Scott:

This is the BBC Home Service.

Scott:

Here is a special bulletin read by John Snagg.

Scott:

D Day has come.

Scott:

Early this morning, the Allies began the assault on the northwestern

Scott:

face of Hitler's European fortress.

Scott:

The first official news came just after half past nine, when Supreme

Scott:

Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force, usually called SHAPE from

Scott:

its initials, issued number one.

Scott:

This said, under the command of General Eisenhower, Allied naval

Scott:

forces supported by strong air forces.

Scott:

began landing allied armies this morning on the northern coast of France.

Scott:

The roar of the aircraft engines was deafening.

Scott:

As a British paratrooper, I knew the success of Operation Tonga hinged on

Scott:

our ability to land and secure key positions behind enemy lines in Normandy.

Scott:

The night of June 5th, 1944 was pitch black, and the only light in the sky.

Scott:

came from the moon and the distant flashes of anti aircraft fire.

Scott:

As we approached our drop zone, the tension among us was palpable.

Scott:

I clutched my rifle tightly, my heart pounding in my chest.

Scott:

The red light turned green and we jumped.

Scott:

The air hit me like a wall and I plummeted down towards the dark fields below.

Scott:

My parachute opened with a jolt and I began my descent.

Scott:

I landed awkwardly in a hedgerow, quickly unbuckling my harness

Scott:

and scanning my surroundings.

Scott:

The sounds of war were everywhere.

Scott:

Gunfire, explosions, and the distant rumbles of tanks.

Scott:

I quickly regrouped with my fellow paratroopers and we moved towards our

Scott:

objective, securing the bridges over the Orne River and the Cane Canal.

Scott:

Our mission was critical.

Scott:

If we failed, the Germans could use the bridges to launch a counterattack

Scott:

against the beaches where our comrades were landing in the morning.

Scott:

We advanced cautiously, using the cover of darkness to our advantage.

Scott:

As we approached the first bridge, we encountered heavy resistance.

Scott:

German soldiers were well entrenched, and a fierce fight ensued.

Scott:

Despite being outnumbered, we fought with determination and grit.

Scott:

I fired my rifle, took cover, advanced, and fired again.

Scott:

The rhythm of combat.

Scott:

The training kicked in and we moved as one cohesive unit.

Scott:

Slowly, we began to push the Germans back.

Scott:

Keep moving.

Scott:

We have to secure them.

Scott:

The bridge was ours, but the cost was high.

Scott:

Many of my comrades lay wounded or dead.

Scott:

We moved to the next objective, knowing there was no time to mourn.

Scott:

The battle for the second bridge was equally brutal, but we were relentless.

Scott:

By dawn, we had secured both bridges, cutting off the German

Scott:

reinforcements and protecting the flank of the invasion force.

Scott:

Exhausted but triumphant, we dug in and prepared for the inevitable counterattack.

Scott:

Looking at the faces of my fellow paratroopers, I felt a surge of pride.

Scott:

We had accomplished our mission against all odds.

Scott:

The success of Operation Tonga played a crucial role in the overall

Scott:

invasion of Normandy, and I was honored to have been a part of it.

Scott:

As the sun rose over the battle scarred landscape, I knew

Scott:

this was just the beginning.

Scott:

The road to victory would be long and arduous, but we had

Scott:

taken the first crucial step.

Scott:

Something glinted out of the corner of my eye.

Scott:

I thought I could almost see the horizon lined with ships

Scott:

as they landed on the beaches.

Scott:

I said a prayer for my little brother.

Scott:

He was part of the 50th Division, landing at Gold Beach.

Scott:

I had told my mom nothing would happen to him, and I was

Scott:

determined to keep that promise.

Scott:

Welcome to Talk With History.

Scott:

I'm your host, Scott, here with my wife and historian, Jen.

Scott:

On this podcast, we give you insights to our history inspired world travels,

Scott:

YouTube channel journey, and examine history through deeper conversations

Scott:

with the curious, the explorers, and the history lovers out there.

Scott:

Now, Jen, we're just going to jump right into it because this is a series

Scott:

we have been anxiously wanting to get out into the world for quite some time.

Scott:

Quite a few months ago, you made plans.

Scott:

We, I mean, you for you to get out to Normandy.

Scott:

So if anybody follows us on our Walk with Us YouTube channel, they would have

Scott:

just seen our first video from there.

Scott:

And you went to the 80th anniversary.

Scott:

You went to do a multitude of things out there.

Scott:

But the day before the actual 80th anniversary day, you were out at the

Scott:

Gold Beach kind of memorial out there.

