Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Sainte-Mere-Eglise

On our way back home from Utah Beach, we stopped at the little town of Sainte-Mere-Eglise. This town was one of the first to be liberated in the invasion of D-Day. A brief story from wikipedia.com:

“The early landings, at about 0140 directly on the town, resulted in heavy casualties for the paratroopers. Some buildings in town were on fire that night, and they illuminated the sky, making easy targets of the descending men. Some were sucked into the fire. Many hanging from trees and utility poles were shot before they could cut loose. The German defenders were alerted.

A famous incident involved paratrooper John Steele, whose parachute caught on the spire of the town church, and could only observe the fighting going on below. He was later captured by a German soldier. The incident was portrayed in the movie The Longest Day. Later that morning, about 0500, a force led by Lt. Colonel Edward C. Krause of the 505th PIR took the town with little resistance. Apparently the German garrison was confused and had retired for the rest of the night. However, heavy German counterattacks began later in the day and into the next. The lightly-armed troopers held the town, until reinforced by tanks from nearby Utah Beach in the afternoon of June 7.”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sainte-M%C3%A8re-%C3%89glise

1 comment:

adw said...

Daniel, enjoyed learning of the adventures of Daniel and Cindy!

Will miss you at the reunion.

Best regards,

David Wall