In honor of the 80th anniversary of
D-Day, below is novelist and Collier's famed war correspondent Ernest
Hemingway's magazine piece on the D-Day invasion:
No one remembers the date of the Battle of
Shiloh. But the day we took Fox Green beach was the sixth of June, and the wind
was blowing hard out of the northwest. As we moved in toward land in the gray
early light, the 36-foot coffin-shaped steel boats took solid green sheet of
water that fell on the helmeted heads of the troops packed shoulder to shoulder
in the stiff, awkward, uncomfortable, lonely companionship of men going to a
battle. There were cases of TNT, with rubber tube life preservers wrapped around
them to float them in the surf, stacked forward in the steel well of the
LCV(P), and there were piles of bazookas and boxes of bazooka rockets encased
in waterproof coverings that reminded you of the transparent raincoats college
girls wear.
All this equipment, too, had the rubber tube
life preservers strapped and tied on, and the men wore these same gray rubber
tubes strapped under their armpits.
As the boat rose to a sea, the green water
turned white and came slamming in over the men, the guns and the cases of
explosives. Ahead you could see the coast of France. The gray booms and
derrick-forested bulks of the attack transports were behind now, and, over all
the sea, boats were crawling forward toward France.
As the LCV(P) rose to the crest of a wave, you
saw the line of low, silhouetted cruisers and the two big battlewagons lying
broad-side to the shore. You saw the heat-bright flashes of their guns and the
brown smoke that pushed out against the wind and then blew away.
"What's your course, coxswain?"
Lieutenant (jg) Robert Anderson of Roanoke, Virginia, shouted from the stern.
"Two-twenty, sir." the coxswain, Frank
Currier of Saugus, Massachusetts, answered. He was a thin-faced, freckled boy
with his eyes fixed on the compass.
"Then steer two-twenty, damn it!"
Anderson said. "Don't steer all over the whole damn ocean!"
"I'm steering two-twenty, sir," the
coxswain said patiently.
"Well, steer it, then," Andy said. He
was nervous, but the boat crew, who were making their first landing under fire,
knew this officer had taken LCV(P)s into the African landing, Sicily and
Salerno, and they had confidence in him.
"Don't steer into that LCT," Andy
shouted, as we roared by the ugly steel hull of a tank landing craft, her
vehicles sea-lashed, her troops huddling out of the spray.
"I'm steering two-twenty," the
coxswain said.
"That doesn't mean you have to run into
everything on the ocean," Andy said. He was a handsome, hollow-cheeked boy
with a lot of style and a sort of easy petulance. "Mr. Hemingway, will you
please see if you can see what that flag is over there, with your
glasses?"
I got my old miniature Zeiss glasses out of an
inside pocket, where they were wrapped in a woolen sock with some tissue to
clean them, and focused them on the flag. I made the flag out just before a
wave drenched the glasses.
"It's green."
"Then we are in the mine-swept
channel," Andy said. "That's all right. Coxswain, what's the matter
with you? Can't you steer two-twenty?"
I was trying to dry my glasses, but it was
hopeless the way the spray was coming in, so I wrapped them up for a try later
on and watched the battleship Texas shelling the shore. She was just off on our
right now and firing over us as we moved in toward the French coast, which was
showing clearer all the time on what was, or was not, a course of 220 degrees,
depending on whether you believed Andy or Currier the coxswain.
The low cliffs were broken by valleys. There was
a town with a church spire in one of them. There was a wood that came down to
the sea. There was a house on the right of one of the beaches. On all the
headlands, the gorse was burning, but the northwest wind held the smoke close
to the ground.
Those of our troops who were not wax-gray with
seasickness, fighting it off, trying to hold onto themselves before they had to
grab for the steel side of the boat, were watching the Texas with looks of
surprise and happiness. Under the steel helmets they looked like pikemen of the
Middle Ages to whose aid in battle had suddenly come some strange and
unbelievable monster.
There would be a flash like a blast furnace from
the 14-inch guns of the Texas, that would lick far out from the ship. Then the
yellow-brown smoke would cloud out and, with the smoke still rolling, the
concussion and the report would hit us, jarring the men's helmets. It struck
your near ear like a punch with a heavy, dry glove.
Then up on the green rise of a hill that now
showed clearly as we moved in would spout two tall black fountains of earth and
smoke.
