Fact Sheet D-Day, 6 June 1944 Normandy, France
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Prelude to Operation OverlordDuring the first six months of 1944, the
United States and Great Britain concentrated land, naval, and air forces
in England to prepare for Operation Overlord, the assault on Hitler's
"Fortress Europe." While the Soviet Union tied down a great portion of the
enemy's forces, the western Allies marshaled their resources, trained
their forces, separately and jointly, for the operation, and fine tuned
the invasion plans to take full advantage of their joint and combined
capabilities.
Before the invasion, the air and sea components played major roles. The
12,000 planes of the Allied air forces swept the Luftwaffe from the skies,
photographed enemy defenses, dropped supplies to the resistance, bombed
railways, attacked Germany's industries and isolated the battlefield. The
Allies' naval component was similarly active during the buildup. The
navies escorted convoys, patrolled and protected the English Channel,
reconnoitered beaches and beach defenses, conducted amphibious rehearsals
and organized and loaded a mighty flotilla to land the assault forces in
France.
Meanwhile, the nine army divisions (three airborne and six infantry)
from the United States, Britain and Canada trained and rehearsed their
roles in the carefully choreographed operation. Rangers climbed cliffs,
engineers destroyed beach obstacles, quartermasters stockpiled supplies
and infantrymen waded through the English surf as each honed the skills
necessary for the invasion's success.
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Normandy
InvasionSupreme Commander--General Dwight D.
Eisenhower Allied Expeditionary Naval Forces--Admiral Sir Bertram
Ramsay 21st Army Group--General Sir Bernard L. Montgomery Allied
Expeditionary Air Forces--Air Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh- Mallory
United States Army United Kingdom Land Forces
First Army Second British Army
V Corps 1st British Corps
VII Corps 30th British Corps
1st Infantry Division 3rd British Infantry Division
4th Infantry Division 6th British Airborne Division
29th Infantry Division 50th British Infantry Division
82nd Airborne Division 3rd Canadian Infantry Division
101st Airborne Division
Air Forces
U.S. Army Air Forces Royal Air Forces
Eighth Air Force 2nd Tactical Air Force
Ninth Air Force
Allied Expeditionary Naval Forces
Western Task Force Eastern Task Force
(United States) (British)
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D-Day
OperationsThe invasion itself gave prominence to
land forces but provided major roles for air and sea components. Allied
air forces carried three airborne divisions into battle, protected the
force as it crossed the English Channel, and attacked targets throughout
the invasion area before and after the landing in support of the assault
forces. More than 5,000 ships--from battleships to landing craft--carried,
escorted and landed the assault force along the Normandy coast. Once the
force was landed, naval gunfire provided critical support for the soldiers
as they fought their way across the beaches.
In the invasion's early hours, more than 1,000 transports dropped
paratroopers to secure the flanks and beach exits of the assault area.
Amphibious craft landed some 130,000 troops on five beaches along 50 miles
of Normandy coast between the Cotentin Peninsula and the Orne River while
the air forces controlled the skies overhead. In the eastern zone, the
British and Canadians landed on GOLD, JUNO and SWORD Beaches. The
Americans landed on two beaches in the west--UTAH and OMAHA. As the Allies
came ashore, they took the first steps on the final road to victory in
Europe.
Omaha
BeachThe landing by regiments of the 1st and
29th Infantry divisions and Army Rangers on OMAHA Beach was even more
difficult than expected. When the first wave landed at 6:30 a.m., the men
found that naval gunfire and prelanding air bombardments had not softened
German defenses or resistance. Along the 7,000 yards of Normandy shore
German defenses were as close to that of an Atlantic Wall as any of the
D-Day beaches. Enemy positions that looked down from bluffs as high as 170
feet, and water and beach obstacles strewn across the narrow strip of
beach, stopped the assault at the water's edge for much of the morning of
D-Day.
By mid-morning, initial reports painted such a bleak portrait of
beachhead conditions that Lt. Gen. Omar Bradley, United States First Army
commander, considered pulling off the beach and landing troops elsewhere
along the coast. However, during these dark hours, bravery and initiative
came to the fore. As soldiers struggled, one leader told his men that two
types of people would stay on the beach--the dead and those going to
die--so they'd better get the hell out of there, and they did.
Slowly, as individuals and then in groups, soldiers began to cross the
fire-swept beach. Supported by Allied naval gunfire from destroyers
steaming dangerously close to shore, the American infantrymen gained the
heights and beach exits and drove the enemy inland. By day's end V Corps
had a tenuous toehold on the Normandy coast, and the force consolidated to
protect its gains and prepare for the next step on the road to Germany.
Utah
BeachIn the predawn darkness of June 6, the 82nd
and 101st Airborne Divisions were air dropped behind UTAH Beach to secure
four causeways across a flooded area directly behind the beach and to
protect the invasion's western flank. Numerous factors caused the
paratroopers to miss their drop zones and become scattered across the
Norman countryside. However, throughout the night and into the day the
airborne troops gathered and organized themselves and went on to
accomplish their missions. Ironically, the paratroopers' wide dispersion
benefited the invasion. With paratroopers in so many places, the Germans
never developed adequate responses to the airborne and amphibious
assaults.
The 4th Infantry Division was assigned to take UTAH Beach. In contrast
with OMAHA Beach, the 4th Division's landing went smoothly. The first wave
landed 2,000 yards south of the planned beach--one of the Allies' more
fortuitous opportunities on D-Day. The original beach was heavily defended
in comparison to the light resistance and few fixed defenses encountered
on the new beach. After a personal reconnaissance, Brigadier General
Theodore Roosevelt Jr., who accompanied the first wave, decided to exploit
the opportunity and altered the original plan. He ordered that landing
craft carrying the successive assault waves land reinforcements, equipment
and supplies to capitalize on the first wave's success. Within hours, the
beachhead was secured and the 4th Division started inland to contact the
airborne divisions scattered across its front.
As in the OMAHA zone, at day's end the UTAH Beach forces had not gained
all of their planned objectives. However, a lodgement was secured, and,
most important, once again the American soldier's resourcefulness and
initiative had rescued the operation from floundering along the Normandy
coast.
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SourcesD-Day,
The 6th of June, Center of Military History Map Guide, Washington,
D.C. 1994
Normandy, U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II pamphlet, Center
of Military History, Washington, D.C. 1994.
;) 50th Anniversary of World War II Commemoration
Committee HQDA, SACC; Pentagon, Room 3E524 Washington, D.C.
20310-0101 (703) 604-0822
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Center Home Page or return to the Kansas
Heritage Server Home Page.
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D-Day actually happened on June
6.
All,
The correct answer is D-Day the invasion of
Normandy.
I'm getting ready to go buy Medal of Honor:Frontline for the Playstation 2. It's an
awsome WWII First person shooter.
Later,
Noel"Spirit
Rider"Bell
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