20 A&M Men in the Normandy American Cemetery

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Arthur Rider, A&M College of Texas class of 1942 KIA June 21, 1944, while fighting in Normandy, France.



Arthur was a member of D Troop Calvary and the Polo Team as pictured in the 1942 Longhorn.

Lt Rider was in the 4th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron and was awarded the Silver Star as he served gallantly in combat against the enemy.

4th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron found itself attached to the 82d Airborne Division from 6 June-3 July 1944.

The 82d Airborne Division assigned the cavalry troop combat patrols in the hedgerow country and enjoyed the additional firepower the troop brought with it in the form of 37 mm cannons and machine guns. It was on one of these platoon-sized patrols that the troop lost an entire platoon of men and vehicles, less one jeep and two scouts who managed to escape.

Lacking the support of the troop's other platoons, and beyond the support of the other assets found in every mechanized reconnaissance squadron, the lightly armed platoon faired poorly. Early fighting in Normandy provided one fascinating example of the value of stealth, one of the salient features of the interwar debate on the desired characteristics of a mechanized reconnaissance unit.

In helping to take Auderville, in support of the 9th Infantry Division, Troop B, 4th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron, proved the value of wheeled vehicles for mechanized reconnaissance under combat conditions.

Confronted by a continuous line of German defenders, the cavalrymen found a hill behind friendly lines that allowed them to gain enough speed on the descent into enemy lines to gain the speed and momentum to coast undetected into and beyond the German positions. Completely surprised, the Germans retreated under pressure from attacking American infantrymen as the cavalrymen dashed on to Auderville, surprised the garrison, and took control of the village by daylight. This was not characteristic of most of the fighting in Normandy. The 4th Cavalry Squadron participated in the drive to secure the Cherbourg Peninsula. During the advance up the peninsula, the 4th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron helped maintain contact between the 9th and 79th Infantry Divisions.

Lt Arthur Rider is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

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Henry T Gillespie, A&M College of Texas class of 1938, KIA June 17, 1944.



HT Gillespie was a member of Troop B Cavalry, as pictured in the 1935 Longhorn.

Henry Troy Gillespie was born on November 29, 1916, Coleman County, Texas. He was the son of Francis Henry Gillespie and Hazel Leta Keesee Gillespie.

Henry served in the 392nd Fighter Squadron, 367th Fighter Group, as a Second Lieutenant and Pilot of the P-38 #42-104180 during World War II.



On June 17, 1944, he took off at Station 452 airfield in Stoney Cross, England, for an attack mission to the marshaling yards of Epernon, France. At 2:35 PM, he was shot down by a German Me109 fighter, crashing his plane into the commune of Maillebois.

His name is found on a Monument at the site of the crash:

Maillebois - Dampierre sur Blvy
June 17, 1944 - 367th Fighter Group
In tribute to the pilots
2nd Lt Henry T. GILLESPIE
2nd Lt Earl L. PETERS

2Lt Henry Gillespie is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery

ABATTBQ87
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Henry D Jackson, A&M College of Texas class of 1942 was with Company D 22nd Infantry and was assigned as a platoon leader on January 1, 1944.



First Lieutenant Jackson was killed in action in Normandy, France on June 8, 1944, during the 1st Battalion's attack against the German coastal battery at Crisbecq.



22nd Infantry Regiment
After Action Report
4th (US) Infantry Division Battle of Normandy June 1944

Headquarters, 22nd Infantry
APO 4, U. S. Army
21 July 1944

The 22nd Infantry, 4th Infantry Division, landed on Utah Beach starting at H plus 75 minutes.
The Third Battalion, 22nd Infantry, initially attached to the 8th Infantry, landed in a small craft with the mission of crossing the beach seawall, turning to the northwest, and attacking and destroying the fortified positions along the coast.

The First and Second Battalions landed in LCIs, crossed the beach, and flooded areas with the mission of attacking to the northwest, reducing the strong points at Crisbecq and Azeville, and then securing the high ground west and southwest of Quineville. The landing was made approximately 1500 yards south of the proposed beach. By nightfall, the Regiment was short of the initial objective but had reached the general line Utah Beach-Foucarville.