That is the only thing I remember hearing a G.I.
say all that morning. They spoke to one another sometimes, but you could not
hear them with the roar the 225-horsepower high-speed gray Diesel made. Mostly,
though, they stood silent without speaking.
I never saw anyone smile after we left the line
of firing ships. They had seen the mysterious monster that was helping them,
but now he was gone and they were alone again. I found if I kept my mouth open
from the time I saw the guns flash until after the concussion, it took the
shock away.
I was glad when we were inside and out of the
line of fire of the Texas and the Arkansas. Other ships were firing over us all
day and you were never away from the sudden, slapping thud of naval gunfire.
But the big guns of the Texas and Arkansas that sounded as though they were
throwing whole railway trains across the sky were far away as we moved on in.
They were no part of our world as we moved steadily over the gray, whitecapped
sea toward where, ahead of us, death was being issued in small, intimate, accurately
administered packages. They were like the thunder of a storm that is passing in
another county whose rain will never reach you. But they were knocking out the
shore batteries, so that later the destroyers could move in almost to the shore
when they had to come in to save the landing.
Invasion Coast Dead Ahead
Now ahead of us we could see the coast in
complete detail. Andy opened the silhouette map with all the beaches and their
distinguishing features reproduced on it, and I got my glasses out and
commenced drying and wiping them under the shelter of the skirts of my
burberry. As far as you could see, there were landing craft moving in over the
gray sea. The sun was under at this time, and smoke was blowing all along the
coast.
The map that Andy spread on his knees was in ten
folded sheets, held together with staples, and marked Appendix One to Annex A.
Five different sheets were stapled together and, as I watched Andy open his
map, which spread, open, twice as long as a man could reach with outstretched
arms, the wind caught it, and the section of the map showing Dog White, Fox
Red, Fox Green, Dog Green, Easy Red and part of Sector Charlie snapped twice
gaily in the wind and blew overboard.
I had studied this map and memorized most of it,
but it is one thing to have it in your memory and another thing to see it
actually on paper and be able to check and be sure.
"Have you got a small chart, Andy?" I
shouted. "One of those one-sheet ones with just Fox Green and Easy
Red?"
"Never had one," said Andy. All this
time we were approaching the coast of France, which looked increasingly
hostile.
"That the only chart?" I said, close
to his ear.
"Only one," said Andy, "and it
disintegrated on me. A wave hit it, and it disintegrated. What beach do you
think we are opposite?"
"There's the church tower that looks like
Colleville," I said. "That ought to be on Fox Green. Then there is a
house like the one marked on Fox Green and the timber that runs down to the
water in a straight line, like on Easy Red."
"That's right," said Andy. "But I
think we're too far to the left."
"Those are the features, all right," I
said. "I've got them in my head but there shouldn't be any cliffs. The
cliffs start to the left of Fox Green where Fox Red beach starts. If that's
true, then Fox Green has to be on our right."
"There's a control boat here
somewhere," Andy said. "We'll find out what beach we're
opposite."
"She can't be Fox Green if there are
cliffs," I said.
"That's right," Andy said. "We'll
find out from a control boat. Steer for that PC, coxswain. No, not there! Don't
you see him? Get ahead of him. You'll never catch him that way."
We never did catch him, either. We slammed into
the seas instead of topping them, and the boat pulled away from us. The LCV(P)
was bow-heavy with the load of TNT and the weight of the three-eighth-inch
steel armor, and where she should have lifted easily over the seas she banged
into them and the water came in solidly.
"The hell with him!" Andy said.
"We'll ask this LCI."
Landing Craft Infantry are the only amphibious
operations craft that look as though they were made to go to sea. They very
nearly have the lines of a ship, while the LCV(P)s look like iron bathtubs, and
the LCTs like floating freight gondolas. Everywhere you could see, the ocean
was covered with these craft but very few of them were headed toward shore.
They would start toward the beach, then sheer off and circle back. On the beach
itself, in from where we were, there were lines of what looked like tanks, but
my glasses were still too wet to function.
"Where's Fox Green beach?" Andy cupped
his hands and shouted up at the LCI that was surging past us, loaded with
troops.
"Can't hear," someone shouted. We had
no megaphone.
"What beach are we opposite?" Andy
yelled.
The officer on the LCI shook his head. The other
officers did not even look toward us. They were looking over their shoulders at
the beach.
"Get her close alongside, coxswain,"
Andy said. "Come on, get in there close."