Scott:

Why don't you tell us a little bit about that?

Jenn:

Yes, so I went to the 80th anniversary of D Day ceremony

Jenn:

and celebration at Normandy and there was a lot of people there.

Jenn:

It was.

Jenn:

very busy.

Jenn:

The tour guide said it's the busiest they have ever seen it.

Scott:

And, if anybody's listening to this, it makes sense, right?

Scott:

This being the 80th anniversary, there's not going to be another

Scott:

kind of big number anniversary, really, where there's going to be any

Scott:

veterans that'll most likely be there.

Jenn:

We'll see.

Jenn:

There was a, about 120 veterans at this one.

Jenn:

I bet the 85th will be another big one and we'll see maybe the 90th.

Jenn:

I think those will probably be our last three big, these

Jenn:

will be our last three big

Scott:

Yeah, and I think because the majority of the World War II vets

Scott:

that were there were probably in their, in the youngest, in their 90s.

Jenn:

nineties.

Jenn:

Oh, absolutely.

Scott:

the, at the absolute youngest.

Scott:

I mean, there's, there's some I've seen recent interviews with that are 102, 103.

Jenn:

Exactly.

Jenn:

So it was just a real honor to be there, but because it was so busy, we, the first

Jenn:

day we got there, we were supposed to go to the American Normandy cemetery.

Jenn:

We couldn't get there.

Jenn:

It was too crowded.

Jenn:

They shut it down.

Jenn:

We went to Omaha beach, but we were barely there for 10 minutes and then that

Jenn:

got shut down for the next three days.

Jenn:

So it really didn't get to make it back out to Omaha beach again.

Jenn:

We'll talk about it on another podcast.

Jenn:

Thanks.

Jenn:

just the little bit we got to do, which is mostly in reels on Instagram.

Jenn:

I don't even think we can, we can't even make a full video on YouTube

Jenn:

because we just went there long enough.

Scott:

Yeah, because you were there, I, I didn't get to go I had to

Scott:

stay back with the kids and work.

Scott:

But you got, you got to get out there with, some Navy, veteran friends of ours.

Scott:

So when you say we, that's, that's who you're talking about for our listeners

Jenn:

Yeah, I went with two other female Navy veterans

Jenn:

officers that I had served with.

Jenn:

And when Scott says he had to stay back and work, Scott

Jenn:

had to stay back and, and be.

Jenn:

a naval officer in the United States Navy.

Jenn:

So he couldn't make it to D Day because he is actually doing the real deal.

Jenn:

But the first place we were able to really go and get out and see and

Jenn:

just experience it all was Gold Beach.

Scott:

Now that one was a little bit unique.

Scott:

This time, because and I know we'll touch on this and I'll, I'll let you

Scott:

walk us through what you saw for the day.

Scott:

But one of the big things there was obviously there was like memorial

Scott:

there, but they also had the standing with giants silhouettes, which a lot

Scott:

of people may have seen pictures of but talk, walk us through or walk our

Scott:

listeners through, getting there and what all is there at, at gold beach.

Jenn:

So just just a quick background.

Jenn:

We're not going to go right.

Jenn:

into much of the history of gold beach, but I'm gonna give you a quick

Jenn:

background so you know what gold beach is.

Jenn:

So remember there are five beaches that are part of operation overlord

Jenn:

and operation overlord is the entire operation of the landing on the

Jenn:

French beaches against the Nazis.

Jenn:

So these are the allies, the, the British, the Americans, the

Jenn:

Canadians, the Polish, the Dutch.

Jenn:

It's everybody who the New Zealand's, if you can think Australians,

Jenn:

everybody who is together trying to overcome Nazi Germany.

Jenn:

And they have since been, they've been joined with Italy and Japan.

Jenn:

So they are the Axis powers.

Jenn:

And so they have taken.

Jenn:

France, the entire country of France.

Jenn:

For four years, they've occupied this country.

Jenn:

And the British basically have gotten away back to England and been planning.

Jenn:

And that's what's been going on for about a year.

Jenn:

They've been planning this big operation.

Jenn:

And Eisenhower at the time, General Eisenhower is in charge

Jenn:

of all of it, oversees all of it.

Jenn:

So this is the day, D Day.

Jenn:

And when people ask me, what does D Day mean?

Jenn:

It means day, day day.

Jenn:

So D Day is day day.

Scott:

it's like the

Jenn:

It's like the day.

Jenn:

So the D doesn't really stand for anything.

Jenn:

It's the day.

Jenn:

So It's Operation Overlord is the entire operation.

