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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers D-Day On Omaha Beach (6/6/1944) - June 6th, 2003
The Atlantic Monthly ^ | November 1960 | S.L.A. Marshall

Posted on 06/06/2003 5:21:10 AM PDT by SAMWolf



Dear Lord,

There's a young man far from home,
called to serve his nation in time of war;
sent to defend our freedom
on some distant foreign shore.

We pray You keep him safe,
we pray You keep him strong,
we pray You send him safely home ...
for he's been away so long.

There's a young woman far from home,
serving her nation with pride.
Her step is strong, her step is sure,
there is courage in every stride.
We pray You keep her safe,
we pray You keep her strong,
we pray You send her safely home ...
for she's been away too long.

Bless those who await their safe return.
Bless those who mourn the lost.
Bless those who serve this country well,
no matter what the cost.

Author Unknown

.

FReepers from the The Foxhole
join in prayer for all those serving their country at this time.

.

.................................................................................................................................

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The First Wave at Omaha Beach


UNLIKE what happens to other great battles, the passing of the years and the retelling of the story have softened the horror of Omaha Beach on D Day.

This fluke of history is doubly ironic since no other decisive battle has ever been so thoroughly reported for the official record. While the troops were still fighting in Normandy, what had happened to each unit in the landing had become known through the eyewitness testimony of all survivors. It was this research by the field historians which first determined where each company had hit the beach and by what route it had moved inland. Owing to the fact that every unit save one had been mislanded, it took this work to show the troops where they had fought.



How they fought and what they suffered were also determined in detail during the field research. As published today, the map data showing where the troops came ashore check exactly with the work done in the field; but the accompanying narrative describing their ordeal is a sanitized version of the original field notes.

This happened because the Army historians who wrote the first official book about Omaha Beach, basing it on the field notes, did a calculated job of sifting and weighting the material. So saying does not imply that their judgment was wrong. Normandy was an American victory; it was their duty to trace the twists and turns of fortune by which success was won. But to follow that rule slights the story of Omaha as an epic human tragedy which in the early hours bordered on total disaster. On this two-division front landing, only six rifle companies were relatively effective as units. They did better than others mainly because they had the luck to touch down on a less deadly section of the beach. Three times that number were shattered or foundered before they could start to fight. Several contributed not a man or bullet to the battle for the high ground. But their ordeal has gone unmarked because its detail was largely ignored by history in the first place. The worst-fated companies were overlooked, the more wretched personal experiences were toned down, and disproportionate attention was paid to the little element of courageous success in a situation which was largely characterized by tragic failure.

The official accounts which came later took their cue from this secondary source instead of searching the original documents. Even such an otherwise splendid and popular book on the great adventure as Cornelius Ryan's The Longest Day misses the essence of the Omaha story.


Men from Company E, 16th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division are in the initial wave to assult the beach at OMAHA.


In everything that has been written about Omaha until now, there is less blood and iron than in the original field notes covering any battalion landing in the first wave. Doubt it? Then let's follow along with Able and Baker companies, 116th Infantry, 29th Division. Their story is lifted from my fading Normandy notebook, which covers the landing of every Omaha company.

ABLE Company riding the tide in seven Higgins boats is still five thousand yards from the beach when first taken under artillery fire. The shells fall short. At one thousand yards, Boat No. 5 is hit dead on and foundered. Six men drown before help arrives. Second Lieutenant Edward Gearing and twenty others paddle around until picked up by naval craft, thereby missing the fight at the shore line. It's their lucky day. The other six boats ride unscathed to within one hundred yards of the shore, where a shell into Boat No. 3 kills two men. Another dozen drown, taking to the water as the boat sinks. That leaves five boats.

Lieutenant Edward Tidrick in Boat No. 2 cries out: "My God, we're coming in at the right spot, but look at it! No shingle, no wall, no shell holes, no cover. Nothing!"


At low tide, the assaulting troops had to cross more than 300 meters of completely exposed beach to gain entrance to the Vierville draw.


His men are at the sides of the boat, straining for a view of the target. They stare but say nothing. At exactly 6:36 A.M. ramps are dropped along the boat line and the men jump off in water anywhere from waist deep to higher than a man's head. This is the signal awaited by the Germans atop the bluff. Already pounded by mortars, the floundering line is instantly swept by crossing machine-gun fires from both ends of the beach.

