D-Day: Those who Were ThereThe logistics of landing almost 250,000 men on a 60-mile stretch of heavily fortified coastline are almost unimaginable. By Whitsun 1944, Britain had began to resemble a vast military warehouse, with jeeps and trucks parked along what seemed like every road in the south and west of England, tanks ranked in carparks and forecourts, and rows upon rows of bombs stored under tarpaulin in fields - all labelled "Europe". The roads were jammed with soldiers in transit, all trains were requisitioned for the troops, and women knew that their menfolk 'somewhere in southern England' might be one of that perilous first wave across the Channel. |
From inside the book
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... boats - fishing boats , pleasure boats , ferries , anything seaworthy - were volunteering too , eager to join the flotilla of small boats making for the French coast at Dunkirk to snatch the remnants of the British Expeditionary Force ...
... boats - fishing boats , pleasure boats , ferries , anything seaworthy - were volunteering too , eager to join the flotilla of small boats making for the French coast at Dunkirk to snatch the remnants of the British Expeditionary Force ...
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... boats for military purposes . These boats that were patrolling the Channel to see that we weren't going to be invaded had no wireless on , so we had to fix sky rockets on them . We'd screw racks alongside the wheelhouse and drop a ...
... boats for military purposes . These boats that were patrolling the Channel to see that we weren't going to be invaded had no wireless on , so we had to fix sky rockets on them . We'd screw racks alongside the wheelhouse and drop a ...
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... boats sinking one and driving the rest back to Le Havre where they were destroyed by fighter - bomber attacks . 124 Unknown to the Germans - who had assumed that E - boats operated beyond the range of British radar - the British navy ...
... boats sinking one and driving the rest back to Le Havre where they were destroyed by fighter - bomber attacks . 124 Unknown to the Germans - who had assumed that E - boats operated beyond the range of British radar - the British navy ...
Contents
Contents | |
Part Three Managing Tame Problems | 151 |
Part Four Commanding in Crises | 305 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Air Force Airborne Division aircraft Allied Ambrose American amphibious anti-tank Armoured Division artillery ashore assault Atlantic Wall attack Balkoski Battalion battery battle boats bombardment bombers bombing Bradley Britain Caen Calais Canadian captured casualties cent Chandler and Collins Cherbourg Churchill coast combat commanders Company Corps D-Day DD tanks defenders Delaforce destroyed Dieppe Dieppe raid DUKWs E-boats Eisenhower enemy fight fighter fire France French front glider going Group Hitler Infantry Division initial inland invasion June Juno Juno Beach killed Kilvert-Jones landing craft LCTs leaders leadership London Luftwaffe machine guns managed miles military Montgomery move naval Navy Neillands Normandy officers Omaha Beach Operation Overlord Panzer Division paratroopers Pas de Calais Pitcairn-Jones Pointe du Hoc Quoted raid Ramsey Regiment rifle Rommel Royal Rundstedt shells Sherman ships soldiers Soviet strategy success suggested Sword Beach target troops units Utah Utah Beach vehicles Wehrmacht Wicked Problem wounded