Jenn:

We're going to get Operation Point Blank, where British and American bombers are

Jenn:

going to start bombing at midnight, the night of June 6th, and you're

Jenn:

going to get over 2200 bombers just bombing all of these strategic areas.

Jenn:

on the French soil, which is now occupied Nazi Germany.

Jenn:

And then Operation Neptune will be the naval side.

Jenn:

Neptune will start first, because Neptune will start with the bombardment,

Jenn:

amphibious bombardment of the coast.

Jenn:

So it always will have Neptune before the landings.

Jenn:

There's five beaches, basically.

Jenn:

And if you go from east to west, I guess that's the best way to go.

Jenn:

Or maybe from from west to east.

Jenn:

It's going to start with Utah Beach, an American beach, Omaha Beach, another

Jenn:

an American beach, Gold Beach, the one we're talking about is like the

Jenn:

joining beach between the American beaches and the other allied beaches

Jenn:

and Gold Beach will be British.

Jenn:

Then you're going to have Juno, which will be a Canadian beach and Sword,

Jenn:

which will be another British beach.

Jenn:

Utah and Omaha are named by the Americans.

Jenn:

The story is that when Eisenhower was planning the men who were writing, he

Jenn:

asked, where are you, where are you from?

Jenn:

And the two men who were typing out the, the operation plans, one was from

Jenn:

Omaha, and one was from the state of

Scott:

I, I did not know

Jenn:

So they named the beaches after those two men.

Jenn:

For the Allied side the British side Churchill went with fish names So

Jenn:

swordfish goldfish and it's supposed to be jellyfish for Juno, but Winston Churchill

Jenn:

couldn't see Men dying on jellyfish

Scott:

Yeah.

Scott:

Yeah.

Jenn:

so he changed it to Juno Beach.

Jenn:

So when you hear gold Beach Sometimes it's referred to as gold But it's goldfish.

Jenn:

That's where it comes from.

Jenn:

So again, this is the middle beach of these five beaches.

Jenn:

It's completely British authority.

Jenn:

It's the British who are taking this beach.

Jenn:

So what we went to was the British Normandy Memorial.

Jenn:

And I don't want it confused with the American Normandy Cemetery because

Jenn:

the American Normandy Cemetery is a cemetery where men are buried.

Jenn:

The memorial men are not buried there.

Jenn:

It's a memorial and it overlooks the entire gold beach.

Scott:

Yeah.

Scott:

And it's, I mean, you guys did a good job of, as, as much as I

Scott:

love and I'm, I'm biased towards my own B roll footage, right?

Scott:

A little behind the scenes here of YouTube, you and, and Bonnie and whoever's

Scott:

holding the camera kind of did a good job of kind of really showing what the,

Scott:

the view look like, it's a, it is a beachhead kind of going uphill, right?

Scott:

So you can look out.

Scott:

over this beach and you can see down to the water, right?

Scott:

And it's, it's not super steep, right where you guys were.

Scott:

So it's pretty long.

Scott:

So there's a long way to go to get all the way to the top of the beachhead.

Scott:

Now, when I was doing the editing and putting the video together, the,

Scott:

the fighting on this speech wasn't, wasn't but this is a very this is

Scott:

specifically a British memorial, right?

Scott:

I think you were saying when you were there, it looked like there, there

Scott:

were some British soldiers practicing and stuff like that, potentially for

Scott:

Prince William or somebody like that,

Jenn:

so I was at the American ceremony.

Jenn:

I was at the American Normandy ceremony at the American Normandy cemetery.

Scott:

Oh, the, so that, oh, that was at the cemetery.

Scott:

That's where the, that's where the ceremony was.

Jenn:

The British ceremony was at that location.

Scott:

and that's what you saw they were prepping for when you were

Scott:

there the day before the actual 80th

Jenn:

And it was Prince William.

Jenn:

Prince William had come And he was in, in replace of King

Jenn:

Charles and he, he, he served.

Jenn:

So he, he was the big dignitary there.

Jenn:

So when you think of Gold Beach, it's going to be the British, the

Jenn:

Dutch, the Polish and other allies.

Jenn:

So it's really their militaries that were also part of that ceremony there.

Jenn:

And so that's what you see in the video is those militaries.

Scott:

can hear the band playing in the background Which is neat because

Scott:

they were playing old school music and

Jenn:

It was really neat.

Jenn:

And they're.

Jenn:

Memorial, if you look down from the sky, looks like a British flag.

Jenn:

So with the walkways are making that crisscross design of the British

Jenn:

flag, and they have names on pillars.