We roared up alongside the LCI, then cut down
the motor as she slipped past us.
"Where's Fox Green beach?" Andy
yelled, as the wind blew the words away.
"Straight in to your right," an
officer shouted.
"Thanks." Andy looked astern at the
other two boats and told Ed Banker, the signalman, "Get them to close up.
Get them up."
Ed Banker turned around and jerked his forearm,
with index finger raised, up and down. "They're closing up, sir," he
said.
Looking back you could see the other heavily
loaded boats climbing the waves that were green now the sun was out, and
pounding down into the troughs.
"You wet all through, sir?" Ed asked
me.
"All the way."
"Me, too," Ed said. "Only thing
wasn't wet was my belly button. Now it's wet, too."
"This has got to be Fox Green," I said
to Andy. "I recognize where the cliff stops. That's all Fox Green to the
right. There is the Colleville church. There's the house on the beach. There's
the Ruquet Valley on Easy Red to the right. This is Fox Green absolutely."
"We'll check when we get in closer,"
Andy said. "You really think it's Fox Green?"
"It has to be."
Ahead of us, the various landing craft were all
acting in the same confusing manner—heading in, coming out and circling.
The Tanks Were Stymied
"There's something wrong as hell," I
said to Andy. "See the tanks? They're all along the edge of the beach.
They haven't gone in at all."
Just then one of the tanks flared up and started
to burn with thick black smoke and yellow flame. Farther down the beach,
another tank started burning. Along the line of the beach, they were crouched
like big yellow toads along the high water line. As I stood up, watching, two
more started to barn. The first ones were pouring out gray smoke now, and the
wind was blowing it flat along the beach. As I stood up, trying to see if there
was anyone in beyond the high water line of tanks, one of the burning tanks blew
up with a flash in the streaming gray smoke.
"There's a boat we can check with,"
Andy said. "Coxswain, steer for that LC over there. Yes, that one. Put her
hard over. Come on. Get over there!"
This was a black boat, fast-looking, mounting
two machine guns and wallowing slowly out away from the beach, her engine
almost idling.
"Can you tell us what beach this is?"
Andy shouted.
"Dog White," came the answer.
"Are you sure?"
"Dog White beach," they called from
the black boat.
"You checked it?" Andy called.
"It's Dog White beach," they called
back from the boat, and their screw churned the water white as they slipped
into speed and pulled away from us.
I was discouraged now, because ahead of us,
inshore, was every landmark I had memorized on Fox Green and Easy Red beaches.
The line of the cliffs that marked the left end of Fox Green beach showed
clearly. Every house was where it should be. The steeple of the Colleville
church showed exactly as it had in the silhouette. I had studied the charts,
the silhouettes, the data on the obstacles in the water and the defenses all
one morning, and I remember having asked our captain, Commander W. I. Leahy of
the attack transport Dorothea M. Dix, if our attack was to be a diversion in
force.
"No," he had said. "Absolutely
not. What makes you ask that question?"
"Because these beaches are so highly
defensible."
"The Army is going to clear the obstacles
and the mines out in the first thirty minutes," Captain Leahy had told me.
"They're going to cut lanes in through them for the landing craft."
I wish I could write the full story of what it
means to take a transport across through a mine-swept channel; the mathematical
precision of maneuver; the infinite detail and chronometrical accuracy and
split-second timing of everything from the time the anchor comes up until the
boats are lowered and away into the roaring, sea-churning assembly circle from
which they break off into the attack wave.
The story of all the teamwork behind that has to
be written, but to get all that in would take a book, and this is simply the
account of how it was in a LCV(P) on the day we stormed Fox Green beach.
Right at this moment, no one seemed to know
where Fox Green beach was. I was sure we were opposite it, but the patrol boat
had said this was Dog White beach which should be 4,295 yards to our right, if
we were where I knew we were.
"It can't be Dog White, Andy," I said.
"Those are the cliffs where Fox Red starts on our left."
"The man says it's Dog White," Andy
said.
In the solid-packed troops in the boat, a man
with a vertical white bar painted on his helmet was looking at us and shaking
his head. He had high cheekbones and a rather flat, puzzled face.
"The lieutenant says he knows it, and we're
on Fox Green," Ed Banker shouted back at us. He spoke again to the
lieutenant but we could not hear what they said.
Andy shouted at the lieutenant, and he nodded
his helmeted head up and down.
"He says it's Fox Green," Andy said.
