Operation OVERLORD (1944)

SHAEF Order of the Day
June 6, 1944

Broadcast audio:

580px-SHAEF_Shoulder_Patch.svg

SUPREME HEADQUARTERS
ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE

Dwight_D_Eisenhower

Soldiers, Sailors, and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force!

You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hope and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you. In company with our brave Allies and brothers-in-arms on other Fronts, you will bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.

Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well equipped and battle-hardened. He will fight savagely.

But this is the year 1944! Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of 1940-41. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats, in open battle, man-to-man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground. Our Home Fronts have given us an overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and placed at our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men. The tide has turned! The free men of the world are marching together to Victory!

I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle. We will accept nothing less than full Victory!

Good luck! And let us beseech the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.

DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER

Hand-written, unissued message:

Our landings in the Cherbourg-Havre area have failed to gain a satisfactory foothold and I have withdrawn the troops. My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available. The troops, the air and the Navy did all that bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt it is mine alone.

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TOP SECRET

SHEAF
STAFF MESSAGE CONTROL
INCOMING MESSAGE

SHEAF CP

Filed 060800B June
SHEAF 83/06
TOR 060930B June

URGENT

FROM: SHAEF COMMAND POST, PERSONAL FROM GENERAL EISENHOWER

TO: AGWAR TO GENERAL MARSHALL FOR HIS EYES ONLY; SHAEF FOR INFORMATION

REF NO: 90016, 6 June 1944

Local time is now 8 in the morning.

I have as yet no information concerning the actual landings nor of our progress through beach obstacles. Communiqué will not be issued until we have word that leading ground troops are actually ashore.

All preliminary reports are satisfactory. Airborne formations apparently landed in good order with losses out of approximately 1250 airplanes participating about 30. Preliminary bombings by air went off as scheduled. Navy reports sweeping some mines, but so far as is known channels are clear and operation proceeding as planned. In early morning hours reaction from shore batteries was sufficiently light that some of the naval spotting planes have returned awaiting call.

The weather yesterday which was original date selected was impossible all along the target coast. Today conditions are vastly improved both by sea and air and we have the prospect of at least reasonably favorable weather for the next several days.

Yesterday, I visited British troops about to embark and last night saw a great portion of a United States airborne division just prior to its takeoff. The enthusiasm, toughness and obvious fitness of every single man were high and the light of battle was in their eyes.

I will keep you informed.

DISTRIBUTION:

  1. SUPREME COMMANDER
  2. CHIEF OF STAFF
  3. SGS
    4. Gen. Strong (G-2)
    5. Gen. Bull (G-3)

Broadcast: Unconfirmed reports of invasion, June 6, 3:00 a.m. EWT (CBS):

London Calling With John Snagge: Communique No. 1, 3:30 a.m. EWT (BBC):

Broadcast, 3:30 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 3:32 a.m. EWT (NBC):

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Supreme HQ Allied Expeditionary Force (June 6, 1944)

Communiqué No. 1

Under the command of Gen. Eisenhower, Allied naval forces, supported by strong air forces, began landing Allied armies this morning on the northern coast of France.

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Broadcast, 4:00 a.m. EWT (NBC):

Broadcast, 4:15 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 4:15 a.m. EWT (NBC):

Broadcast, 5:00 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 5:40 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 6:00 a.m. EWT (CBS):

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Innsbrucker Nachrichten (June 6, 1944)

BEGINN DER INVASION AN DER KANAL-KÜSTE
Sofortiges Einsetzen der Abwehr; Überraschungsmoment mißlungen; Luftlandetruppen teilweise bereits beim Absprung erfaßt; Viele Fallschirmeinheiten aufgerieben; Schwere ArtilleriekĂ€mpfe mit feindlichen Schiffseinheiten

Unsere Gegner zum Opfergang angetreten

Berlin, 6. Juni –
Der seit langem erwartetem Angriff der Briten und Nordamerikaner gegen die nordfranzösische KĂŒste hat in der letzten Nacht begonnen. Wenige Minuten nach Mitternacht setzte der Feind unter gleichzeitigen heftigen Bombenangriffen im Gebiet der Seine-Bucht starke LuftlandeverbĂ€nde ab. Kurze Zeit spĂ€ter schoben sich, geschĂŒtzt durch schwere und leichte Kriegsschiffseinheiten, zahlreiche feindliche Landungsboote auch gegen andere Abschnitte der KĂŒste vor. Die Abwehr ließ sich an seiner Stelle ĂŒberraschen. Sie nahm den Kampf sofort mit aller Energie auf. Die Luftlandetruppen wurden zum Teil schon beim Absprung erfaßt und die feindlichen Schiffe bereits auf hoher See wirksam unter Feuer genommen. Viele Fallschirmeinheiten wurden aufgerieben oder gefangen, andere von hochgehenden Minen zerrissen. Trotz fortgesetzter heftiger Luftangriffe und schweren Beschusses durch die feindliche Schiffsartillerie griffen die GeschĂŒtze des Atlantikwalls ebenfalls sofort in den Kampf ein. Sie erzielten Treffer auf Schlachtschiffeinheiten und den sich einnebelnden Landungsbooten. Der Kampf gegen die Invasionskruppen ist in vollem Gange.