Jenn:

About 300 little over 300 men will die on Gold Beach that day, they'll land

Jenn:

25, 000 men, the British and allies.

Jenn:

And they'll have a little over a thousand casualties, but 350 men will die.

Scott:

It is announced a little later that General Montgomery is in command of

Scott:

the Army Group carrying out the assault.

Scott:

This Army Group includes British, Canadian, and United States forces.

Scott:

The Allied Commander in Chief, General Eisenhower, has issued an order of

Scott:

the day addressed to each individual of the Allied Expeditionary Force.

Scott:

In it, he said, Your task will not be an easy one.

Scott:

Your enemy is well trained, well equipped, and battle hardened.

Scott:

He will fight savagely.

Scott:

But this is the year 1944.

Scott:

The tide has turned.

Scott:

The free men of the world are marching together to victory.

Scott:

I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty, and skill in battle.

Scott:

We will accept nothing less than full victory.

Scott:

Good luck and let us all beseech the blessing of Almighty God upon

Scott:

this great and noble undertaking.

Scott:

The world seemed to slow down.

Scott:

Every move I made on this cursed boat felt like a lifetime.

Scott:

Was that Winston Churchill over the radio earlier?

Scott:

The only thing I could hear now was the deafening sound of

Scott:

gunfire and artillery in the air.

Scott:

All around me, the sea had red patches.

Scott:

Never seen that before.

Scott:

As an infantryman, I was among thousands of British soldiers.

Scott:

Landing at Gold Beach on D Day.

Scott:

Attention on my fellow countrymen's face was palpable as our landing

Scott:

craft approached the beach.

Scott:

We were under heavy fire, but we were determined.

Scott:

As soon as our landing craft hit the beach, I jumped out and ran

Scott:

towards the sand dune for cover, my heart pounding in my chest.

Scott:

I could see the German bunkers up ahead.

Scott:

We were outgunned, but we pushed forward.

Scott:

We were trained for this.

Scott:

We knew our mission.

Scott:

I fired my rifle, took cover, advanced, and fired again, a

Scott:

rhythm of survival and duty.

Scott:

Despite the chaos around me, I felt a strange sense of clarity.

Scott:

I was fighting for my country, for our freedom.

Scott:

I saw comrades fall, but we kept going, driving the Germans

Scott:

back, securing the beachhead.

Scott:

By the end of the day, we had accomplished our mission.

Scott:

I was one of the lucky ones who survived.

Scott:

Looking back at the beach, I barely realized the enormity

Scott:

of what we had just done.

Scott:

I wondered if my brother had made his jump okay.

Jenn:

Their names are the closest inside the memorial.

Jenn:

And then as you walk outside the memorial, there's names on pillars.

Jenn:

They consider Normandy landings from June 6th to the end of August.

Jenn:

So all of the men who died from June 6th to the end of August are listed

Jenn:

as you walk out towards those pillars.

Jenn:

They also honor 20, 000 French civilians who were killed

Jenn:

during this Normandy landing.

Jenn:

And they're also listed a little bit farther out as well.

Jenn:

But again, you had the civilian casualties of war

Scott:

And that was another interesting thing in in the the listener will

Scott:

if you're listening to this podcast you'll hear in some of the vignettes

Scott:

as we go through this that they were actually You know, the the Allied

Scott:

forces were actually making radio kind of announcements, or You know good guy

Scott:

propaganda trying to announce things to the French people via the radio

Scott:

saying you know, hey, don't fight back, essentially keep your hopes up.

Scott:

And then they also gave them a little bit of warning

Jenn:

to get out into the

Scott:

to get out into the countryside because it's like it, which makes sense.

Scott:

You'd never really think about it.

Scott:

You're like, well, aren't they giving away?

Scott:

What they're doing to the Germans, well, the Germans would have

Scott:

known long before that, right?

Scott:

Long before an hour before the actual landing.

Scott:

They would have detected them, they're like, okay, they're coming, but the

Scott:

people, the French people wouldn't know that, and so they hear it over the

Scott:

radio, they're like, okay, it's time to hightail it out of here, but of course

Scott:

there's still going to be casualties.

Jenn:

So there was a lot of espionage, but there was a lot of what's the

Jenn:

word I'm looking for where you're like

Scott:

Kind of like gamesmanship,

Jenn:

gamesmanship.

Jenn:

They were projecting these false operations.

Jenn:

So to keep the Germans guessing, and they were doing that for about three

Jenn:

months before they actually did this pretending, I forget what they called

Jenn:

it operation bodyguard, I think, but these fake operations that they were

Jenn:

doing to keep the Germans on their toes.

