On This Day, June 6, 1944

Devil Doc

When Death smiles, Corpsmen smile back
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It's the anniversary of the biggest military invasion in history, D-Day, (1944). It's when the Allied armies launched the invasion of Normandy. Dwight D. Eisenhower had planned the invasion, and had been arguing for it ever since America got into the war after Pearl Harbor. Most British military commanders thought it was too risky. Winston Churchill was particularly nervous about the idea of invading France.

But Eisenhower finally won the argument, and the Allies built dozens or airfields in Great Britain, stockpiled millions of tons of weapons and supplies, built tent cities along the ports of the English Channel where tens of thousands of soldiers would live.

The German commanders knew an invasion was coming. They'd spent weeks fortifying their positions, but the Allies had deceived the Nazis into thinking the invasion would come in near the French-Belgian border. They had a number of battle ships across from that point in the channel, and the Nazis took the bait and concentrated a good deal of their defensive forces in the wrong place.

June 6, 1944, was a foggy morning. Sometime after dawn, the English Channel was full of ships,a huge armada1,200 fighting ships, 10,000 planes, more than 150,000 troops, a little more than half of them American. The plan was to bomb the beach to create craters in the sand for foxholes, and then send the ground troops up the beach.

When the American troops reached the shore Of Omaha beach, they saw that the bombers had missed all of their targets. There was no protection on the beach. The landing craft were hit by a barrage of bullets. In less than a half an hour, more than two-thirds of the first company to reach the shore was killed. At first, the American commanders thought that the invasion had failed, but the first troops made some progress, and the second wave came in and slowly took over the fortified positions above the beach. By nightfall, more than 150,000 Allied troops had landed in France.

The Germans had tank divisions that could have driven the Allies back into the sea, but they got conflicting orders from the high command and didn't start to attack until late in the afternoon, almost ten hours after the invasion had started. The German commander said at the time, "If we don't succeed in throwing the Allies into the sea, we will have lost the war." The German tanks got to within three miles of the shore and then were driven back by Allied tanks and anti-tank guns, and no German unit ever again got so close to the beaches. Many historians saw that as the turning point of the war.


Doc.
 
Thanks Doc, I just got an email from the Patriot Guard. It has some CASUALTIES #'s Thank you to all who have served thru conflicts and peaceful times


Let us keep the names of those who fought and died on 6 June 1944 in D-Day.

On D-Day, the Allies landed around 156,000 troops in Normandy. The American forces landed numbered 73,000: 23,250 on Utah Beach, 34,250 on Omaha Beach, and 15,500 airborne troops. In the British and Canadian sector, 83,115 troops were landed (61,715 of them British): 24,970 on Gold Beach, 21,400 on Juno Beach, 28,845 on Sword Beach, and 7900 airborne troops.
11,590 aircraft were available to support the landings. On D-Day, Allied aircraft flew 14,674 sorties, and 127 were lost.

In the airborne landings on both flanks of the beaches, 2395 aircraft and 867 gliders of the RAF and USAAF were used on D-Day.

Operation Neptune involved huge naval forces, including 6939 vessels: 1213 naval combat ships, 4126 landing ships and landing craft, 736 ancillary craft and 864 merchant vessels. Some 195,700 personnel were assigned to Operation Neptune: 52,889 US, 112,824 British, and 4988 from other Allied countries.

By the end of 11 June (D + 5), 326,547 troops, 54,186 vehicles and 104,428 tons of supplies had been landed on the beaches.

As well as the troops who landed in Normandy on D-Day, and those in supporting roles at sea and in the air, millions more men and women in the Allied countries were involved in the preparations for D-Day. They played thousands of different roles, both in the armed forces and as civilians.



Approximate Casualties of the Allied Armies by Sectors, Normandy, 6 June 1944

NATION /
SECTOR
ESTIMATED CASUALTIES

U.S. AIRBORNE 2,499
U.S. / UTAH 197
U.S. / OMAHA 2,000
U.K. / GOLD 413
CAN. / JUNO 1,204
U.K. / SWORD 630
U.K. AIRBORNE 1,500
CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATE
8,443
REASONABLE
GUESS 9,000 total (of which 3,000 may have been fatalities)

The task of compiling casualty figures for the landing Normandy ought to be easy; but it is in fact impossible. Of the three countries involved in the operation, only Canada, it appears, has prepared post-war casualty statistics on the basis of the records of individual soldiers of the units concerned. The only figures available for the United Kingdom and United States forces are the rough and necessarily approximate ones set down at the time; and for some sectors there are really no figures at all. In these circumstances it might seem useless to attempt a compilation; but Operation "Neptune" was so significant an enterprise that an account of it without casualty figures would be an historical absurdity. Accordingly the attempt has been made with the following results.