Auf Moskaus Geheiß

Innsbruck, 6. Juni –
Der Invasionsversuch hat begonnen. Englische und amerikanische Truppen find an der nordfranzösischen KĂŒste gelandet und auf unsere abwehrbereiten VerteidigungskrĂ€fte gestoßen. Der Kampf um Europa hat eingesetzt. Stunden und Tage der Entscheidung stehen bevor. Wir sahen sie herannahen. Je lĂ€nger der Feind zögerte, sein ihm von Moskau aufgezwungenes Unternehmen zu beginnen, desto grĂŒndlicher konnte der Atlantikwall ausgebaut werden. Eine Überraschung bereitete der heutige Tag also nicht. Namen wie Rundstedt und Rommel bĂŒrgen fĂŒr Wachsamkeit, fĂŒr erfahrenen und schneidigen, in zwei Weltkriegen ruhmreich bewahrten Einsatz.

Im Lichte des heutigen Tages erhellt sich noch einmal der Gedanke, der den deutschen militĂ€rischen Maßnahmen seit Jahr und Tag zugrunde liegt: kein Masseneinsatz im Osten, keine Verwicklung in grĂ¶ĂŸere Schlachten in SĂŒditalien. Die deutsche FĂŒhrung hat sich nicht verleiten lassen, ihre Nerven waren stark und fest. Niemals wurde die Überschau verloren. So beginnt der Invasionsversuch zu einem Zeitpunkt, in dem das bewĂ€hrte deutsche Heer gewissermaßen ausgeruht zur großen Schlacht antritt. Wie sicher die deutsche FĂŒhrung die Stunde herannahen sah, ging am Montag aus der Meldung hervor, die das FĂŒhrerhauptquartier zur ZurĂŒckziehung aus Rom herausgab: „Das Jahr der Invasion wird dem Gegner an der entscheidendsten Stelle eine vernichtende Niederlage bringen.“

Die AusflĂŒchte und Verzögerungen hatten Roosevelt und Churchill nichts genĂŒtzt. Moskau hat darauf bestanden, dass die Alliierten nicht lĂ€nger zusehen und ihre Truppen und Kriegsmaterialien schonen. Bereits die Konferenzen von Moskau und Teheran standen im Zeichen des bolschewistischen Befehls. Aber immer wieder hatten sich die EnglĂ€nder und Amerikaner dem Geheiß zu entziehen versucht. Sie versprachen die zweite Front in Italien. Aber der Versuch, die deutschen VerbĂ€nde dort zu binden, misslang völlig. Viele Reden wurden von Churchill und Eden, von Roosevelt und Hull gehalten, nur um den pflichtgemĂ€ĂŸen Angriff auf den Atlantikwall aufzuschieben. Es hat ihnen nichts genĂŒtzt. Die Mahnungen Stalins steigerten sich zu Drohungen. „Keine AusflĂŒcht mehr!“ rief der Moskauer Rundfunk.

So erweisen sich die anglo-amerikanischen VerbĂ€nde, die in das mörderische Feuer der deutschen Verteidigungslinien gejagt werden, als ein Opfer bolschewistischer Befehlsgebung. England wollte andere fĂŒr sich bluten lassen und leistet jetzt selbst den bittersten Blutzoll an einem Wall aus Stahl.

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Eisenhowers Kommuniqué

Stockholm, 6. Juni –
Ein vom Hauptquartier des US-Generals Eisenhower am Dienstag ausgegebenes Kommuniqué besagt:

Unter dem Kommando von General Eisenhower haben MarinestreitkrĂ€fte mit UnterstĂŒtzung starker LuftstreitkrĂ€fte mit der Landung alliierter Armeen an der NordkĂŒste von Frankreich am Dienstagmorgen begonnen.


Der Reichspressechef zur Invasion

Berlin, 6. Juni –
Auf Anfrage des deutschen NachrichtenbĂŒros gab Reichspressechef Doktor Dietrich am Dienstagmorgen folgende Äußerung zum Beginn der Invasion:

Heute frĂŒh find unsere Gegner im Westen zu ihrem blutigen Opfergang, vor dem sie so lange sich gescheut haben, auf Befehl Moskaus angetreten. Der so oft angekĂŒndigte Angriff der westlichen Helfer des Bolschewismus aus die Freiheit Europas hat begonnen. Wir werden ihnen einen heißen Empfang bereiten. Deutschland ist sich der Bedeutung der Stunde bewußt. Es wird mit ganzer Kraft und mit leidenschaftlicher Entschlossenheit kĂ€mpfen, um Europa, seine Kultur und das Leben seiner Volker vor dem Ansturm der Barbarei zu bewahren.

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Harte KĂ€mpfe zwischen Le Havre und Cherbourg

Feindliche Angriffe bei Rom zusammengebrochen – Bandenzentrum Titos zerschlagen

Aus dem FĂŒhrerhauptquartier, 6. Juni –
Das Oberkommando der Wehrmacht gibt bekannt:

In der vergangenen Nacht hat der Feind seinen seit langem vorbereiteten und von uns erwarteten Angriff auf Westeuropa begonnen.