Jenn:

And.

Jenn:

Fortunately, I think I remember correctly, Hitler had gone to bed.

Jenn:

early on June 5th and told not to be awakened for any reason whatsoever.

Scott:

Oh my gosh.

Jenn:

So when things were happening on June 6th, they didn't wake him and tell

Jenn:

him, even though this is a big deal.

Jenn:

They, he was, he was not woken up until well into the day on June 6th.

Jenn:

And so he couldn't send even quick responses because they

Jenn:

were too afraid to wake him.

Jenn:

Lucky for him.

Jenn:

the allies.

Jenn:

Now, like you said, things start at midnight on June 6th.

Jenn:

You're going to get gliders coming in from the British, which are so accurate.

Jenn:

They're taking out these big bridges because when you think of

Jenn:

Normandy, I want you to think of farmland and this farmland, the

Jenn:

way that it's fertile is it floods.

Jenn:

Think of the Nile.

Jenn:

Is they flood this farmland to keep the soil very fertile.

Jenn:

And when they do that, there's no way to connect these areas, but

Jenn:

these big bridges that bring you in.

Jenn:

And the Germans occupied these big bridges.

Jenn:

And they also, the Germans had flooded farmland on purpose to,

Jenn:

to make some roads unusable.

Jenn:

So what the allies had to do was capture these bridges.

Jenn:

And that's, is what they're going to do for Utah beach and Omaha beach.

Jenn:

That's what our airborne.

Jenn:

They're doing the same thing.

Jenn:

They're trying to capture these strategic bridges to get not only the

Jenn:

allies onto the beaches and get all of their material across the bridges

Jenn:

into theater, but to stop the Germans from using those bridges to fight back.

Scott:

Yeah, they're also trying to cut off the, the German

Scott:

kind of supply and logistics.

Scott:

Yeah.

Jenn:

So you get the ally, the Americans are doing it at Utah and

Jenn:

Omaha beach, and then The, the the British and the Dutch and the Canadians

Jenn:

are doing it over on Gold Beach and Sword Beach and Juno Beach as well.

Jenn:

So they're really the first to go.

Jenn:

It's the airborne and the gliders that are going to be the first out.

Jenn:

And the bombardment the bombing.

Jenn:

Also of that strategic outside of that area, but those gliders are so accurate.

Jenn:

They land right where the bridges are.

Jenn:

They pop open this like 20 minute glider and they were able to take those bridges

Jenn:

really with no, with no fight back.

Jenn:

So it was really nice for the British.

Jenn:

Now you had said, Gold Beach is not like Omaha Beach.

Jenn:

No beach will be like Omaha Beach.

Scott:

I mean, there were still casualties.

Jenn:

still casualties, but no beach of the five are going to encounter as much

Jenn:

resistance and firepower and just the way that the topography of the beaches

Jenn:

are against the allies like Omaha.

Jenn:

It's why it's called bloody Omaha.

Jenn:

You will have more losses on Omaha than any other beach.

Jenn:

And we'll talk about that.

Jenn:

But the topography of Utah and Omaha are not like these nice gold

Jenn:

has a nice straight, clear beach.

Jenn:

Utah and Omaha are very rocky.

Jenn:

And they have the point to Hawk is in the middle of them.

Jenn:

So the kind of like cuts off and it it's not as easily The terrain is not

Scott:

It's easier for the germans to defend right because

Scott:

because of the terrain yeah,

Jenn:

So gold beach again, you're going to what happens is the

Jenn:

Navy bombardment starts at 530.

Jenn:

So you're going to get the bomber starting at midnight, the airborne

Jenn:

and the gliders go at midnight.

Jenn:

And then the Navy bombardment starts at 530.

Jenn:

So what does that mean?

Jenn:

The Navy gets as close as they can to the beach and just starts

Jenn:

hitting the beachhead as hard as they can with their guns.

Jenn:

And what's very lucky is they take out the three of the four major guns.

Jenn:

They're taken out by 620.

Jenn:

So that's great.

Jenn:

You only got one major gun then still manned on Gold Beach.

Jenn:

Now that gun takes a day to get out.

Jenn:

They really don't even get it out to June 7th, but it's only one major gun.

Jenn:

So the Navy, their Navy ships are.

Jenn:

pretty accurate taking out those those big artillery guns.

Jenn:

And then the first landings happened about 725.

Jenn:

Now that's about an hour after Omaha beach.

Jenn:

And the reason why is because of tides.