Able Company has planned to wade ashore in three files from each boat, center file going first, then flank files peeling off to right and left. The first men out try to do it but are ripped apart before they can make five yards. Even the lightly wounded die by drowning, doomed by the waterlogging of their overloaded packs. From Boat No. 1, all hands jump off in water over their heads. Most of them are carried down. Ten or so survivors get around the boat and clutch at its sides in an attempt to stay afloat. The same thing happens to the section in Boat No. 4. Half of its people are lost to the fire or tide before anyone gets ashore. All order has vanished from Able Company before it has fired a shot.

Already the sea runs red. Even among some of the lightly wounded who jumped into shallow water the hits prove fatal. Knocked down by a bullet in the arm or weakened by fear and shock, they are unable to rise again and are drowned by the onrushing tide. Other wounded men drag themselves ashore and, on finding the sands, lie quiet from total exhaustion, only to be overtaken and killed by the water. A few move safely through the bullet swarm to the beach, then find that they cannot hold there. They return to the water to use it for body cover. Faces turned upward, so that their nostrils are out of water, they creep toward the land at the same rate as the tide. That is how most of the survivors make it. The less rugged or less clever seek the cover of enemy obstacles moored along the upper half of the beach and are knocked off by machine-gun fire.

Within seven minutes after the ramps drop, Able Company is inert and leaderless. At Boat No. 2, Lieutenant Tidrick takes a bullet through the throat as he jumps from the ramp into the water. He staggers onto the sand and flops down ten feet from Private First Class Leo J. Nash. Nash sees the blood spurting and hears the strangled words gasped by Tidrick: "Advance with the wire cutters!" It's futile; Nash has no cutters. To give the order, Tidrick has raised himself up on his hands and made himself a target for an instant. Nash, burrowing into the sand, sees machine gun bullets rip Tidrick from crown to pelvis. From the cliff above, the German gunners are shooting into the survivors as from a roof top.


American assault troops in a landing craft huddle behind the protective front of the craft as it nears a beachhead, on the Northern Coast of France. Smoke in the background is Naval gunfire supporting the land. 6 June 1944.


Captain Taylor N. Fellers and Lieutenant Benjamin R. Kearfoot never make it. They had loaded with a section of thirty men in Boat No. 6 (Landing Craft, Assault, No. 1015). But exactly what happened to this boat and its human cargo was never to be known. No one saw the craft go down. How each man aboard it met death remains unreported. Half of the drowned bodies were later found along the beach. It is supposed that the others were claimed by the sea.

Along the beach, only one Able Company officer still lives -- Lieutenant Elijah Nance, who is hit in the heel as he quits the boat and hit in the belly by a second bullet as he makes the sand. By the end of ten minutes, every sergeant is either dead or wounded. To the eyes of such men as Private Howard I. Grosser and Private First Class Gilbert G. Murdock, this clean sweep suggests that the Germans on the high ground have spotted all leaders and concentrated fire their way. Among the men who are still moving in with the tide, rifles, packs, and helmets have already been cast away in the interests of survival.

To the right of where Tidrick's boat is drifting with the tide, its coxswain lying dead next to the shell-shattered wheel, the seventh craft, carrying a medical section with one officer and sixteen men, noses toward the beach. The ramp drops. In that instant, two machine guns concentrate their fire on the opening. Not a man is given time to jump. All aboard are cut down where they stand.


Members of an American landing party lend helping hands to other members of their organization whose landing craft was sunk be enemy action of the coast of France. These survivors reached Utah Beach, near Cherbourg, by using a life raft. Photographer: Weintraub, 6 June 1944


By the end of fifteen minutes, Able Company has still not fired a weapon. No orders are being given by anyone. No words are spoken. The few able-bodied survivors move or not as they see fit. Merely to stay alive is a full-time job. The fight has become a rescue operation in which nothing counts but the force of a strong example.

Above all others stands out the first-aid man, Thomas Breedin. Reaching the sands, he strips off pack, blouse, helmet, and boots. For a moment he stands there so that others on the strand will see him and get the same idea. Then he crawls into the water to pull in wounded men about to be overlapped by the tide. The deeper water is still spotted with tide walkers advancing at the same pace as the rising water. But now, owing to Breedin's example, the strongest among them become more conspicuous targets. Coming along, they pick up wounded comrades and float them to the shore raftwise. Machine-gun fire still rakes the water. Burst after burst spoils the rescue act, shooting the floating man from the hands of the walker or killing both together. But Breedin for this hour leads a charmed life and stays with his work indomitably.