Eingeleitet durch schwere Luftangriffe auf unsere KĂŒstenbefestigungen, setzte er an mehreren Stellen der nordfranzösischen KĂŒste zwischen Le Havre und Cherbourg Luftlandetruppen ab und landete gleichzeitig, unterstĂŒtzt durch starke SeestreitkrĂ€fte, auch von See her. In den angegriffenen KĂŒstenstreifen find erbitterte KĂ€mpfe im Gange.

In Italien fĂŒhrte der Gegner aus Rom heraus mehrere vergebliche VorstĂ¶ĂŸe gegen unsere Sicherungen westlich und nördlich der Stadt. Östlich der Stadt brachen die mit zusammengefassten KrĂ€ften wĂ€hrend des ganzen Tages gefĂŒhrten feindlichen Angriffe bei und westlich Tivoli nach erbittertem Ringen zusammen.

JĂ€ger und Flakartillerie der Luftwaffe schossen ĂŒber dem oberitalienischen Raum acht feindliche Flugzeuge ab.

Im Osten kĂ€mpften sich die deutsch-rumĂ€nischen Truppen, wirksam unterstĂŒtzt durch starke deutsch-rumĂ€nische FliegerverbĂ€nde, nordwestlich Iassy gegen zĂ€hen feindlichen Widerstand in harten KĂ€mpfen weiter vor und wiesen wiederholte Gegenangriffe der Bolschewisten ab. 39 feindliche Flugzeuge wurden in LuftkĂ€mpfen vernichtet.

Von der ĂŒbrigen Ostfront wird nur örtliche GefechtstĂ€tigkeit aus dem Kampfraum von Witebsk gemeldet.

In Kroatien haben Truppen des Heeres und der Waffen-SS unter dem Oberbefehl des Generalobersten Rendulic, unterstĂŒtzt durch starke Kampf- und SchlachtfliegerverbĂ€nde, das Zentrum der Bandengruppen Titos ĂŒberfallen und nach tagelangen schweren KĂ€mpfen zerschlagen. Der Feind verlor nach vorlĂ€ufigen Meldungen 6.240 Mann. Außerdem wurden zahlreiche Waffen aller Art und viele Versorgungseinrichtungen erbeutet. In diesen KĂ€mpfen haben sich die 7. SS-Gebirgsdivision „Prinz Eugen“ unter FĂŒhrung des SS-OberfĂŒhrers Kumm und das SS-FallschirmjĂ€gerbataillon 500 unter FĂŒhrung des SS-HauptsturmfĂŒhrers Rybka hervorragend bewĂ€hrt.

Einige feindliche Flugzeuge warfen in der letzten Nacht Bomben auf OsnabrĂŒck. Zwei Flugzeuge wurden abgeschossen.

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The New York Times (June 6, 1944)

ALLIED ARMIES LAND IN FRANCE IN THE HAVRE-CHERBOURG AREA; GREAT INVASION IS UNDERWAY
Eisenhower acts; U.S., British, Canadian troops backed by sea, air forces; Montgomery leads

Nazis say their shock units are battling our parachutists
By Raymond Daniell

First Allied landing made on shores of Western Europe

image
Gen. Eisenhower’s armies invaded northern France this morning. While the landing points were not specified, the Germans said that troops had gone ashore near Le Havre and that fighting raged at Caen (1). The enemy also said that parachutists had descended at the northern tip of the Normandy Peninsula (2) and heavy bombing had been visited on Calais and Dunkerque (3).

SHEAF, England –
The invasion of Europe from the west has begun.

In the gray light of a summer dawn, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower threw his great Anglo-American force into action today for the liberation of the continent. The spearhead of attack was an Army group commanded by Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery and comprising troops of the United States, Britain and Canada.

Gen. Eisenhower’s first communiquĂ© was terse and calculated to give little information to the enemy. It said merely that:

Allied naval forces supported by strong air forces began landing Allied armies this morning on the northern coast of France.

After the first communiqué was released, it was announced that the Allied landing was in Normandy.

Caen battle reported

German broadcasts, beginning at 6:30 a.m. London Time (12:30 a.m. EWT) gave first word of the assault.

The Associated Press said Gen. Eisenhower, for the sake of surprise, deliberately let the Germans have the “first word.”

The German DNB Agency said the Allied invasion operations began with the landing of airborne troops in the area of the mouth of the Seine River.

Berlin said the “center of gravity” of the fierce fighting was at Caen, 30 miles southwest of Le Havre and 65 miles southeast of Cherbourg, the Associated Press reported. Caen is 10 miles inland from the sea, at the base of the 75-mile-wide Normandy Peninsula, and fighting there might indicate the Allies’ seizing of a beachhead.

DNB said in a broadcast just before 10:00 a.m. (4: 00 a.m. EWT) that the Anglo-American troops had been reinforced at dawn at the mouth of the Seine River in the Le Havre area.