Scott:

Oh sure

Jenn:

So when we talk about these beaches and what they did with the

Jenn:

obstacles on the beaches is you remember in saving pride, right?

Jenn:

And they have all the hedgehogs out.

Jenn:

And those are those.

Jenn:

Weird twisty metal looking things that keeps amphibious

Jenn:

craft from landing on the beach.

Jenn:

What it also does is during high tide, when you can't see them, if boats

Jenn:

hit them, it makes boats capsize.

Jenn:

And what they would also do is put mines on the end of those.

Jenn:

So if you also hit them, you would blow up.

Jenn:

So you had to wait to low tide because you had to wait till

Jenn:

you could see all those things.

Jenn:

But low tide, we're Navy officers also means you have a

Jenn:

huge amount of beach to cover.

Scott:

Yeah, and it was in Depending on where you're from what beach you're used

Scott:

to right growing up in california when the tide goes out It doesn't it drops off

Scott:

pretty quickly It's not like beaches in florida where you can walk out, Or in that

Scott:

part of the country where you can walk out for a quarter mile You And the water

Scott:

is only knee deep the entire time, where in California, it drops off to incredibly

Scott:

deep water within, 50 yards or less than even sometimes even less than that.

Scott:

The what I saw and you were able to show a little bit of the of the gold

Scott:

beach there But you see from some of the historical footage that we cut in is

Scott:

that these are one of those beachheads Just like you said for farmland is that

Scott:

the shoreline when the tide goes out.

Scott:

There's a lot Of beachhead, it's it's it's long for them to come in from the

Scott:

ship on all the way up to where it's essentially dry, where the tide wouldn't

Scott:

go up any higher, and then get to the, whatever it is, the embankment, the guns,

Scott:

the, where the Germans actually were.

Scott:

So that's kind of the, the risk on each side.

Scott:

It was actually less risky to wait for the tide to come out so they could land

Scott:

these landing craft, roll the tanks up, or the soldiers, or whatever it was.

Scott:

So that they didn't run into these hedgehogs and mines and things like that.

Jenn:

Exactly.

Jenn:

And then you think of all that beach you have to cover with all that gear.

Jenn:

And it's, it's just seems daunting.

Jenn:

I, the only place I really understood the expansiveness of it was Omaha because

Jenn:

I happened to be on Omaha when the tide was out and it was a huge beach.

Jenn:

Even when you think from the shore all the way to the first grassy area, that's

Jenn:

a lot of beach to cover in full gear.

Jenn:

I'm thinking 50 pounds of gear.

Jenn:

Yeah.

Jenn:

when you're taking tons of hostile fire.

Jenn:

So you can imagine this is what's happening on Gold Beach as well.

Jenn:

Now, like I said, they're landing 25, 000 men, and they're,

Jenn:

they, they are, they secure the beachhead by the end of the day.

Jenn:

So they're able to meet their goal.

Jenn:

Now, Gold Beach is instrumental because it has to join Omaha

Jenn:

with Sword and, or with Juno.

Jenn:

So it has to join Omaha with, with Juno.

Jenn:

Like it's the middle beach.

Jenn:

It's,

Scott:

if people aren't familiar, if you haven't really looked into

Scott:

the beachheads there, it's over 50 miles of continuous beachhead

Scott:

across these five beaches, right?

Scott:

So when we say that, like it's all, they're all continuous kind of along the

Scott:

French coast, but it's a well over 50 miles from one end of one beach all the

Scott:

way to the other end of the other beach.

Scott:

So it's a pretty expansive, Piece of the coast that they are they are landing on.

Jenn:

yeah, it's really beautiful now.

Jenn:

It's really flat now, but at the time I can imagine it was just overwhelming.

Jenn:

What we got to see was the British Normandy Memorial and

Jenn:

they just have recently built it.

Jenn:

It just was unveiled June 6th, 2021 for the

Scott:

wow

Jenn:

anniversary.

Jenn:

Well, the British felt like they don't have their place, right?

Jenn:

Like the American cemetery at Normandy is like where we had the ceremony.

Jenn:

It's our place.

Jenn:

It's also a cemetery.

Jenn:

Now there is this, there is this World War Two cemetery for the British.

Jenn:

It's a little farther inland, but But it doesn't have the place on the beach.

Jenn:

So they wanted something to show the memorial of what the

Jenn:

men did where you can see it.

Jenn:

And it lists over 22, 000 names from more than 30 countries under British command

Jenn:

who were killed at Normandy from June 6th, again, to the end of August 31st.

