boomer177
Loves Spam
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2011
- Posts
- 810
In Southwick House, near Portsmouth, in southern England, in the pre-dawn hours of June 5, 1944—just about the time this is posted, 71 years ago—General Eisenhower, Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary Force, listened to his chief forecaster predict that the break in the heavy rain, low cloud cover, strong winds, and rough Channel seas—which had resulted, the previous day, in the postponement of the scheduled June 5 attack—would likely continue, more or less, and the unanimous view of his principal subordinates to proceed.
Eisenhower is said to have paused and, then, may—or may not—have said, “Okay, we’ll go,” the most widely-accepted of the multiple versions of his brief but momentous words.
Whatever the phrase, June 6, 1944 thereby became D-Day for the western allies’ invasion of western Europe along some 50 miles (80 km) of France’s Normandy coast by more than 170,000 troops, nearly 12,000 aircraft, and almost 7,000 sea vessels, arguably history’s largest amphibious invasion force.
http://mediacenter.smugmug.com/Other/2014-06-05-D-Day-color-photos/i-8HvQF5v/0/XL/060514_DDay_Color_photos_24-XL.jpg
June 3 or 4, 1944. U.S. troops on the Esplanade at Weymouth, Dorset, about to board ships for the Channel crossing. (Photo by Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images)
Departing troops, not yet aware of their destination, chalked simple messages like, “Thank you, Cowplain,” on the roads of southern England.
http://mediacenter.smugmug.com/Other/2014-06-05-D-Day-color-photos/i-gcKRthx/0/XL/060514_DDay_Color_photos_12-XL.jpg
June 5, 1944. Trucks of the U.S. First Infantry Division are loaded in Dorset. The following day the First Division suffered heavy casualties in securing a beachhead at Formigny and Caumont—
better known as Omaha Beach. (AFP Photo/Getty Images)
Further posts—yours, also, I trust—to follow over the next few days.
Post your answers now:
Land units from Britain, the United States and which other nation were among the June 6 invasion force?
What six-word message—seven in English—did the BBC broadcast on June 1 which instructed the French Resistance
to carry out railway sabotage, and what was its source?
More questions to follow.
Post your own questions.
Eisenhower is said to have paused and, then, may—or may not—have said, “Okay, we’ll go,” the most widely-accepted of the multiple versions of his brief but momentous words.
Whatever the phrase, June 6, 1944 thereby became D-Day for the western allies’ invasion of western Europe along some 50 miles (80 km) of France’s Normandy coast by more than 170,000 troops, nearly 12,000 aircraft, and almost 7,000 sea vessels, arguably history’s largest amphibious invasion force.
http://mediacenter.smugmug.com/Other/2014-06-05-D-Day-color-photos/i-8HvQF5v/0/XL/060514_DDay_Color_photos_24-XL.jpg
June 3 or 4, 1944. U.S. troops on the Esplanade at Weymouth, Dorset, about to board ships for the Channel crossing. (Photo by Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images)
Departing troops, not yet aware of their destination, chalked simple messages like, “Thank you, Cowplain,” on the roads of southern England.
http://mediacenter.smugmug.com/Other/2014-06-05-D-Day-color-photos/i-gcKRthx/0/XL/060514_DDay_Color_photos_12-XL.jpg
June 5, 1944. Trucks of the U.S. First Infantry Division are loaded in Dorset. The following day the First Division suffered heavy casualties in securing a beachhead at Formigny and Caumont—
better known as Omaha Beach. (AFP Photo/Getty Images)
Further posts—yours, also, I trust—to follow over the next few days.
Post your answers now:
Land units from Britain, the United States and which other nation were among the June 6 invasion force?
What six-word message—seven in English—did the BBC broadcast on June 1 which instructed the French Resistance
to carry out railway sabotage, and what was its source?
More questions to follow.
Post your own questions.