Invasion leaders of Allied forces

‘Thumbnail’ sketches of men who are directing blows against Hitler’s West Wall
By the Associated Press

SUPREME ALLIED COMMANDER: Gen. Dwight David Eisenhower, 53, Texas-born, Kansas-reared; previously Allied commander of the forces in North Africa, Sicily and Italy.

DEPUTY SUPREME ALLIED COMMANDER: Air Chf. Mshl. Sir Arthur Tedder, 52, Briton who turned to the air after having been wounded as an infantryman in World War I; successful commander of Middle East and Allied Mediterranean Air Forces.

ALLIED NAVAL COMMANDER: Adm. Sir Bertram Home Ramsay, 61, the man who brought the British Army home from Dunkerque, planner of sea participation in North African and Sicilian campaigns.

ALLIED AIR FORCES COMMANDER: Air Chf. Mshl. Trafford Leigh Leigh-Mallory, 52, career airman, son of British clergyman, formerly commander of all British-based RAF fighters.

BRITISH GROUND FORCES COMMANDER: Gen. Sir Bernard Law Montgomery, 56, another clergyman’s son, hero of 8th Army victory at El Alamein and push across Africa and Sicily into Italy.

SENIOR U.S. GROUND FORCES OFFICER: Lt. Gen. Omar Nelson Bradley, 51, Missouri-born, quiet-mannered hero of U.S. victory at Bizerte, called “Doughboys’ General.”

COMMANDER, U.S. STRATEGIC AIR FORCES: Lt. Gen. Carl “Tooey” Spaatz, 53, Pennsylvania Dutch, endurance flier, founder of 8th Air Force and commander of U.S. Air Forces in Mediterranean victories.

CHIEF OF STAFF TO GEN. EISENHOWER: Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, 48, native of Indiana, Gen. Eisenhower’s Chief of Staff for North African invasion.

COMMANDER, U.S. 8TH AIR FORCE: Lt. Gen. James H. “Jimmy” Doolittle, 47, one of the world’s most noted pilots, “the man who bombed Tokyo.”

COMMANDER, U.S. 9TH TACTICAL AIR FORCE: Lt. Gen. Lewis H. Brereton, 54, Pennsylvania-born, went to Annapolis but joined Army after graduation, was air commander in the Philippines, Java, India and the Middle East; noted for driving energy.

COMMANDER, RAF BOMBER FORCE: Air Chf. Mshl. Sir Arthur T. Harris, 52, took over present post in 1942 and has since been trying to bomb Germany out of the war by mass “saturation” technique which he organized.

COMMANDER, BRITISH 2ND TACTICAL AIR FORCE: Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham, 49, veteran of all kinds of air fighting, scored great success with RAF Desert Air Force and then commanded all Allied tactical operations in Tunisian and Sicilian campaigns; was cavalryman and fighter pilot in World War I.

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Allied warning flashed to coast

People told to clear area 22 miles inland as soon as instructions are given

London, England –
The BBC began its 8:00 a.m. news bulletin this morning with quotations from a Supreme Headquarters’ “urgent warning” to inhabitants of the newly-occupied countries living near the coast.

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has directed that whenever possible in France a warning shall be given to towns in which certain targets will be intensively bombed.




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Parade of planes carried invaders

Witness says first parachutists met only light fire when they landed in France

The first eyewitness account of the Allies’ invasion of Europe was given in a pool broadcast from London this morning by Wright Bryan of NBC, who accompanied the airborne troops in their landings.

His account said the first spearhead of Allied forces landed by parachute in northern France to the first hour of D-Day.

Mr. Bryan said:

In the navigator’s dome in the flight deck of a C-47, I rode across the English Channel with the first group of places from the United States 9th Air Force Troop Carrier Command to take our fighting men into Europe.

He added that just before he left French soil for the return trip, he saw 17 U.S. paratroopers, led by a lieutenant colonel, “jump with their arms, ammunition and equipment into German-occupied France.”




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Washington waits three hours for flash

Pershing sees victory is ‘like war of liberation’ fought by sons of 1918 troops

Washington –
Washington learned officially of the invasion of Europe at 3:32 a.m. ET today when the War Department issued the text of the communiqué issued by the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces.

This flash was the climax of three hours of tense waiting that followed the first German radio reports that hostilities off France had begun. Before that both the War Department and the Office of War Information said they had no information to confirm or deny the German reports.

The communiquĂ© was handed newspapermen in the War Department by Maj. Gen. Alexander D. Surles, chief of the Army Bureau of Public Relations. With the communiquĂ© was issued a statement by General of the Armies John J. Pershing which declared the sons of the American soldiers of 1917 and 1918 were engaged in a “like war of liberation” and would bring freedom to people who have been enslaved.

The capital awakened rapidly after the initial broadcasts. Lights flashed on and radios began to blare. Newspapermen hurried to their offices. Everybody was demanding to know whether it was “official.”

If the White House was aware of the report, there was no outward indication. Only a few lights glowed there and the customary guards patrolled up and down monotonously.

Only a few hours earlier – at 8:30 p.m. – Mr. Roosevelt had addressed the world for 15 minutes on the fall of Rome.