By the end of one half hour, approximately two thirds of the company is forever gone. There is no precise casualty figure for that moment. There is for the Normandy landing as a whole no accurate figure for the first hour or first day. The circumstances precluded it. Whether more Able Company riflemen died from water than from fire is known only to heaven. All earthly evidence so indicates, but cannot prove it.


OMAHA BEACH
France
Joseph Gary Sheahan, 1944


By the end of one hour, the survivors from the main body have crawled across the sand to the foot of the bluff, where there is a narrow sanctuary of defiladed space. There they lie all day, clean spent, unarmed, too shocked to feel hunger, incapable even of talking to one another. No one happens by to succor them, ask what has happened, provide water, or offer unwanted pity. D Day at Omaha afforded no time or space for such missions. Every landing company was overloaded by its own assault problems.

By the end of one hour and forty-five minutes, six survivors from the boat section on the extreme right shake loose and work their way to a shelf a few rods up the cliff. Four fall exhausted from the short climb and advance no farther. They stay there through the day, seeing no one else from the company. The other two, Privates Jake Shefer and Thomas Lovejoy, join a group from the Second Ranger Battalion, which is assaulting Pointe du Hoc to the right of the company sector, and fight on with the Rangers through the day. Two men. Two rifles. Except for these, Able Company's contribution to the D Day fire fight is a cipher.



TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: 116thinfantry; 29thdivision; dday; france; freeperfoxhole; ingrates; ltwaltertaylor; michaeldobbs; normandy; omahabeach; veterans
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To: snippy_about_it
I salute those men who went ashore 59 years ago to free the Europeans from the grip of Nazi tyranny. Its too bad the damn French forgot about it. Those brothers, they truly were the Greatest Generation. And I say the word "brothers" with pride!

What's he that wishes so?
My cousin Westmoreland? No, my fair cousin:
If we are mark'd to die, we are enow
To do our country loss; and if to live,
The fewer men, the greater share of honour.

God's will! I pray thee, wish not one man more.
By Jove, I am not covetous for gold,
Nor care I who doth feed upon my cost;
It yearns me not if men my garments wear;
Such outward things dwell not in my desires:
But if it be a sin to covet honour,
I am the most offending soul alive.
No, faith, my coz, wish not a man from England:
God's peace! I would not lose so great an honour
As one man more, methinks, would share from me
For the best hope I have. O, do not wish one more!
Rather proclaim it, Westmoreland, through my host,
That he which hath no stomach to this fight,
Let him depart; his passport shall be made
And crowns for convoy put into his purse:
We would not die in that man's company
That fears his fellowship to die with us.

This day is called the feast of Crispian:
He that outlives this day, and comes safe home,
Will stand a tip-toe when the day is named,
And rouse him at the name of Crispian.
He that shall live this day, and see old age,
Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours,
And say 'To-morrow is Saint Crispian:'
Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars.
And say 'These wounds I had on Crispin's day.'
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot,
But he'll remember with advantages
What feats he did that day: then shall our names.
Familiar in his mouth as household words
Harry the king, Bedford and Exeter,
Warwick and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester,
Be in their flowing cups freshly remember'd.
This story shall the good man teach his son;
And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by,
From this day to the ending of the world,
But we in it shall be remember'd;
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother
; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition:
And gentlemen in England now a-bed
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.
- Henry V Scene III - William Shakespeare

81 posted on 06/06/2003 7:23:50 PM PDT by Colt .45 (Cold War, Vietnam Era, Desert Storm Veteran - Pride in my Southern Ancestry!)
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To: SAMWolf
SAMWolf, thank you for this marvelous tribute to those involved in D-Day on Omaha Beach. I remember that day, June 6, 1944, like it was yesterday (no, I'm not a veteran, I was just a little kid) and it always brings a tear or two and a thrill when I read the stories of all those heros. Thank God for our outstanding military.
82 posted on 06/06/2003 7:28:19 PM PDT by jtill (Those who love the Lord never meet for the last time.)
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To: Colt .45
Wonderful. Thank you.
83 posted on 06/06/2003 7:29:40 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Pray for our Troops)
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To: snippy_about_it
Good Night Snippy. Great song.
84 posted on 06/06/2003 7:36:57 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: Colt .45
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother;...

Old Shakepseare knew what he was taklking about, Thanks Colt-45.