On the morning of 7 June, the Regiment continued the attack. The Third Battalion Continued the attack on the beach strong points; the Second Battalion moved Forward and launched an attack on the strong point northeast of Azeville; the First Battalion moved through Ravenoville, St Marcouf, and attacked the strong point near Crisbecq. Later in the afternoon the First and Second Battalions received counterattacks in some force and were driven back about 800 yards. During the night the First Battalion received another counterattack at about 0040hrs and repulsed this action without casualties.

On 8 June the First and Second Battalions attacked the strong points at Azeville and Crisbecq but were unsuccessful. The Third Battalion continued its Mission of reducing the beach strong points until late in the afternoon at which time they reverted in place to the Regimental reserve with the mission of blocking an expected enemy attempt to break through the First Battalion to the beach. The Third Battalion secured areas already taken and consolidated their positions in the hamlets just east of the Azeville and Crisbecq Gun positions.

Henry D. Jackson was originally buried in the temporary military cemetery at Sainte Mere Eglise Cemetery #1 at Carentan, France, and now he is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

ABATTBQ87
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William Jameson, A&M College of Texas class of 1934, KIA on June 24, 1944.



Lester Jameson was a member of Company D Infantry, Kream and Kow Klub, and the Scholarship Society Club as found in the 1934 Longhorn.

Lt. William L. Jameson, or as he was known in Tolar, Coach Lester Jameson, was killed while on a night patrol in Normandy, France, in June of 1944.

A few years earlier in 1941, Coach Lester Jameson led the Tolar High School FFA team to victories in school agriculture competitions, in 1942 he was handing out letterman jackets to the Tolar High School football team. Coach Lester Jameson was a big part of Tolar High School and was a very respected teacher and coach.
He went from leading high school boys in competitions, to leading men, in fighting for our freedom. Serving as a 1st Lt. with the 38th Infantry Regiment of the 2nd Division, he was reportedly leading a patrol that was ambushed. According to one report, he was killed by a grenade.



LT William L. Jameson is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

ABATTBQ87
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James Japhet, A&M College of Texas class of 1943, KIA on June 6, 1944.



James was a member of A Battery Field Artillery and the Landscape Art Club as found in the 1942 Longhorn.

SSGT James Japhet was in the 101st Airborne, 506th PIR, I Company, and his outfit were assigned Drop Zone "D", close to Angoville au Plain/St Come du Mont.

On June 6, 1944, as part of the "D-Day" invasion of Normandy, the C-47 Skytrain (serial number 42-100733) of the 96th Squadron, 440th Troop Carrier Group left Exeter UK airbase carrying 23 individuals who participated in the paratroop drop mission assigned Drop Zone "D", Angoville au Plain/St Come du Mont.

The C-47 was shot down by enemy fire during the mission. Four individuals were able to parachute to safety, but the remaining nineteen were killed during the incident. The remains of six were eventually recovered and identified, but the other 13 men are still unaccounted for.

SSGT James Japhet is memorialized on the Tablets of the Missing at the Normandy American Cemetery.

ABATTBQ87
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Robert English, A&M College of Texas class of 1942, KIA on December 20th, 1942. He was the first casualty from Houston County serving in World War II.

Robert was in C Company Infantry according to the 1941 Longhorn.



Robert English joined the U.S. Army Air Corps in June 1941.



In December 1942, he was a First Lieutenant, B-17 Flying Fortress pilot assigned to the 401st Bombardment Squadron, 91st Bombardment Group (Heavy), 8th Air Force, U.S. Army Air Forces, European Theater of Operations deployed to Royal Air Force (RAF) Bassingbourn.

On 20 Dec 1942, on his 6th mission over France, he was killed in action en route to bomb the German air depot at Romilly, France (shot and died at the controls of the B-17F tail #41-24452). Enemy aircraft KO'd tailplane and the aircraft crashed near Rouen, France.

The remaining crew parachuted out and became prisoners of war.



1st LT Robert English is listed on the Tablet of the Missing at the Normandy American Cemetery.

ABATTBQ87
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William B Morehouse, A&M College of Texas class of 1945, KIA July 19, 1944, while fighting in the Hedgerows of Normandy, France.