By 1:45 a.m., almost the entire public relations staff at the War Department had reported for duty.

Elmer Davis, director of the OWI, met about half a dozen newsmen in his office about 4:00 a.m. and told them the OWI had no assurance that the invasion was coming off this morning but thought that it might be. He said that OWI did not put out any of the German broadcast reports prior to official confirmation from Gen. Eisenhower’s headquarters.

Between the official flash and the time Gen. Eisenhower began his talk, the OWI was transmitting the text of the communiqué.

The OWI director added that ABSIE, the agency’s foreign radio, had broadcast Gen. Eisenhower’s speech in about 20 languages.


Pershing sees patriots rising

Washington (UP) –
Gen. Pershing, in a statement headed “American troops have landed in Western Europe,” said today that he had “every confidence” that the invasion would succeed.

The statement was released by the War Department.

The aged general said:

The overwhelming military might of the Allies advances. It will be joined by the men of the occupied countries, whose land has been overrun by the enemy but whose spirit remains unconquered.

Twenty-six years ago, American soldiers, in cooperation with their Allies, were locked in mortal combat with the German enemy. Their march of victory was never halted until the enemy laid down his arms in defeat. The American soldiers of 1917-1918, fighting in a war of liberation, wrote by his deeds one of the most glorious pages of military history.

Today the sons of American soldiers of 1917-18 are engaged in a like war of liberation. It is their task to bring freedom to peoples who have been enslaved.

I have every confidence that they, together with their gallant brothers-in-arms, will win through to victory.

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McNaughton prays for invaders

MontrĂ©al, QuĂ©bec, Canada (CP) –
Lt. Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, former commander of the Canadian Army overseas and the man who trained the Canadians for their part in today’s invasion of the continent, said early this morning that “all I’d like to say is that my prayers are with them.”


Normandy airdromes wiped out

London, England (UP) –
The German DNB News Agency today broadcast a dispatch, unconfirmed by Allied sources, that the most important airdromes in the area of the Normandy Peninsula of France had been wiped out.


Davis warns of German trick

Washington (UP) –
Elmer Davis, director of the Office of War Production, warned the American public today that the German radio might be trying to build up a reputation for accuracy in its news reports of the invasion so that “they can put one over on the Allies later.”

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Editorial: Invasion

At last, the supreme moment has come. The months and years of waiting are over. Troops of the United States, the British Isles, the Dominions, contingents from occupied but unconquered countries in Europe are at this moment setting foot on the continental soil. The men who left Dunkerque nearly four years ago are returning. They left as a handful of shattered divisions, armed only with the splendor of an undying courage. They return as part of a great force supplied with every known means of beating down the enemy’s resistance.

They are commanded by generals of proven worth, in whom there is universal confidence throughout the United Nations. The preparations have been thorough. Nazi resistance has been weakened by air attacks of unprecedented destructiveness. In equipment, in training, in courage and resolution, these men are doubtless the equals of any soldiers who ever marched.

They are meeting and will meet terrible obstacles. The Nazis have had four years to prepare, and no doubt they are ready. They have had ample warning that the invasion was coming, though they did not know the time or the places. They will fight hard, for when they are beaten now, they are beaten forever.

The next few hours and days will be critical in our history, and in all human history. We must wait in patience for news that may be slow in coming. We must be prepared for losses and for reverses at some points. The shape of the battle of Europe may be slow in emerging.

Today we can only pray, in our churches with other petitioners of the Almighty or alone and in our hearts.

We cannot pray that one we love be spared if a stranger must fall in his place. But we can call upon the God of mercy and justice to strengthen each soldier in his hour of trial; to give victory with the least cost in life, in suffering and in sorrow; to grant each soldier faith in his cause and full knowledge that our love and our hope go with him.

We may pray, too, that we ourselves may be given the fortitude that these young men possess; that we may have strength to face the dreadful waiting; that we may have courage to bear the sorrow that must be the lot of so many.

We may humbly pray for untiring bodies and hearts to support all the soldiers of the United Nations who battle for victory and for the liberation of those who are in slavery.

Finally, we may pray for the knowledge and skill to create out of this slaughter a just and lasting peace.

These are our sons. God bless them.

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Broadcast, 9:00 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 9:00 a.m. EWT (NBC):

Broadcast, 9:27 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 9:30 a.m. EWT (NBC):

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Valiant Lady: Buy War Bonds! 10:00 a.m. EWT (CBS):

Light of the World, 10:15 a.m. EWT (CBS):

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A Prayer For Our Troops from Kate Smith, 12:00 noon EWT (CBS):

Romance of Helen Trent, 12:30 p.m. EWT (CBS):

Broadcast, 12:45 p.m. EWT (CBS):

Report by Quincy Howe, 12:55 p.m. EWT (CBS):

John Daly, 1:00 p.m. EWT (CBS):

Reports from London, 1:00 p.m. EWT (NBC):

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The Brooklyn Eagle (June 6, 1944)

Allies smash 9œ miles beyond French coast

Battle rages at Caen; our casualties ‘light’
By Virgil Pinkley

SHAEF, England (UP) –
U.S., British and Canadian invasion forces landed in northwestern France today, established beachheads in Normandy, and by evening had “gotten over the first five or six hurdles” in the greatest amphibious assault of all time.