Jenn:

And as you move from the center out, their names will be listed

Jenn:

as the days go out from June 6th.

Jenn:

So you can look on the pillars and find names.

Jenn:

And I found Benny's and I found Mitchell's.

Jenn:

And so it was really neat to see all those names on there.

Jenn:

But yeah.

Jenn:

The centerpiece is a bronze statue of three British soldiers attacking the beach

Jenn:

and it was made by David William Ellis.

Jenn:

It really is reminiscent to me of the one at Omaha Beach

Jenn:

and the one we saw at Bedford.

Jenn:

Again, just about you with your comrades together.

Jenn:

handling it together

Scott:

they're they're it's a classic kind of world war ii soldiers charging it

Jenn:

yes.

Jenn:

And you would know they were different because of their helmets.

Jenn:

They have different helmets than the Americans.

Jenn:

Now the standing with giant silhouettes is what's really impressive there as well.

Scott:

Those were really cool and it's it's the thumbnail Yeah, we used one

Scott:

of them a picture of one of them as the thumbnail of this particular video, but

Scott:

they have They're displaying all these different kinds of soldiers and airmen

Scott:

and sailors that were involved in this.

Jenn:

Yeah, so it depicts 1475 giants who are the number of servicemen who

Jenn:

died under British command on D Day.

Jenn:

So not at Gold Beach, but of all And all the beaches and

Jenn:

the airborne and the bombers.

Jenn:

So anyone who died that day under British command is depicted with a silhouette.

Jenn:

And that's why there's 1475 of them.

Jenn:

And they all look different because they're different.

Jenn:

doing different jobs in the military.

Jenn:

And so it's very neat to see pilots or naval officers or army officers.

Jenn:

It's very neat to see how they look, their silhouettes look different and that people

Jenn:

have little placards with quotes on them.

Jenn:

And we found Dick Winters at those placards will

Scott:

Oh, okay.

Jenn:

but the silhouettes will go.

Scott:

they were only there for the basically for the 80th

Jenn:

Yes, they're supposed to leave the The end of August, but there's two women

Jenn:

depicted There's two army nurses sister ever shed and sister field They died on

Jenn:

deed on D day trying to save men on a sinking hospital ship So they're also

Jenn:

their silhouettes are also depicted there.

Jenn:

So that's very neat to see

Scott:

Yeah, theirs was cool because it had that cut out.

Scott:

Like the from the waist down, you could see the metal kind of silhouette of them.

Scott:

And then there was like that hollow so you could see the sky as there, they

Scott:

would fill in, the rest of the gaps.

Scott:

It was really neat how they did it.

Jenn:

Yeah, they were really neat and it's a and to have women depicted.

Jenn:

They're the only two women of the fourteen hundred seventy five You I

Jenn:

think it's such a neat memoir, I really don't want them to take it down at all.

Jenn:

I think it would just be great.

Jenn:

It doesn't really impede on the view.

Jenn:

And I thought it was just an amazing thing to see.

Jenn:

It really feels like it's called standing with giants.

Jenn:

And I really feel like you are standing with them.

Jenn:

And it gives a real to me, humanization of the area.

Jenn:

And I almost I don't want to see it go.

Jenn:

But it was really neat to be there and to see that and you can walk among them,

Jenn:

you're allowed to walk out in there, it wasn't cut, and the grass was high.

Jenn:

But you're allowed to walk in there and take pictures and Find ones that maybe

Jenn:

could be dedicated because each of them is supposed to be a certain person to maybe

Jenn:

your ancestor or somebody that you knew from your family or something like that.

Jenn:

So that was really neat to see, but I'm happy we got to go there.

Jenn:

It is an impressive monuments.

Jenn:

And again, this is the middle beach.

Jenn:

So when you think of the five beaches, this is the middle beach.

Jenn:

If you do make it out to gold beach, gold beach is one of the

Jenn:

few beaches that has preserved a lot of those big guns and a lot of

Jenn:

those what do they call those, babe?

Scott:

little bunkers.

Jenn:

they preserve the bunkers there.

Jenn:

So you can actually go and see them.

Jenn:

They're, they're really well preserved.

Jenn:

And so if you make it out to Gold Beach, it's one of those places

Jenn:

that if you walk the beach, you can really see a lot of the history still

Jenn:

there for you to participate in.

Jenn:

So I'm happy we got to go there.

Jenn:

I never thought about it as an American.

Jenn:

I was like, Oh, it's like, it's I mean, after Omaha and Utah, you're kind of

Jenn:

like, Oh, what are the other beaches?

Jenn:

So for me, I learned a lot.