Bill was a member of A Company Infantry the Entomolgy Club and the Dallas Club, as pictured in the 1943 Longhorn.



2nd LT Morehouse landed with the 39th Infantry on D-Day plus 4, June 10th, 1944, at Utah Beach. On June 12th, the 9th Infantry Division began a series of battles that resulted in the race to the sea and the eventual sealing off of the Cherbourg Peninsula. The battle for the Contentin Peninsula began on June 18th, 1944.

Again, the 9th Infantry Division excelled, this time in Anderville, which fell on July 1st, yielding 3.000 prisoners. Next followed the famous "Battle of the Hedgerows", the large earth walls covered with large bushes and trees, dividing the many farming fields in Normandy. For 25 days the men of the 9th infantry bled and died in of the bloodiest battles of all time.

William is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

byfLuger41
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Here!

OP, please keep the posts coming.
TO THE DROP ZONE!!!
ABATTBQ87
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Harry Conner Robison A&M College of Texas class of 1945

PFC 264th Infantry Regiment, 66th Infantry Division
Lost at Sea December 24-25, 1944



Sam Noto, JR A&M College of Texas class of 1947

PFC 264th Infantry Regiment, 66th Infantry Division
Lost at Sea December 24-25, 1944



Herbert Koehler A&M College of Texas class of 1947

PFC 264th Infantry Regiment, 66th Infantry Division
Lost at Sea December 24-25, 1944


On Christmas Eve 1944, the Belgium troopship Leopoldville left the pier at Southampton, England with over 2,000 American soldiers assigned to the 66th Infantry Division and crossed the English Channel to France. Just 5 1/2 miles from its destination, Cherbourg, the Leopoldville was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-486. There were 763 American soldiers killed and the bodies of 493 were never recovered from the Channel's frigid 48-degree waters.
ABATTBQ87
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Major John L Hanby, A&M College of Texas class of 1940, KIA on August 3, 1944.


John Hanby was the Captain/CO of A Company Infantry according to the 1940 Longhorn.

Major John Hanby served with the 2nd Infantry Division, 9th Infantry Regiment, which landed on Omaha Beach on 7 June 1944, near St. Laurent-sur-Mer. Attacking across the Aure River, the Division liberated Trevieres, on 10 June, and proceeded to assault and secure Hill 192, the key enemy strongpoint on the road to St. Lo. With the hill taken on 11 July 1944, the Division went on the defensive until 26 July.

Exploiting the St. Lo break-through, the 2d Division advanced across the Vire to take Tinchebray 15 August 1944. Major Hanby was killed during this action on August 3rd, 1944.



Major Hanby is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.


Watch this video by the Mesquite ISD as they discuss John Hanby
Hanby is a name that is synonymous with the community of Mesquite. In his senior year, Johnny, as he was affectionately known, was named Mesquite High School's Athlete of the Year, captaining the football and basketball team. After graduating, he went on to join the U.S. Army and served our country during World War II. He achieved the rank of major, served in the 2nd and 9th Infantry Divisions, and fought in the D-Day invasion of Normandy in 1944. Just two months later, he gave his life for his country and was killed in action in France.
https://fb.watch/tDkeEuddTx/
1988PA-Aggie
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Thank you! Great tribute to our Aggie Forefathers.
ABATTBQ87
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David Lamun, A&M College of Texas class of 1946, KIA on July 6, 1944.



David Vance Lamun of Big Spring was 19 when he enlisted in the U.S. Army. Lamun enrolled at the A&M College of Texas and joined the ROTC program as a member of the Corps of Cadets but was called for active duty during World War II.

Initially, he was assigned to a tank destroyer force but was later moved to the 357th Battalion, 90th Infantry Division, which landed at Utah Beach in Normandy on June 8, 1944. By all accounts, Lamun was a model of leadership and valor to his fellow soldiers. He was only 20 years old fighting alongside his comrades in Beau Coudray, France a small town whose capture was to develop into one of the toughest engagements of the entire war, and was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart for his honorable death during that battle.

The Lamun-Lusk-Sanchez Texas State Veterans Home in Big Spring is named after David Vance Lamun, Joe Lusk, and Reynaldo Sanchez.