The Allies are fighting in the town of Caen, nine and a half miles inside the French coast, Prime Minister Churchill said today.

Gen. Eisenhower’s Supreme Headquarters revealed the Allied armies, carried and supported by 4,000 ships and 11,000 planes, encountered considerably less resistance than had been expected in the storming of Adolf Hitler’s vaunted West Wall.

Nazi broadcasts reported Allied troops pouring ashore most of the day along a broad reach of the Norman coast and to the east, and admitted invasion landing barges had penetrated two estuaries behind the Atlantic Wall.

The apparent key to the lightness of the Nazi opposition to invasion forces opening the battle of Europe was contained in a disclosure that thousands of Allied planes dropped more than 11,200 tons of bombs on German coastal fortifications in eight and a half hours last night and early today.

As the massive Allied air fleets took complete command of the skies over the invasion zone, Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring issued an order of the day to his air force declaring the invasion “must be fought off, even if it means the death of the Luftwaffe.”

Late in the day, Prime Minister Churchill, making his second statement of the day to Commons, said the invasion was proceeding “in a thoroughly satisfactory manner.” Earlier he told Commons it was going “according to plan and what a plan!”

Simultaneously the German DNB News Agency reported the invasion front “has been further widened.” Nazi broadcasts throughout the day told of the amphibious assault developing on a grand scale, with fighting as deep as 10 miles inland – a figure apparently extended by the last enemy report.

Supreme Headquarters revealed late in the day that bad weather had forced a 24-hour postponement of the invasion. The Allied command gave the go-ahead order last night despite strong northwest winds and rain squalls when weather experts forecast improving conditions today. The weather was still somewhat unfavorable, however, impeding the support given the land armies by the air force.

Although detailed official reports were lacking as the tense first day wore towards a close, it was summed up by one source at headquarters in the words: “We have gotten over the first five or six hurdles.” The surmounted hurdles were described as:

  • The German Air Force did little or no bombing of ports from which the invasion was mounted in the last critical days.

  • Attacks on invasion convoys failed to reach the expected scale.

  • Minesweepers succeeded in sweeping channels to the beaches without much opposition from shore batteries or from the air.

  • The troops got ashore with less opposition from shore guns than was believed probable.

  • Opposition was generally well below expectations; for instance, up to a certain time this morning, the German Air Force had flown only 30 battle area sorties.

Allied overall casualties appeared to have been relatively light. Headquarters announced they were light among airborne troops and “surprisingly small – very small” at sea.

The disembarkation went according to plan. Warships succeeded in silencing shore batteries and laying smokescreens on schedule. A U.S. battleship moved in much closer to shore than scheduled in order to silence a troublesome group of fortifications.

The minesweeping was described as the biggest and probably the most difficult operation of its kind ever attempted. Hundreds of sweepers headed the invasion fleets, clearing the water and marking channels.

The German DNB News Agency said this afternoon Allied landing barges had pushed into the estuaries of the Orne and Vire Rivers in the coastal stretch between Cherbourg and Le Havre “in the rear of the Atlantic Wall” – the vaunted defense line Hitler hoped would keep invaders off the soil of Germany.

Nazi broadcasters also acknowledged Allied tanks had cut several kilometers inland between the towns of Caen and Isigny, and admitted Allied penetrations ranging up to ten miles.

The British radio said at least two beachheads had been secured and that “Allied formations are advancing inland.” The German DNB News Agency acknowledged the Allies had put tanks ashore in at least one sector.

Some six hours after the first wave of U.S., British and Canadian assault forces landed by sea and air on the Normandy Peninsula, Prime Minister Churchill told Commons the invasion was proceeding “according to plan.”

One German broadcast reported fighting as much as 10 miles inland.

The commander of the army group now storming France was revealed to be Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery, “Monty of El Alamein,” who led the famed British 8th Army all the way from the approaches to Alexandria, Egypt, to southern Italy. His command included U.S., British and Canadian troops.

German news agencies said Allied shock forces and paratroops landed along the north coast of the Normandy Peninsula – which juts out from France some 90-110 miles below the English south coast – all the way from the Cherbourg area at the northern tip to Le Havre at the mouth of the Seine, 110 miles northwest of Paris.

Airborne troops were landing deep inland on the peninsula, the official Nazi DNB Agency said, in an effort to seize a number of strategic airfields, cut off the Normandy Peninsula and capture Cherbourg, one of the two main ports for Paris.

Although the initial phase of the invasion was apparently confined to the Normandy coast of France, an Allied headquarters spokesman hinted operations may soon be extended to Holland and possibly to other countries in Western Europe.

The spokesman broadcast urgent instructions to the inhabitants of Holland to evacuate their coast to a depth of 21 miles immediately and to keep off highways, railways and bridges.