"Ask him where he wants to go in," I
said.
Leading in the Seventh Wave
Just then another small black patrol boat with
several officers in it came toward us from the beach, and an officer stood up
in it and megaphoned, "Are there any boats here for the seventh wave on
Fox Green beach?"
There was one boat for that wave with us, and
the officer shouted to them to follow their boat.
"Is this Fox Green?" Andy called to
them.
"Yes. Do you see that ruined house? Fox
Green beach runs for eleven hundred and thirty-five yards to the right of that
ruined house."
"Can you get into the beach?"
"I can't tell you that. You will have to
ask a beach control boat."
"Can't we just run in?"
"I have no authority on that. You must ask
the beach control boat."
"Where is it?"
"Way out there somewhere."
"We can go in where an LCV(P) has been in
or an LCI," I said. "It's bound to be clear where they run in, and we
can go in under the lee of one."
"We'll look for the control boat,"
Andy said, and we went banging out to sea through the swarming traffic of
landing craft and lighters.
"I can't find her," Andy said.
"She isn't here. She ought to be in closer. We have to get the hell in.
We're late now. Let's go in."
"Ask him where he is supposed to
land," I said.
Andy went down and talked to the lieutenant. I
could see the lieutenant's lips moving as he spoke, but could hear nothing
above the engine noise.
"He wants to run straight in for that
ruined house," Andy said, when he came back.
We headed in for the beach. As we came in,
running fast, the black patrol boat swung over toward us again.
"Did you find the control boat?" they
megaphoned.
"No!"
"What are you going to do?"
"We're going in," Andy yelled.
"Well, good luck to you fellows," the
megaphone said. It came over, slow and solemn like an elegy. "Good luck to
all of you fellows."
That included Thomas E. Nash, engineer, from
Seattle with a good grin and two teeth out of it. It included Edward F. Banker,
signalman, of Brooklyn, and Lacey T. Shiflet of Orange, Virginia, who would
have been the gunner if we had had room for guns. It included Frank Currier,
the coxswain, of Saugus, Massachusetts, and it included Andy and me. When we
heard the lugubrious tone of that parting benediction we all knew how bad the
beach really was.
As we came roaring in on the beach, I sat high
on the stern to see what we were up against. I had the glasses dry now and I
took a good look at the shore. The shore was coming toward us awfully fast, and
in the glasses it was coming even faster.
On the beach on the left where there was no
sheltering overhang of shingled bank, the first, second, third, fourth and
fifth waves lay where they had fallen, looking like so many heavily laden
bundles on the flat pebbly stretch between the sea and the first cover. To the
right, there was an open stretch where the beach exit led up a wooded valley
from the sea. It was here that the Germans hoped to get something very good,
and later we saw them get it.
To the right of this, two tanks were burning on
the crest of the beach, the smoke now gray after the first violent black and
yellow billows. Coming in I had spotted two machine gun nests. One was firing
intermittently from the ruins of the smashed house on the right of the small
valley. The other was two hundred yards to the right and possibly four hundred
yards in front of the beach.
The officer commanding the troops we were
carrying had asked us to head directly for the beach opposite the ruined house.
"Right in there," he said.
"That's where."
"Andy," I said, "that whole
sector is enfiladed by machine gun fire. I just saw them open twice on that
stranded boat."
Target for Machine Guns
An LCV(P) was slanted drunkenly in the stakes
like a lost gray steel bathtub. They were firing at the water line, and the
fire was kicking up sharp spurts of water.
"That's where he says he wants to go,"
Andy said. "So that's where we'll take him."
"It isn't any good," I said.
"I've seen both those guns open up."
"That's where he wants to go," Andy
said. "Put her ahead straight in." He turned astern and signaled to
the other boats, jerking his arm, with its upraised finger, up and down.
"Come on, you guys," he said,
inaudible in the roar of the motor that sounded like a plane taking off.
"Close up! Close up! What's the matter with you? Close up, can't you? Take
her straight in, coxswain!"
At this point, we entered the beaten zone from
the two machine gun points, and I ducked my head under the sharp cracking that
was going overhead. Then I dropped into the well in the stern sheets where the
gunner would have been if we had any guns. The machine gun fire was throwing
water all around the boat, and an antitank shell tossed up a jet of water over
us.
The lieutenant was talking, but I couldn't hear
what he said. Andy could hear him. He had his head down close to his lips.
