)—I took a walk along the historic coast of Normandy in the country of Prance. It was a lovely day for strolling along the seashore. Men were sleeping on the sand, some of them sleeping forever. Men were floating in the water, but they didn’t know they were in the water, for they were dead.
The water was full of squishy little jellyfish about the size of your hand. Millions of them. In the center each of them had a green design exactly like a four-leaf clover. The good-luck emblem. Sure. Hell yes.

Ernie Pyle
I walked for a mile and a half along the water’s edge of our many-miled invasion beach. You wanted to walk slowly, for the detail on that beach was infinite. The wreckage was vast and startling. The awful waste and destruction of war, even aside from the loss of human life, has always been one of its outstanding features to those who are in it. Anything and everything is expendable. And we did expend on our beachhead in Normandy during those first few hours.
For a mile out from the beach there were scores of tanks and trucks and boats that you could no longer see, for they were at the bottom of the water—swamped by overloading, or hit by shells, or sunk by mines. Most of their crews were lost. You could see trucks tipped half over and swamped. You could see partly sunken barges, and the angled-up corners of jeeps, and small landing craft half submerged. And at low tide you could still see those vicious six-pronged iron snares that helped snag and wreck them.
On the beach itself, high and dry, were all kinds of wrecked vehicles. There were tanks that had only just made the beach before being knocked out. There were jeeps that had burned to a dull gray. There were big derricks on caterpillar treads that didn’t quite make it. There were half-tracks carrying office equipment that had been made into a shambles by a single shell hit, their interiors still holding their useless equipage of smashed typewriters, telephones, office files.
There were LCT’s turned completely upside down, and lying on their backs, and how they got that way I don’t know. There were boats stacked on top of each other, their sides caved in, their suspension doors knocked off. In this shoreline museum of carnage there were abandoned rolls of barbed wire and smashed bulldozers and big stacks of thrown-away lifebelts and piles of shells still waiting to be moved.
In the water floated empty life rafts and soldiers’ packs and ration boxes, and mysterious oranges. On the beach lay snarled rolls of telephone wire and big rolls of steel matting and stacks of broken, rusting rifles.
On the beach lay, expended, sufficient men and mechanism for a small war. They were gone forever now. And yet we could afford it.
We could afford it because we were on, we had our toehold, and behind us there were such enormous replacements for this wreckage on the beach that you could hardly conceive of their sum total. Men and equipment were flowing from England in such a gigantic stream that it made the waste on the beachhead seem like nothing at all, really nothing at all.
A few hundred yards back on the beach is a high bluff. Up there we had a tent hospital, and a barbed-wire enclosure for prisoners of war. From up there you could see far up and down the beach, in a spectacular crow’s-nest view, and far out to sea.
And standing out there on the water beyond all this wreckage was the greatest armada man has ever seen. You simply could not believe the gigantic collection of ships that lay out there waiting to unload.
Looking from the bluff, it lay thick and clear to the far horizon of the sea and on beyond, and it spread out to the sides and was miles wide. Its utter enormity would move the hardest man.
As I stood up there I noticed a group of freshly taken German prisoners standing nearby. They had not vet been put in the prison cage. They were just standing there, a couple of doughboys leisurely guarding them with Tommy guns.
The prisoners too were looking out to sea—the same bit of sea that for months and years had been so safely empty before their gaze. Now they stood staring almost as if in a trance.
They didn’t say a word to each other. They didn’t need to. The expression on their faces was something forever unforgettable. In it was the final horrified acceptance of their doom.
If only all Germany could have had the rich experience of standing on the bluff and looking out across the water and seeing what their compatriots saw.
Scripps-Howard wire copy, June 16, 1944
 
Great post. Thank you for sharing. My first thought this morning when I woke up was about of all those young men who woke up that morning knowing that many would not make it through the day. I've been to Normandy when I was very young and yet I still remember it like it was yesterday. Walking the beaches looking up at those imposing cliffs knowing that at one time those positions were manned by some very battle hardened and experienced soldiers that were well dug in with all sorts of supporting light, medium and heavy weapons gives chills up the spine. Experiencing the bad end of those weapons is something that no one in that position will ever forget. For anyone interested in history/military history it's a place worth visiting. We are truly indebted to that generation.