Bars speculation

Churchill said the battle which has now been joined “will grow constantly in scale and intensity for many weeks to come.” He said there were hopes that “tactical surprise has already been achieved.”

He said:

This vast plan is undoubtedly the most complicated and difficult that ever has occurred. It involves tides, wind, waves, visibility from both the air and the sea standpoints, and the combined employment of land, air and sea forces in the highest degree of intimacy.

We hope to furnish the enemy with a succession of surprises
 I shall not speculate on the battle’s course, but this I may say – this complete unity prevails throughout the Allies’ armies.

The first official word that D-Day had finally arrived came at 9:32 a.m. (3:22 a.m. ET) when Gen. Eisenhower announced the opening of a long-awaited western front in a communiqué of only 26 words. It said:

Under the command of Gen. Eisenhower, Allied naval forces, supported by strong air forces, began landing Allied armies this morning on the northern coast of France.

Issues order of the day

To his land, sea and air forces, Eisenhower issued an order of the day pledging them to “bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of occupied Europe and security for ourselves in a free world.”

Fliers report progress

The first waves of Allied assault troops pushed ashore at several points along the Normandy coast, between 6:00 and 8:15 a.m. (midnight and 2:15 a.m. ET) under a protective naval barrage of rockets and shells ranging up to 16 inches in diameter.

Allied fighter pilots returning from flights over the beachhead reported Allied infantrymen were scrambling up the shores at 7:00 a.m., apparently without heavy opposition in the early stages.

The principal German opposition at sea came from torpedo boats and destroyers, which, however, were hampered by a smokescreen thrown around the invasion armada by Allied vessels. Allied planes – Churchill said Eisenhower had 11,000 first-lines ones upon which to draw – ruled the skies virtually unchallenged.

The German DNB Agency acknowledged one of their vessels had been sunk in “violent fighting” in the Seine Estuary, but also claimed that an Allied cruiser and a large landing vessel loaded with troops had been sent to the bottom off the Normandy Peninsula.

Four air divisions reported

At least four Anglo-American airborne divisions have been observed between Le Havre and Cherbourg, another DNB broadcast said. The greater part of the landed paraunits, especially the British, can be considered annihilated, DNB said.

Allied headquarters announced some 200 Allied minesweepers manned by 10,000 officers and men were clearing the approaches to the invasion beaches. Churchill placed the total number of ships involved at 4,000, at least 1,000 greater than participated in the invasion of Sicily. In addition, Churchill said, thousands of smaller craft were taking part in the European landings.

The invasion came only one day after the fall of Rome to Allied armies in Italy and marked the second phase of the master plane to smash Nazi Germany into unconditional surrender, possibly this year. The third and final phase will be a Red Army offensive from the east.


Mrs. Eisenhower sleeps as invasion is flashed

West Point, New York (UP) –
Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower was asleep this morning when the communiquĂ© announcing the invasion was issued from her husband’s headquarters, friends said today.

The general’s wife declined to comment. She was at West Point to see her 22-year-old son John graduate today.

Young Eisenhower, who is said to be “in the middle of his class” scholastically, is in the infantry, and will be commissioned a second lieutenant. A graduate of Stadium High School at Tacoma, Washington, and a Washington, DC, preparatory school, he is a member of the cadet choir, the Glee Club, and was formerly manager of the tennis team. Gen. Eisenhower graduated from West Point in 1915.

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11,200-ton lead softens up foe before invasion

7,500 Allied planes hammer enemy guns studding the Channel
By Walter Cronkite

London, England (UP) –
Thousands of Allied bombing planes softened up the defenses of Western Europe for the Anglo-American invasion armies last night and early today, dropping more than 11,200 tons of high explosives on the Nazi coastal fortifications in eight and a half hours of furious attack.

The roar of bursting bombs and the motors of attacking fighter planes rolled back across the narrow Straits of Dover incessantly from midnight until 8:00 a.m. (local time) as some 7,500 Allied planes hammered at the network of enemy gun emplacements studding the Channel coast.

By midmorning, the Allied air fleets had swept the skies clear of Nazi planes, and fighters were racing as far as 75 miles inland without drawing a challenge from the battered Luftwaffe.

More than 2,300 U.S. and British heavy bombers spearheaded the great sky fleet, crashing an estimated 7,000 tons or more of bombs on the enemy’s beachhead defenses. Another 4,200 tons were dropped by tactical air forces.

It was the heaviest attack ever hurled against a single objective, and all reports indicated that the mighty barrage had all but beaten the Nazi forts into submission before the ground assault began.

A sky-filling parade of British four-engined heavies, 1,300 strong, opened the mighty assault at 11:30 p.m., thundering out in continuous waves until daybreak. The black-winged raiders struck in 10 separate formations of 100 or more planes each and spewed well over 5,000 tons of high explosives across the Nazi coastal forts.

At dawn, 1,000 U.S. Flying Fortresses and Liberators took up the attack sweeping out over the heads of the thousands of Allied assault troops moving on to the French coast.

Wave upon wave of U.S. and Allied medium bombers and fighter bombers followed the heavies across bombing and machine-gunning the beachheads and communications behind the battle area.