PVT David Luman is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery
ABATTBQ87
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John D Ragland, A&M College of Texas class of 1941, KIA July 18, 1944, while fighting in Normandy, France.



As a Senior at A&M John was a member of the 2nd Battalion Headquarters, Field Artillery, and was a Ross Volunteer as pictured in the 1941 Longhorn.

1st LT John D. Ragland, United States Army, is reported to have been awarded the Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action against the enemy while serving with the 9th Infantry Division during World War II.

John Ragland is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

ABATTBQ87
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PVT Rolland J Bowman, Class of 1940, was KIA on July 15, 1944, in Normandy, France.

Rolland was a member of the San Antonio Club, Entomology Club, and the First Combat Train Field Artillery.


Rolland is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery

ABATTBQ87
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Capt James E Rountree, Class of 1937, was KIA on July 14, 1944 in Normandy, France.



James Rountree was second in command of the HQ Company First Battalion Infantry and in the Agronomy Club according to pictures in the 1937 Longhorn.



Capt Rountree was in the 314th Regiment of the 79th Division, which was involved in fierce fighting around La Haye-du-Puits.



Capt Rountree is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

ABATTBQ87
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Ralph Hartgraves, A&M College of Texas class of 1941, KIA July 13, 1944.



Captain Hartgraves was the commanding officer of A Company. The morning report for July 17, 1944, on page 39 shows him killed in action on July 13, 1944, and Lt. Holland assumed command of the company.



On July 9th at 11:30 am, the 2nd Battalion of the 331st Infantry Regiment (83rd Infantry Division) commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel James F. Faber engaged in the fight for the liberation of the village of Sainteny. The latter is defended by paratroopers of the Fallschirmjger Regiment 6 (91. Infanterie Division), SS-Panzergrenadier Regiment 38 (17 SS Panzer-Division "Götz von Berlichingen") which is reinforced by elements of the SS Panzer "Das Reich" Division.

Despite the destructive firepower of the Germans and the catastrophic loss rate of the 331st Infantry Regiment, the Americans hold fast and maintained control of the village. The fighting continued at the gates of Sainteny until 21 July, when the 83rd Infantry Division commanded by Major General Robert C. Macon resumed its southern advance.

CPT Ralph Hartgraves is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery

ABATTBQ87
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James Thompson, A&M College of Texas class of 1928, KIA April 1, 1944.



James was in Flight B Air Corps



Colonel James Thompson was the CO of the 448th Bombardment Group, B24 Liberators, based in Seething UK.



Colonel Thompson was killed in his parachute as he made his descent--by German machinegun ground fire.

He is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery



ABATTBQ87
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Frank Daugherty, A&M College of Texas class of 1941, KIA April 20, 1944.



Frank was in the Chemical Warfare Service outfit, as well as the Larado A&M Club.



Frank was born on the 13th of August 1919 in Laredo, Webb County Texas. He graduated from Laredo High School in 1937. He then went on to complete his degree in Petroleum Engineering at Texas A & M College, then volunteered to join the Army Air Corps, and attended Roswell Army Air Field, where he was a student at the four-engine pilot transition school.

In 1944, Frank arrived in England and joined the Eighth Air Force at RAF Deenethorpe, AAF Station - 128. Home to the 401st Bomb Group, Frank was assigned to the 613th Bomb Squadron.

2nd Lt. Frank Daugherty's first and last operational mission was on the 20th of April 1944. Mission Log 53, (Operation Crossbow). The target is to strike the V1 & V2 Rocket sites at Bois Coquerel, on the Pas de Calais, France. He was on the rookie crew of the B-17g (42-31593), "Carrie B". No3 & No4 engines were hit by flak and about 3 to 4 minutes later the aircraft pulled up vertically and went into a dive to around 12000ft, and exploded the aircraft crashed near the target area, at Pont Remy, France.

Just before the explosion, Frank went to the nose of the aircraft to warn his crew to bail out, but due to lack of oxygen, Frank fell unconscious. His co-pilot William Maher, pushed Frank out of the aircraft and pulled his rip cord for him. Dennis Beach the Navigator, found Frank on the ground two hours later guarded by the German troops. They refused to let Dennis anywhere near him, according to the guards Frank was already dead.