NEVER FORGET.....NEVER!
 
Thank you gents for posting this. I was expecting Doc or Ray to post on this, but if not, I had intended to. Such a remarkably different time for us, as well as a remarkably different set of beliefs about our great Nation and its place in the world. The casualties in the European and South Pacific theaters were astonishing, yet never once were there significant detractors or uncertainties about what needed to be done and who needed to do it. It's a substantially changed world, and sad testament, that these beliefs and principles no longer seem to be prevalent.

Thanks again brothers.

Semper Fi.
 
Thanks for post, always enjoyed.

Thank you gents for posting this. I was expecting Doc or Ray to post on this, but if not, I had intended to. Such a remarkably different time for us, as well as a remarkably different set of beliefs about our great Nation and its place in the world. The casualties in the European and South Pacific theaters were astonishing, yet never once were there significant detractors or uncertainties about what needed to be done and who needed to do it. It's a substantially changed world, and sad testament, that these beliefs and principles no longer seem to be prevalent.

Thanks again brothers.

Semper Fi.

X2
 
I pulled out an Anejo #50 to smoke on this day. As I never forget the sacrifices that have been made. :thumbs:
 
Thanks for the reminder Doc. I knew you would post this. I could not imagine what those soldiers were feeling when those boats were pulling up to the beaches.
 
Their sacrifice will NOT be forgotten by this AMERICAN! EVER!!
I have a framed letter, hanging in my living room that my Great-Uncle Carlo sent to his parents during WWII. Carlo's letter speaks of the sacrifice of his buddies and of his love and concern for America and his Family. People that visit and read the letter are amazed, many thought that stuff existed only in movies and cheap romance novels. My Great-Grandparents raised 17, that is not a typo, 17 children on a farm in Central Utah. Martin, their eldest was a coal miner and worked double shifts throughout the War years, his younger brother Carlo served in the Army, landing at Normandy and later Anzio. My Grandfather served as a translator for Axis POWs and learned of the atrocities they committed from their own lips, very few of which he has ever repeted to this day. When my Grandfather, who is now 97 reads Carlo, his brother-in-law's letter he is so filled with admiration for the heroics of many on D-Day and the rest of the war.
MC it does seem that there is a lack of that kind of love and respect for America, but I assure you it is out there and when you confront the opposite, say so. There are many out there that have sacrificed to allow us to live the way we do in this country and others around the world to be better off. Enough of the soapbox -sor.
I'll honor D-Day with a great cigar tonight as well! And some good ol’ American Bourbon!

d-day1.jpg


NEVER FORGET!

Normandy%20cemetary.jpg


edited for dbl word & syntax
 
Good GOD! As big of a fan of our GREATEST GENERATION as I am, it completely slipped my mind what today was! Thanks for reminding us, Doc!
 
Growing up I knew a crusty old farmer who lived down the road. He was a real nice man and was always willing to teach a kid like me new things about farming, fishing and hunting. Man was the best shot with a rifle I have ever seen and his skill at fishing put me to shame to this day.

He passed away when I was 17. Many of us who attended his funeral were shocked to learn that he was part of the D-Day invasion. Apparently he was among a small handful of men from his division who set foot at Normandy who lived to see the end of the war. His widow opened a chest he kept in the attic after he died and let some of us see the things he brought back from Europe. He had several lugers he took off dead officers, insignias, a couple flags that apparently he had taken down himself and a whole mess of other items from his time at war.

He would never talk about it to anyone other than his wife and had asked her to show us the chest after his death. He wanted us to know what he had been through, yet could never bring himself to speak of it for fear his friends would think of him as a murderer for the lives he took during that time.

I think of him as a hero.
 
Bilder.....that is an amazing story. Thank you so much for sharing that. It sounds like that crusty old farmer had more character and humbleness than most people can have their entire lifetime. I think of him as a hero too.
 
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