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(Greg DeLong) #1

186 TURNING THE TIDE 1943–1944


English


Channel


Au

re

To
uq
ue
s

USS
Augusta
HMS
Scylla

Utah

Utah

Omaha

Omaha

Gold

Gold

Juno

Juno

Sword

Sword

Isle
of Wight

UNITED KINGDOM


F
R
A N

C


E


FORCE G

30th Mobile
Division

352nd Infantry
Division

709th
Infantry
Division

243rd Infantry
Division

91st Infantry
Division

21st Panzer
Division

711th Infantry
Division

716th Infantry
Division

FORCE S

FORCE J FORCE L

FORCE O

FORCE U
From Dartmouth

From Portland

From
Falmouth

From East Coast

Southampton

Portsmouth

Cherbourg

Le Havre

Cabourg
Merville

Brighton
Newhaven

Shoreham-by-Sea

Caen

Bayeux

Grandcamp-
Maisy

Creully Douvres
Bénouville

FORCE B

At the Washington Conference of May 1943, the Allied leaders met
to discuss their future strategy in Europe, and set a date of May 1944
for the invasion of France. Numerous sites for the offensive were
considered. The obvious choice, an invasion across the narrowest
part of the Channel to France’s northernmost point, the Pas-de-Calais,
was ruled out because it was the most heavily defended. Normandy
was favored for the broad front it offered into central France.
The naval operations, led by British admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay,
were described by historian Correlli Barnett as a “never surpassed
masterpiece of planning” and involved a 6,939-strong invasion fleet.
This consisted of 1,213 warships, 4,126 landing craft, 736 ancillary
craft (including minesweepers), and 864 merchant vessels from
eight different Allied navies, carrying 176,000 troops in all. German
defenses consisted of around 50,000 troops and 170 artillery guns.
Allied planners identified the ideal conditions for the landings—
low tide, clear skies, and a full moon—and suggested a window of
June 5–7. Poor weather on June 5 delayed the landings by a day, but
even so the seas remained rough when the invasion began in the
early hours of June 6, 1944. A naval and aerial bombardment was
followed by an airborne and amphibious assault by troops from
the US, Britain, and Canada under the supreme command of
US general Dwight D. Eisenhower.

THE D-DAY


LANDINGS


On June 6, 1944, the largest seaborne invasion in history


took place on the beaches of Normandy. Code named


Operation Neptune, and usually referred to as D-Day,


it began the liberation of France and the opening of


another front in Europe.


THE DECEPTION PLAN


The Allies convinced Hitler that their attack would be centered on the
Pas-de-Calais using a variety of methods. A bogus US 1st Army Group
with fake tanks was created in south-east England. As the real invasion
fleet headed for Normandy, naval launches headed to Calais and Boulogne
towing barrage balloons to create radar echoes similar to those of troop
ships. Dummy parachutists were also dropped in the area.

Allied troops lift an
inflatable decoy tank

OPERATION NEPTUNE
All five landing beaches were given code names—
from west to east: Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno,
and Sword. The Allied goal was to link up the
four easterly beaches and establish a front line
10 miles (16 km) inland from the coast no later
than midnight on June 6.

KEY
Allied territory, Jun 6

Axis territory, Jun 6

Normandy beaches

Allied gains,
Jun 6

Allied objective
at 12:00 midnight
Jun 6

1
2
3
4

TIMELINE

JUN 5, 1944 JUN 6

5
6
7

JUN 7

▽ After the fighting
US soldiers at Omaha Beach cover their
dead and dying. Their landing craft sunk
by German artillery, these troops could
only reach Omaha by using a life raft.

German mine barrier

German gun batteries

German infantry divisions

German panzer division

ASSEMBLY 5 PM JUNE 5–6:30 AM JUNE 6, 1944
The invasion fleet assembled in the English Channel
and passed through gaps in the German minefields in
the Channel known as “The Spout” early on June 6.
Thousands of Allied planes attacked targets on the
French coast and combed the skies for enemy aircraft,
unleashing a naval bombardment at 5:45 am as ships
neared the shore. US airborne pathfinders and
paratroopers landed to the west, and British airborne
troops to the east of the invasion force, to guard the
flanks of the landing beaches.

1


Invasion fleets

Follow-up fleets

Assembly area

“The Spout”

Flagships

Airborne troops

US LANDINGS ON UTAH BEACH
6:30 AM–END OF DAY JUNE 6, 1944
The first US troops landed on Utah beach at 6:30 am.
Strong currents pushed their landing craft 1 mile
(1.8 km) to the south, but their new landing site turned
out to be more favorable than the intended one.
There, US troops set up a beachhead and made
contact with airborne troops. By the end of the day,
21,000 troops had landed with just 197 casualties.

2


US landing craft US troop movements

US_186-187_D-day_landings.indd 186 22/03/19 2:39 PM

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