On
May 24th ~ The Hamilton Spectator published a page of
historical information on this topic.
A
black and white photo of military personnel, having just been
deployed from an off-shore ship, as they approach the beach, remind
us of the heavy price paid to protect their shores and ours.
Possibly you read it. Unknown to me were several facts ~ perhaps,
also to you.
Seventy-five
years ago, tens of thousands of people
risked
their lives to save the world for democracy
during
the Allied invasion of France's Normandy coast in World War II.
War
photographer, Robert Capa, who said, “If
your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough,” landed
at Omaha Beach on D-Day. He took more than100 pictures, but when the
film was sent to London, a dark-room technician dried it too quickly
and melted the emulsion, leaving fewer than a dozen pictures usable.
Even so, those shaky and chaotic photos tell the story of Omaha
Beach. A decade later, Capa got too close: He died in 1954 after
stepping on a land mine in Indochina.
In
the weeks before D-Day, British intelligence was highly concerned
about crossword puzzles. The London Daily Telegraph's recent puzzle
answers had included Overlord
and Neptune
(the code names for the overall operation and the landing
operation), Utah
and
Omaha
(the
two American invasions ( beaches) and Mulberry
(the
code name for the artificial harbours planned for the invasion).
Agents interrogated the puzzle-maker, a Sunday School headmaster,
named Leonard Dawe. Turned out, it was just a coincidence.
The
people who planned D-Day were bigots. That was the code word ~
bigot
~ for
anyone who knew the time and place of the invasion. It was a
reversal of a designation ~ 'to
Gib' ~ that
was used on the papers of those travelling to Gibraltar for the
invasion of North Africa.
Among
those who landed at Normandy on D-Day were J.D. Salinger (who went
on to write 'Catcher
inthe Rye').Theodore
Roosevelt Jr. (the president's son who died of a heart attack a
month later) and Elliott Richardson (attorney general under
President Richard Nixon.
The
allied effort to hoodwink Adolf Hitler about the invasion was
code-named Fortitude,
and
it was nearly detailed as the invasion itself. The Allies went so
far as to parachute dummies, outfitted with firecrackers that
exploded on impact, behind enemy lines as a diversion. Under an
effort, code-named Window,
Allied
airplanes dropped strips of aluminum foil, cut to a length that
corresponded to German radar waves. The effect created two phantom
fleets of bombers out of thin air and ingenuity.
D-Day secrets were almost exposed in Chicago. A package from Supreme
Headquarters in London arrived at a Chicago mail-sorting office a few
months before D-Day and was accidentally opened. Its contents ~
including the timetable and location of the invasion ~ may have been
seen by more than a dozen unauthorized people. The FBI found that a
U.S. general's aide of German descent had sent the package to “The
Ordnance Division G-4” but had added the address of his sister in
Chicago. The FBI concluded that the aide was overtired and had been
thinking about his sister, who was ill. But, just to be safe, the
Chicago postal workers were put under surveillance and the aide
confined to quarters.
In
a 1964 interview, Dwight Einsenhower said a single person 'won the
war for us.” Was he referring to Gen. George Patton? Gen. Douglas
MacArthur? No ~ Andrew Higgins, who designed and built the
amphibious assault crafts that allowed the Allies to storm the
beaches of Normandy. The eccentric boat-builder foresaw not only the
Navy's acute need for small military crafts early on ~ but also the
shortage of steel. So he gambled and bought the entire 1939 crop of
mahogany from the Philippines. His New Orleans company produced
thousands of the unimpressive-looking~ but vital ~ boats for the war
effort.
Woe
be unto a politician who commits a gaffe during a D-Day remembrance
in 2004: Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin referred to the
'invasion of Norway'
when he meant 'Normandy'.
Years later, at an event with President Barack Obama, British Prime
Minister Brown cited 'Obama
Beach'
when he actually meant 'Omaha
Beach'.
While U.S. forces were conducting a training exercise off the
southwestern English coast to prepare for the landing on Utah Beach,
German torpedo boats ambushed them. More than 700 Americans were
killed. ~ a toll far worse than when U.S. forces actually took Utah
Beach a few months later.
France wasn't the only theatre of action in early June 1944. On
June 5, the B-29 Superfortress flew its first combat mission; the
target: Bangkok. The day before that, U.S. forces were able to
capture a German submarine off the African coast because they had
broken the Enigma code and learned a sub was in the vicinity. On the
eve of D-Day, the U.S. couldn't risk that the Germans would realize
the code was cracked. So, they hid away the sub and its captured
crew until the end of the war ~ and the Germans assumed: the vessel
was lost at sea!
The foregoing was previously posted
in The Chicago Tribune.
June
6, 1944
The Allies invade occupied France
Some175,000 British, Canadian, French, Polish, Norwegian
and other nationalities participate in the first 24 hours
of the Normandy invasion.
Below the above war endeavours, a broad map depicts
the locations of war troops along the coast of France:
Utah..Omaha...Gold...Juno...Sword Beaches
facing Germany's Army and Corps.
Compiled by Merle Baird-Kerr...June 1, 2019
To respond: mbairdkerr@bell.net
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