"Get her the hell around and out of here,
coxswain!" Andy called. "Get her out of here!"
As we swung round on our stem in a pivot and
pulled out, the machine gun fire stopped. But individual sniping shots kept
cracking over or spitting into the water around us. I'd got my head up again
with some difficulty and was watching the shore.
"It wasn't cleared, either," Andy
said. "You could see the mines on all those stakes."
"Let's coast along and find a good place to
put them ashore," I said. "If we stay outside of the machine gun
fire, I don't think they'll shoot at us with anything big because we're just as
LCV(P), and they've got better targets than us."
"We'll look for a place," Andy said.
"What's he want now?" I said to Andy.
The lieutenant's lips were moving again. They
moved very slowly and as though they had no connection with him or with his
face.
Andy got down to listen to him. He came back
into the stern. "He wants to go out to an LCI we passed that has his
commanding officer on it."
"We can get him ashore farther up toward
Easy Red," I said.
"He wants to see his commanding
officer," Andy said. "Those people in that black boat were from his
outfit."
Advice from a Wounded Ship
Out a way, rolling in the sea, was a Landing
Craft Infantry, and as we came alongside of her I saw a ragged shellhole
through the steel plates forward of her pilothouse where an 88-mm. German shell
had punched through. Blood was dripping from the shiny edges of the hole into
the sea with each roll of the LCI. Her rails and hull had been befouled by
seasick men, and her dead were laid forward of her pilothouse. Our lieutenant
had some conversation with another officer while we rose and fell in the surge alongside
the black iron hull, and then we pulled away.
Andy went forward and talked to him, then came
aft again, and we sat up on the stern and watched two destroyers coming along
toward us from the eastern beaches, their guns pounding away at targets on the
headlands and sloping fields behind the beaches.
"He says they don't want him to go in yet;
to wait," Andy said. "Let's get out of the way of this
destroyer."
"How long is he going to wait?"
"He says they have no business in there
now. People that should have been ahead of them haven't gone in yet. They told
him to wait."
"Let's get in where we can keep track of
it," I said. "Take the glasses and look at that beach, but don't tell
them forward what you see."
Andy looked. He handed the glasses back to me
and shook his head.
"Let's cruise along it to the right and see
how it is up at that end," I said. "I'm pretty sure we can get in
there when he wants to get in. You're sure they told him he shouldn't go
in?"
"That's what he says."
"Talk to him again and get it
straight."
Andy came back. "He says they shouldn't go
in now. They're supposed to clear the mines away, so the tanks can go, and he
says nothing is in there to go yet. He says they told him it is all fouled up
and to stay out yet a while."
The destroyer was firing point blank at the
concrete pillbox that had fired at us on the first trip into the beach, and as
the guns fired you heard the bursts and saw the earth jump almost at the same
time as the empty brass cases clanged back onto the steel deck. The five-inch
guns of the destroyer were smashing at the ruined house at the edge of the
little valley where the other machine gun had fired from.
"Let's move in now that the can has gone by
and see if we can't find a good place," Andy said.
"That can punched out what was holding them
up there, and you can see some infantry working up that draw now," I said
to Andy. "Here, take the glasses."
Slowly, laboriously, as though they were Atlas
carrying the world on their shoulders, men were working up the valley on our
right. They were not firing. They were just moving slowly up the valley like a
tired pack train at the end of the day, going the other way from home.
"The infantry has pushed up to the top of
the ridge at the end of that valley," I shouted to the lieutenant.
"They don't want us yet,"' he said.
"They told me clear they didn't want us in yet."
"Let me take the glasses for
Hemingway," Andy said. Then he handed them back. "In there, there's
somebody signaling with a yellow flag, and there's a boat in there in trouble,
it looks like. Coxswain, take her straight in."
We moved in toward the beach at full speed, and
Ed Banker looked around and said, "Mr. Anderson, the other boats are
coming, too."
"Get them back!" Andy said. "Get
them back!"
Banker turned around and waved the boats away.
He had difficulty making them understand, but finally the wide waves they were
throwing subsided and they dropped astern.
"Did you get them back?" Andy asked,
without looking away from the beach where we could see a half-sunken LCV(P)
foundered in the mined stakes.
"Yes, sir," Ed Banker said.
An LCI was headed straight toward us, pulling
away from the beach after having circled to go in. As it passed, a man shouted
with a megaphone, "There are wounded on that boat and she is
sinking."
