6 June 44
Posted By: Sgt. Mom @ 1228 on 2008-06-06

So this is one of those historic dates that seems to be slipping faster and faster out of sight, receding into a past at such a rate that we who were born afterwards, or long afterwards, can just barely see. But it was such an enormous, monumental enterprise – so longed looked for, so carefully planned and involved so many soldiers, sailors and airmen – of course the memory would linger long afterwards.

Think of looking down from the air, at that great metal armada, spilling out from every harbor, every estuary along England’s coast. Think of the sound of marching footsteps in a thousand encampments, and the silence left as the men marched away, counted out by squad, company and battalion, think of those great parks of tanks and vehicles, slowly emptying out, loaded into the holds of ships and onto the open decks of LSTs. Think of the roar of a thousand airplane engines, the sound of it rattling the china on the shelf, of white contrails scratching straight furrows across the moonless sky.

Think of the planners and architects of this enormous undertaking, the briefers and the specialists in all sorts of arcane specialties, most of whom would never set foot on Gold, Juno, Sword, Omaha or Utah Beach. Many of those in the know would spend the last few days or hours before D-day in guarded lock-down, to preserve security. Think of them pacing up and down, looking out of windows or at blank walls, wondering if there might be one more thing they might have done, or considered, knowing that lives depended upon every tiny minutiae, hoping that they had accounted for everything possible.

Think of the people in country villages, and port towns, seeing the marching soldiers, the grey ships sliding away from quays and wharves, hearing the airplanes, with their wings boldly striped with black and white paint… and knowing that something was up - But only knowing for a certainty that those men, those ships and those planes were heading towards France, and also knowing just as surely that many of them would not return.

Think of the commanders, of Eisenhower and his subordinates, as the minutes ticked slowly down to H-Hour, considering all that was at stake, all the lives that they were putting into this grand effort, this gamble that Europe could be liberated through a force landing from the West. Think of all the diversions and practices, the secrecy and the responsibility, the burden of lives which they carried along with the rank on their shoulders. Eisenhower had in his pocket the draft of an announcement, just in case the invasion failed and he had to break off the grand enterprise; a soldier and commander hoping for the best, but already prepared for the worst.

Think on this day, and how the might of the Nazi Reich was cast down. June 6th was for Hitler the crack of doom, although he would not know for sure for many more months. After this day, his armies only advanced once – everywhere else and at every other time, they fell back upon a Reich in ruins. Think on this while there are still those alive who remember it at first hand.

Later, courtesy of Belmont Club - Another war, another June 6th, another battlefield in France -

Yet another view, cortest of Da Blogfaddah - the real ‘Greatest Generation’, and why we should pay some attention.

3 Comments »

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  1. We all slept in today, Boyo’s out of school and Beautiful Wife and I both have Fridays off. I did remember to put the flag out.

    Comment by Timmer — 20080606 @ 1313

  2. Several years ago (before it was PC’d into oblivion, when Joseph Epstein was still the editor), The American Scholar had a great article on the effects of D-Day as a news story — the biggest breaking news story in history — on the US news business.

    All “sound bites” are descended from a D-Day sound bite. Before D-Day, the radio networks had a policy against airing recorded sound bites, what today are called “actualities” I think. The rationale was that listeners couldn’t tell it was recorded. It also prevented affiliates from timeshifting the network feed. But a reporter took an early portable sound recorder out on one of the invasion ships. The recorder weighed 70 pounds and recorded on movie film. The ship he was on was one of the few to be attacked by a German aircraft, and the plane was shot down.

    So the network had a recording of a German plane being shot down on D-Day, and a policy against airing it. Guess what happened.

    The networks also had a policy against star anchors. They deliberately kept their newsreaders anonymous and interchangeable, and their salaries low. Robert Trout pulled an all-nighter covering D-Day for NBC, and became “the first anchorman.” See for example:

    http://www.keener13.com/trout.htm

    Just a couple of minor side effects of D-Day.

    Comment by Bob Hawkins — 20080606 @ 1519

  3. The entire WWII experience is becoming more and more irrelevant to our citizens. Being one of the people born at the end of the war, I grew up surrounded by men who had been in the war in various capacities. My Dad was a paratrooper. One of my uncle wss a B-24 tail gunner. Another was with the Army in the South Pacific and participated in the liberation of the Philippines. Yet another was on Iwo Jima as a Marine. I am very proud to have known them all and thank them all for their sacrifice.

    Comment by Jim in Marietta — 20080607 @ 1554

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