A big day
today, with us heading to firstly Sainte Mere Eglise, one the first towns to be
liberated by allied troops (US Para troop Division) on D-Day 1944. The town itself claims to be the first, but
we’ve read of other towns also claiming to be the first, so we’re sticking with
one of the first. The town is on the
N13, the main route on the Normandy Peninsular, so it was imperative that the
Allies got control of this route before the landings started to thwart any
German counter-offensives. The spire on
the town’s church is also the spire that para trooper John Steele got his
parachute caught on, and had to play dead for two hours before he was captured
by the Germans. Fortunately for him, he
escaped, survived the war, and made a number of returns to France, always to a
warm welcome. To this day, a mannequin
(him) hangs on the side of the church, with the parachute caught over the
steeple.
Beside the
church is the airborne museum, which commemorates the airborn assault the
allies launched on the Germans. It is a
fantastic museum, and we learned so much about the German Occupation and how
the allies got their invasion going. In
doing this tour, we’ve learned a lot more of the detail of the wars and how and
where they were conducted. Up until now,
all I’ve really known is that the war was in Europe and went from 1939 until
1945, so I assumed that it was all going on, all over the place, all of that
time. With this trip, we’ve learned that
in fact the Germans invaded and became an occupying force in many countries,
and that the Allies ran specific offensives against parts of the German
lines.
After the
Germans occupied France, but couldn’t defeat Britain, they spent several years
building the Atlantic Wall, along the coast of Norway, Holland, Belgium and
France – 700 miles, I think. This was a
massive undertaking (But what else are you going to do when you’ve got a bunch
of soldiers sitting around getting bored, and a local population that you can
do with what you will), and involved a series of pill boxes, gun emplacements, and
beach barricades. It was built by
Rommel, and he firmly believed that if the Germans could not stop an Allied
assault, at the beaches, they would lose the war.
The Museum
goes through various means that the Allies got men and equipment onto French
soil, and is particularly focused on the first hours of the invasion, when the
paratroop divisions dropped in from the skies, and secured key positions to
enable the beach landings, and from there the push from Normandy to Paris, and
on to Berlin. The Battle is refered to
as the 100 days of Normandy.
War is an
amazing logistical exercise, and I never knew that troops and equipment were
delivered into Normandy in gliders, as well as by parachute. The Gliders were towed from the UK, and then
released over Normandy where they would find a place to land. Rommel knew that this was coming, and had put
large stakes into all the paddocks, to catch and destroy any planes that tried
to land there. As a result of this, many
soldiers lost their lives being impaled as their planes landed. To understand the gamble the allies were
taking, Eisenhower was expecting losses of 50% of all the Allied Troops which
were under his command, and his detractors were picking losses of up to 80%. Eisenhower was right, but not in a way that
anybody would ever want to be.
The Museum
had many personal letters from soldiers and their families posted after the war,
which was very moving, and as a result we spent a lot of time reading these
letters, which isn’t something I would normally do in a museum. One of the most memorable was the one from
John Steele, posted in 1964, after he had attended the 20th Anniversary
thanking the local people for the warm reception he always received. The Museum is a great exhibitor of the many
acts of personal bravery and sacrifice that were made on the day, and
ultimately led to the Allied Victory.
From there
it was on to Saint Marie Du Monte, and Utah Beach. There are 5 beaches involved in the D-Day
Landings Utah, Omaha, Juno, Gold and Sword.
The first two are American, the last three British. The British are named based on random
selections from the Dictionary, which is good practice. The Americans however named there after a
couple of their states, for varying reasons, and those names seem to be the
most famous. Saint Marie Du Monte is the
town inland from Utah Beach, which became the scene of one of the initial
engagement of D-Day between the US Para Troopers and the German occupiers. It is 5ks from Utah Beach. On the road between Saint Marie Du Monte and
Utah Beech is a newly erected monument to Richard Winters who was the commander
of the 506th US Infantry Regiment, upon which the TV Series Band of
Brothers was based. We had watched the
series before we came on the holiday, as part of our study and preparation, so
were keen to see the monument to one of the outstanding leaders of the D-Day
invasion.
Utah Beach
has several monuments to various US Military groups who served and sacrificed
their lives on D-Day. In addition, there
is the Utah Beach D-Day Museum, which recounts the events of D-Day, the
landings that occurred at Utah Beach in the 5 months following D-Day, in order
to provision the supplies needed to support and army that was about to take on
and conquer Europe. The Museum was
created by the man who was Mayor of Saint Marie du Monte from 1949 to 1991. He was around on D-Day, and was mistakenly shot
by the Americans. Given a transfusion,
shipped off to the states for further treatment and recuperation, he then set
about creating a museum in one of the old German bunkers to honour the men who
came to liberate France and the rest of Europe from the Germans.
Utah Beach
was hugely important in terms of being a supply point for the Allied
forces. From June to November 1944, the
Allies landed 836,000 men, 220,000 vehicles ranging from jeeps to locomotives
and 725,000 tonnes of supplies at Utah Beach.
After Utah
Beach, we headed to Pointe du Hoc, one of the key German defensive positions,
located on top of a cliff. The US
Rangers had to use rope ladders to scale the cliff, at the cost of many lives, find
the Germans had scarpered, track them down, and destroy their guns. When they were relieved from duty several
days after D-Day, the original 225 soldiers now numbered only 90.
We were sorry to hear that your balls hurt, Nadine. Hope you were we'll lubricated when you wrote this else...
ReplyDeleteAll quiet here apart from a 5.7 shake this morning that reminded us of our vulnerability in these parts. Everything intact.
Thanks for letting us know everything's OK. Hope you guys are OK. Have Brook(e) and Ridge appeared from under the bed yet?
ReplyDeleteIf you had to put up with these naffing pigeons the way that we do, they'd start talking to you too. God do they go on, and there's no off switch for them, and the tent not being double glazed and all.
We have had the pigeons too...and we are over them already. Great blog David and Annie x
ReplyDeleteYes, they started at 5am again this morning - same as every morning I suspect. Maybe they won't be at the next campground. Hope your travels are going well, too. Loving your blog also. Bad luck about not going horse riding, or maybe not so much - for you or the horse.
ReplyDelete