Note—This
event is too big to ignore. Versions of
this post have appeared annually.
When it comes to World War II, certain dates are etched
indelibly into the American consciousness,
even occasionally piercing the historical
amnesia of young people now generations removed from the events. December
7, Pearl Harbor day is one. August
6 when the U.S. dropped the
first Atomic Bomb making the end of
the war with Japan inevitable is
another.
So is June 6, known without further explanation as D-Day.
On
June 6, 1944 the Allies invaded Nazi occupied France under the overall command of General Dwight D. Eisenhower. It is the iconic event of World War II in the American
memory.
It
was the largest coordinated movements
of men, arms and materiel in history and had to be conducted in enough secrecy to surprise the Germans who had at least 55 divisions in France while the Allied effort could only put 8 ashore
to secure the beachhead on the first
day.
Nearly
2 million soldiers, sailors, and airmen were involved in the total Operation Overlord, including those landed after the first day. 195,000
Naval personnel manned 6,039 vessels including 1,200 warships and 15 hospital ships. The United States
alone shipped 7 million tons of supplies, 14 billion pounds of material including
448,000 tons of ammunition.
Air operations in support of D-Day, which began in April,
included 14,000 missions with a loss of 2000 air craft and 12,000 airmen before
the landing. 127 planes were lost on
D-Day alone.
On June 6th U.S. casualties were reported as 6,603 including 1,465 dead. While
these are awful numbers, there were several Civil War battles with greater dead. The Soviets
suffered more single day casualties four or five times. And losses in some Pacific landings per men engaged were more than 5 times as
high. Total allied casualties that day
among U.S. British, Canadian, Free French, and Polish troops
are estimated to be in excess of 10,000.
German losses are less well documented but are estimated between four
and nine thousand.
After
the beachhead was secured hundreds of thousands of men and tons of supplies
landed across those sands because the Allies did not control any French port for weeks. By July 14 over a million men had come
ashore.
But
heavy German resistance confined the invaders to a small zone around the
landing beaches until a breakout
began on July 25.
Once
free, the Allied advance across France was remarkably swift. Despite setbacks like the Battle of the Bulge in December and
delays in getting a bridgehead across the Rhine
into the German heartland, by the
following April British and American units from the west met up with Soviet
troops from the east. Within a few days
of that Hitler committed suicide, Berlin, and the German High Command surrendered unconditionally.
It
has been my pleasure to know several men who either fought on D-Day or who
landed on the Normandy beaches over the next few days. One of them was my late father-in-law, Art Brady.
All of them are gone now. Within a few years the last of the veterans
of D-Day will go the way of the ghosts of Gettysburg and Belleau Wood. The latter battle reached its peak on another
June 6 in 1918 when U.S. Marines suffered their worst single day losses
in history.
So much war. So much grief.
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