Jenn:

I got to see it.

Jenn:

I really did appreciate it.

Jenn:

So I'm happy we went.

Scott:

People in enemy occupied territory who lived near the coast were warned

Scott:

to leave their homes as soon as they received a warning of the coming attack.

Scott:

It would come about an hour before the attack, and then they ordered once to make

Scott:

it with all speed for the open country.

Scott:

After Communique No.

Scott:

1 had been issued, General Eisenhower broadcast to the people of Western

Scott:

Europe announcing the landing as part of the concerted United Nations

Scott:

plan for the liberation of Europe.

Scott:

He asked them to wait for the signal to rise and strike the enemy.

Scott:

The day will come, he said, when I shall need your united strength.

Scott:

Until that day, I call on you for the hard task of discipline and restraint.

Scott:

Addressing the French people especially, General Eisenhower expressed his

Scott:

pride at having under his command the gallant forces of France.

Scott:

As the initial landing was Being made in France, he emphasized the

Scott:

importance of his warning message.

Scott:

A premature rising of all Frenchmen, he tell them, may prevent you

Scott:

from being of maximum help to your country in the critical eye, be

Scott:

patient, prepare great battles.

Scott:

Lie ahead.

Scott:

The

Scott:

sun was beginning to set as I walked through the narrowest streets of the

Scott:

French town we had just liberated.

Scott:

The air was filled with a mixture of relief and apprehension.

Scott:

The residents, though cautious, peeked out from their homes, some

Scott:

offering smiles of gratitude.

Scott:

It felt surreal to be standing here in Aramajus, a town that had been under

Scott:

German occupation just hours before.

Scott:

Gold Beach had been a crucible of fire and steel.

Scott:

As an infantryman in the British 50th Division, I had

Scott:

faced the fiercest resistance.

Scott:

The memory was still fresh.

Scott:

The roar of the guns, the whizzing of the bullets, and the cries of my comrades.

Scott:

We had pushed through, determined to secure the beach and move inland.

Scott:

Our objective was clear, to link up with the Americans on Omaha Beach

Scott:

to the west, and the Canadians on Juneau Beach to the east.

Scott:

Now as I stood in the heart of this French town, I reflected on what we had achieved.

Scott:

The Mulberry Harbors were already being constructed, an engineering marvel that

Scott:

would allow us to bring in the supplies we needed for the rest of the campaign.

Scott:

The liberation of this town was just the beginning.

Scott:

We had paved the way for Allied forces to establish a foothold in Normandy,

Scott:

but our mission was far from over.

Scott:

The road ahead was fraught with danger, but Germans were

Scott:

not going to give up easily.

Scott:

Kane, a major objective late of the southeast.

Scott:

We had to push forward, liberate more towns, and secure critical supply routes.

Scott:

The success of Operation Overlord depended on our ability to maintain momentum.

Scott:

As I looked around, I saw my fellow soldiers, weary but resolute.

Scott:

Subconsciously, I think I was looking for my older brother.

Scott:

His unit should have jumped in the middle of the night.

Scott:

God willing, I will see him soon.

Scott:

I found a moment of solace knowing that today we had made a difference.

Scott:

Tomorrow, we would continue the fight for freedom, for peace, and for a future where

Scott:

such a conflict would never happen again.

Scott:

General Eisenhower concluded, I call upon all who love freedom to stand with us.

Scott:

Keep your faith staunch, our arms are resolute.

Scott:

Together, we shall achieve victory.

Scott:

And that is the end of this special news bulletin.

Scott:

Thank you for listening to the Talk With History podcast and please reach out

Scott:

to us at our website, talkwithhistory.

Scott:

com.

Scott:

But more importantly, if you know someone else that might enjoy this

Scott:

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Scott:

Shoot them a text and tell them to look us up.

Scott:

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Scott:

We'll talk to you next time.

Scott:

Thank you.

Scott:

, I'm debating over whether or not to talk about this on Talk with History.

Scott:

So we are going to start kind of a, a, a premium podcast and, and I'll talk

Scott:

about more about this in the future.

Scott:

So if you're listening, if you made it to the end of this particular episode I've

Scott:

got some stuff in the works and we're going to talk a little bit more about

Scott:

the, the, the travel aspects of things.

Scott:

And I've got a newsletter and kind of more to follow.

Scott:

So if you're one of our loyal listeners, this is something that you, you most

Scott:

definitely will be interested in.

Scott:

And, and again, I'll tease it a little bit more.

Scott:

And we'll talk a little bit more about, about that kind of stuff.