Frank was buried in the English Military Cemetery, Abbeville/Somme on the 24th of April 1944, Single grave number B-15. He was later moved to the Normandy American Cemetery, Colville-sur-Mer, France, and is interred at plot D, Row 18, Grave 42. His name is also on the Laredo WWII & Korean Conflict Memorial on Jarvis Plaza and is also registered on The American Battle Monuments Commission.

WWII Commendations - Air Medal, Purple Heart, Victory Medal, American Campaign Medal, Army Presidential Unit Citation, Army Good Conduct Medal, European - African - Middle Eastern Campaign Medal.

ABATTBQ87
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Joel Stratton, A&M College of Texas class of 1941 KIA June 30, 1944



Joel Stratton was in C Troop Cavalry according to the 1939 Longhorn



PVT Joel Stratton is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery

ABATTBQ87
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W.D. Stubblefield, A&M College of Texas class of 1934 KIA June 12, 1944.



Warren was in Company A Engineers, the SA Club, and the YMCA cabinet, according to pictures in the 1932 Longhorn.





From an interview with Tommy Niland in 1998:


Stubblefield was an older man, a major from Texas in the National Guard. He became a kind of father figure to Tommy, an elder who would listen and offer some advice. Tommy remembered how Stubblefield had a sports car and a beautiful wife, how all the young guys dreamed they might someday be like him.

On the day before he visited the cemetery, Tommy had walked a dirt road near the French town of Carentan. There, amid swirling cattails and stone cottages that seemed to rise out of the ground, Tommy recalled how Stubblefield walked ahead in 1944, too close to a ditch. Some U.S. scouts had spotted Germans in the field. Tommy called for him to stop. Stubblefield kept going.

This was a hard story for Tommy to get out. The spray of a machine gun caught Stubblefield in the neck. Tommy crawled 30 yards in the dirt to drag back his good friend. Too late. He was gone. Another white cross.

W. D. Stubblefield is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery.

BigJim49 AustinNowDallas
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Many thanks, ABATT ! HEROES ALL!
chick79
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This is great! Are you the one who put on the covers at the bottom each marker?
CyanideJenkins
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Great thread OP!
F4GIB71
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Outstanding tribute. Lest we forget. Thanks so much
F4GIB71
jograki
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This is wonderful! Thank you for such a detailed and descriptive thread. I was also there last week and looked up the Aggies on the Wall of the Missing as well a few headstones. Here is my photo for Joel Stratton.

Thank you for honoring and remembering.
OldArmy71
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What a reminder of the staggering losses the United States suffered in that war. Imagine what the families went through.

We need to remember these good, brave men. Thank you so much, OP.
Rabid Cougar
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Blue Stars!
ABATTBQ87
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chick79 said:

This is great! Are you the one who put on the covers at the bottom each marker?
Yes, I designed the banner and had a local embroidery company do all the work for me
ABATTBQ87
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OldArmy71 said:

What a reminder of the staggering losses the United States suffered in that war. Imagine what the families went through.

We need to remember these good, brave men. Thank you so much, OP.
Rows and Rows and Rows of crosses



OldArmy71
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I admire you for being able to go to those cemeteries. I'm not sure I could do that now. Just so sad. We certainly fought monstrous foes, but it is so sad.

I am reminded of a passage in the second book of Rick Atkinson's WWII trilogy, The Day of Battle. Atkinson is writing about a military cemetery in Italy, but it's the same idea:

..
Quote:

....just three weeks after the end of the war in Europe, a stocky, square-jawed figure would climb the bunting-draped speaker's platform and survey the dignitaries seated before him on folding chairs. Then Lucian Truscott, who had returned to Italy from France a few months earlier to succeed Mark Clark as the Fifth Army commander, turned his back on the living and instead faced the dead. "It was, " wrote eyewitness Bill Mauldin [the Stars and Stripes cartoonist], "the most moving gesture I ever saw." In his carbolic voice, Truscott spoke to Jack Toffey, to Henry Waskow [a Texan who was the subject of a famous column by Ernie Pyle], and to the thousands of others who lay beneath the ranks of Latin crosses and stars of David. As Maulding later recalled:

He apologized to the dead men for their presence here. He said everybody tells leaders it is not their fault that men get killed in war, but that every leader knows in his heart that this is not altogether true. He said he hoped anybody here through any mistake of his own would forgive him, but he realized that was asking a hell of a lot under the circumstances....