"For those who have fought for it, freedom has a flavor the protected will never know."

85 posted on 06/06/2003 7:40:53 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: Alberta's Child
Hats off to SAMWolf. For the life of me, I have never understood how he find the time to carry out this marvelous task on a daily basis.

And they're getting better everyday. This is more informative and interesting than history class in school ever could be.

86 posted on 06/06/2003 7:42:14 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: jtill
You're welcome jtill. My Father-in-law is visiting and he started the after dinner conversation with:

"Fifty-nine years ago today..." He was one of the Coast Guardmen running the troops in the first wave onto Omaha Beach in and LCVP.

Fascinating conversation, tonight.
87 posted on 06/06/2003 7:43:06 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: Reaganwuzthebest
Thanks Reaganwazthebest, it's really easy when you love what you're doing.
88 posted on 06/06/2003 7:44:41 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: SAMWolf
No problem Sam, nice job.
89 posted on 06/06/2003 7:47:46 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Reaganwuzthebest
I appreciate it. Today's a special thread for me since I had family there.
90 posted on 06/06/2003 7:49:01 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: SAMWolf
You had family in France at the time of Normandy? If so, we're they affected at all by the invasion?
91 posted on 06/06/2003 7:52:07 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Reaganwuzthebest
No not in France, My father-in-law was at Omaha Beach with the Coast Guard
92 posted on 06/06/2003 7:58:51 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: SAMWolf
Yeah I had a close relative too who was part of the Normandy landing, but not Omaha fortunately, think it was Utah. That was a bloodbath for those poor guys.
93 posted on 06/06/2003 8:08:22 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: radu; snippy_about_it; LaDivaLoca; TEXOKIE; cherry_bomb88; Bethbg79; Do the Dew; Pippin; ...

WWII veteran Dalmain Estes from Pontiac, Il., who landed on Omaha Beach with the 1st Infantry Division on June 7, 1944, salutes as the American anthem is played during D-Day commemoration ceremonies at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial of Colleville-sur-Mer, Friday, June 6, 2003. U.S., Canadian and British troops fought their way ashore 59 years ago to liberate France from Nazi occupation. The U.S. flag waves behind. (AP Photo/Franck Prevel)

94 posted on 06/06/2003 8:13:59 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: Reaganwuzthebest
I thank him for his service.

Omaha came real close to being a failure. It was the individual who eneded up making the difference.
95 posted on 06/06/2003 8:15:08 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: SAMWolf; AntiJen
Evening, Foxhole crew! If you know any Colorado Freepers who might have friends who might want to help a Vet put on a parade in Longmont, Sunday - please ping 'em. DoD's even getting involved.

Know anyone w/ a marching band? A float? A folding chair? A flag? Thank you. (^:

Old Vet Drums Up Parade for New Vet
DoD website / Special to American Forces Press Service ^ | June 5, 2003 | Casie Vinall


96 posted on 06/06/2003 8:21:55 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl ("The American people are proud of you and God bless each of you." Rummy to troops in Iraq)
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl; colorado tanker
Don't know if this applies to you Colorado Tanker, see post #96
97 posted on 06/06/2003 8:25:10 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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To: snippy_about_it
I will have a drink tonight for an aquaintance(Howard Manoian).He lives in Normandy.He parachuted into the cemetary at St.Mere Eglise(505th.PIR ,82nd AirBorne Division)in the wee small hours 59 years ago!!God Bless You,Howard,And God Bless AMERICA!!!!!!!!!!I would refer to him as a friend,only he NEVER writes back!!!!!!!!!!!
98 posted on 06/06/2003 8:27:05 PM PDT by bandleader
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To: snippy_about_it
I will have a drink tonight for an aquaintance(Howard Manoian).He lives in Normandy.He parachuted into the cemetary at St.Mere Eglise(505th.PIR ,82nd AirBorne Division)in the wee small hours 59 years ago!!God Bless You,Howard,And God Bless AMERICA!!!!!!!!!!I would refer to him as a friend,only he NEVER writes back!!!!!!!!!!!
99 posted on 06/06/2003 8:27:41 PM PDT by bandleader
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To: bandleader
I'll join you in a toast to Howard Manoian. Thanks for my Freedom Mr. Manion.

Thanks for letting us know about him.
100 posted on 06/06/2003 8:31:01 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Do ghost trains stop at manife-stations?)
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