"Can you get in to her?"
The only words we heard clearly from the
megaphone as the wind snatched the voice away were "machine gun
nest."
"Did they say there was or there wasn't a
machine gun nest?" Andy said.
"I couldn't hear."
"Run alongside of her again,
coxswain," he said. "Run close alongside."
"Did you say there was a machine gun
nest?" he shouted.
An officer leaned over with the megaphone,
"A machine gun nest has been firing on them. They are sinking."
"Take her straight in, coxswain," Andy
said.
It was difficult to make our way through the
stakes that had been sunk as obstructions, because there were contact mines
fastened them, that looked like large double pie plates fastened face to face.
They looked as though they had been spiked to the pilings and then assembled.
They were the ugly, neutral gray-yellow color that almost everything is in war.
We did not know what other stakes with mines
were under us, but the ones that we could see we fended off by hand and worked
our way to the sinking boat.
It was not easy to bring on board the man who
had been shot through the lower abdomen, because there was no room to let the
ramp down the way we were jammed in the stakes with the cross sea.
I do not know why the Germans did not fire on us
unless the destroyer had knocked the machine gun pillbox out. Or maybe they
were waiting for us to blow up with the mines. Certainly the mines had been a
great amount of trouble to lay and the Germans might well have wanted to see
them work. We were in the range of the antitank gun that had fired on us
before, and all the time we were maneuvering and working in the stakes I was
waiting for it to fire.
As we lowered the ramp the first time, while we
were crowded in against the other LCV(P), but before she sank, I saw three
tanks coming along the beach, barely moving, they were advancing so slowly. The
Germans let them cross the open space where the valley opened onto the beach,
and it was absolutely flat with a perfect field of fire. Then I saw a little
fountain of water jut up, just over and beyond the lead tank. Then smoke broke
out of the leading tank on the side away from us, and I saw two men dive out of
the turret and land on their hands and knees on the stones of the beach. They
were close enough so that I could see their faces, but no more men came out as
the tank started to blaze up and burn fiercely.
By then, we had the wounded man and the
survivors on board, the ramp back up, and were feeling our way out through the
stakes. As we cleared the last of the stakes, and Currier opened up the engine
wide as we pulled out to sea, another tank was beginning to burn.
We took the wounded boy out to the destroyer.
They hoisted him aboard it in one of those metal baskets and took on the
survivors. Meantime, the destroyers had run in almost to the beach and were
blowing every pillbox out of the ground with their five-inch guns. I saw a
piece of German about three feet long with an arm on it sail high up into the
air in the fountaining of one shellburst. It reminded me of a scene in
Petroushka.
Landing on the Beach
The infantry had now worked up the valley on our
left and had gone on over that ridge. There was no reason for anyone to stay
out now. We ran in to a good spot we had picked on the beach and put our troops
and their TNT and their bazookas and their lieutenant ashore, and that was
that.
The Germans were still shooting with their
antitank guns, shifting them around in the valley, holding their fire until
they had a target they wanted. Their mortars were still laying a plunging fire
along the beaches. They had left people behind to snipe at the beaches, and
when we left, finally, all these people who were firing were evidently going to
stay until dark at least.
The heavily loaded ducks that had formerly sunk
in the waves on their way in were now making the beach steadily. The famous
thirty-minute clearing of the channels through the mined obstacles was still a
myth, and now, with the high tide, it was a tough trip in with the stakes
submerged.
We had six craft missing, finally, out of the
twenty-four LVC(P)s that went in from the Dix, but many of the crews could have
been picked up and might be on other vessels. It had been a frontal assault in
broad daylight, against a mined beach defended by all the obstacles military
ingenuity could devise. The beach had been defended as stubbornly and as
intelligently as any troops could defend it. But every boat from the Dix had
landed her troops and cargo. No boat was lost through bad seamanship. All that
were lost were lost by enemy action. And we had taken the beach.
There is much that I have not written. You could
write for a week and not give everyone credit for what he did on a front of
1,135 yards. Real war is never like paper war, nor do accounts of it read much
the way it looks. But if you want to know how it was in an LCV(P) on D-Day when
we took Fox Green beach and Easy Red beach on the sixth of June, 1944, then
this is as near as I can come to it.
Paul, Great story to read this June 6th. Thank you. Richard
ReplyDeleteRichard, Thanks. Paul
ReplyDelete