ABATTBQ87
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An article written by Ernie Pyle:

The Horrible Waste of War

Friday, June 16, 1944

NORMANDY BEACHHEAD, June 16, 1944 I took a walk along the historic coast of Normandy in the country of France.

It was a lovely day for strolling along the seashore. Men were sleeping on the sand, some of them sleeping forever. Men were floating in the water, but they didn't know they were in the water, for they were dead.

The water was full of squishy little jellyfish about the size of your hand. Millions of them. In the center each of them had a green design exactly like a four-leaf clover. The good-luck emblem. Sure. Hell yes.

I walked for a mile and a half along the water's edge of our many-miled invasion beach. You wanted to walk slowly, for the detail on that beach was infinite.

The wreckage was vast and startling. The awful waste and destruction of war, even aside from the loss of human life, has always been one of its outstanding features to those who are in it. Anything and everything is expendable. And we did expend on our beachhead in Normandy during those first few hours.

For a mile out from the beach there were scores of tanks and trucks and boats that you could no longer see, for they were at the bottom of the water swamped by overloading, or hit by shells, or sunk by mines. Most of their crews were lost.

You could see trucks tipped half over and swamped. You could see partly sunken barges, and the angled-up corners of jeeps, and small landing craft half submerged. And at low tide you could still see those vicious six-pronged iron snares that helped snag and wreck them.

On the beach itself, high and dry, were all kinds of wrecked vehicles. There were tanks that had only just made the beach before being knocked out. There were jeeps that had been burned to a dull gray. There were big derricks on caterpillar treads that didn't quite make it. There were half-tracks carrying office equipment that had been made into a shambles by a single shell hit, their interiors still holding their useless equipage of smashed typewriters, telephones, office files.

There were LCT's turned completely upside down, and lying on their backs, and how they got that way I don't know. There were boats stacked on top of each other, their sides caved in, their suspension doors knocked off.
In this shoreline museum of carnage there were abandoned rolls of barbed wire and smashed bulldozers and big stacks of thrown-away lifebelts and piles of shells still waiting to be moved.

In the water floated empty life rafts and soldiers' packs and ration boxes, and mysterious oranges.

On the beach lay snarled rolls of telephone wire and big rolls of steel matting and stacks of broken, rusting rifles.

On the beach lay, expended, sufficient men and mechanism for a small war. They were gone forever now. And yet we could afford it.

We could afford it because we were on, we had our toehold, and behind us there were such enormous replacements for this wreckage on the beach that you could hardly conceive of their sum total. Men and equipment were flowing from England in such a gigantic stream that it made the waste on the beachhead seem like nothing at all, really nothing at all.

A few hundred yards back on the beach is a high bluff. Up there we had a tent hospital, and a barbed-wire enclosure for prisoners of war. From up there you could see far up and down the beach, in a spectacular crow's-nest view, and far out to sea.

And standing out there on the water beyond all this wreckage was the greatest armada man has ever seen. You simply could not believe the gigantic collection of ships that lay out there waiting to unload.

Looking from the bluff, it lay thick and clear to the far horizon of the sea and beyond, and it spread out to the sides and was miles wide. Its utter enormity would move the hardest man.

As I stood up there I noticed a group of freshly taken German prisoners standing nearby. They had not yet been put in the prison cage. They were just standing there, a couple of doughboys leisurely guarding them with tommy guns.

The prisoners too were looking out to sea the same bit of sea that for months and years had been so safely empty before their gaze. Now they stood staring almost as if in a trance.

They didn't say a word to each other. They didn't need to. The expression on their faces was something forever unforgettable. In it was the final horrified acceptance of their doom.

If only all Germans could have had the rich experience of standing on the bluff and looking out across the water and seeing what their compatriots saw.
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