Agreed ... but not me.And thank you to the Americans and British who fought their way through North Africa and Italy for two years before Normandy. That seems to be the forgotten front of WWII.
I watch "Patton" probably four times a year!
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Agreed ... but not me.And thank you to the Americans and British who fought their way through North Africa and Italy for two years before Normandy. That seems to be the forgotten front of WWII.
The 29th Infantry Division was a National Guard division, and was manned (from since before the war) by soldiers mostly from Virginia and Maryland - hence the high number of casualties from a Valley town like Bedford. The 29th landed on Omaha (with the Big Red 1) to open the invasion.
My friend Joe Balkoski was the Division historian and is a fabulous author. He wrote a trilogy of books on the 29th in Europe. I highly recommend them.
Beyond the Beachhead: The 29th Division... book by Joseph Balkoski
Given what was already known about amphibious landings (quite a lot, there had already been dozens of them in the Pacific, not to mention Italy and North Africa), the limited naval bombardment on Jone 6 was probably the Allies' most deadly blunder. Of course, that mistake pales besides such beauties as "I know there's an invasion, but the Leader is asleep and we're afraid to wake him."