Air opposition over the French interior was described as slight. There was no immediate announcement on Allied plane losses.


Small: Sees troops landing under shell canopy

By Collie Small

With a Marauder formation over the invasion coast, France (UP) –
No-man’s-land is 5,000 feet below.

It’s somewhere between the grey, Channel-washed beaches on which Allied troops are swarming from their landing barges and the brown fields beyond. The wink of gun flashes in the half-light of dawn in those fields came from Germans fighting the invasion.

My aerial grandstand seat is in a Marauder piloted by 1st Lt. Carl Oliver of Sacramento, California, a part of an unending stream of Allied aircraft, ranging from fighters to heavies, which is streaming across the Channel to support the infantry assault.

Five thousand feet is one of the lowest altitudes the medium bombers have ever bombed from in this theater but we chance the German flak to pinpoint our targets.

As we wheel off the targets and streak back toward the Channel, dawn streaks the eastern sky. Peering down I can see our troops scrambling ashore under a canopy of shells hurled over their heads by warships in a harbor that dents the shoreline.

In the half-light we can see the flashes from German shore batteries all along the coastline and inside the harbor.

We know that it must be a disjoined and disorganized defense, for, right in this section, American paratroops floated down earlier to soften up Germans for the great armada crossing the Channel.

By now, as we across the white-capped Channel, we have a bridge of ships from England to France. They range from mighty battlewagons down to tiny, gnat-like PT boats and include all manner of transports and landing craft.

Some of the landing craft plough through the swell leaving a thin, white wake. Others have arrived off the appointed shore and appear to be just waiting.

From the cockpit of this Marauder, no-man’s-land is an eerie strip of dimly-lit coastline and fields which show dull green and brown as the first rays of the sun slant upon them. We can see the puffs of bombs and shells falling in it as the German batteries duel with the long rifles of Allied warships offshore.

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WAR BULLETINS!

Adm. King: Invasion ‘doing all right’

Washington (UP) –
Adm. Ernest J. King, commander of the U.S. Fleet, said after a conference with President Roosevelt today that the invasion of Europe is “doing all right so far.”

Channel battle reported by Germans

London, England (UP) –
The German Transocean News Agency said today that a battle was in progress in the English Channel north of Le Havre between German naval units and Allied forces attempting to make a landing.

See Red drive before weekend

London, England (UP) –
Military observers said today a general Russian offensive coordinated with the Anglo-American attack from the west may be launched within the next 48 hours and almost certainly will begin before the weekend.

Russians celebrate Allied landing

Moscow, USSR (UP) –
News of the Allied landing in France spread swiftly throughout Russia today and touched off enthusiastic demonstrations such as rarely have been seen since the war began. Soviet war marches, “Yankee Doodle” and the triumphal music reserved for Stalin’s victory orders followed the announcement.

Berlin: Allies hold firm bridgeheads

Radio Berlin, monitored by NBC, has admitted bridgeheads between Le Havre and Boulogne are now firmly in Allied hands. The Berlin radio added the Allies have landed heavy armament on the beachheads.

Naval guns bombard French beaches

London, England (UP) –
More than 640 naval guns, ranging from four-inch to 16-inch, are bombarding the French beaches and enemy strongpoints in support of the Allied armies, Allied Supreme Headquarters announced today.

Allies suffer heavy reverses, Nazis claim

London, England (UP) –
The German High Command in its first invasion communiquĂ© today said Allied forces suffered “particularly heavy reverses” in the Caen area of northern France and claimed that an entire regiment of paratroopers was destroyed in that sector.

Nazis report 80 Allied warships in the Orne

London, England (UP) –
The German Transocean News Agency said today that about 80 medium-sized Allied warships were approaching the town of Ouistreham in the estuary of the Orne River.

OWI warns against German broadcasts

Washington (UP) –
Americans were warned today by Director Elmer Davis of the OWI that despite the Germans’ accuracy in announcing the invasion prior to the official Allied communiquĂ©, German broadcasts should not be relied on in the future.

Pershing confident of victory

Washington (UP) –
Gen. John J. Pershing, who led U.S. troops to victory in World War I, called on his countrymen today to share his “every confidence” that American manhood again “will win through to victory” in their second great contest on Western European soil.

Nazis: Allied warship afire in Seine

London, England (UP) –
The German Transocean News Agency said today that a large Allied warship had been set ablaze in the Seine estuary by artillery fire.

More Allied troops landed, Germans report

London, England (UP) –
The German news agency DNB said today the allies had landed “further reinforcements” by sea and air in the Seine estuary.

Nazis admit Allied grip on French isles

London, England (UP) –
The German Transocean News Agency acknowledged today that the Allies had gained footholds on several islands off the coast of France.

German artillery opens up with salvoes

London, England (UP) –
German coastal artillery in France opened up with salvoes across the Channel soon after noon today, shaking towns in Southeast England.

Not one Nazi coastal gun firing

An NBC reporter, who flew over 20 miles of the invasion coast this morning, reports that “not a single German coastal gun was firing in the entire invasion zone,” indicating that we have completely knocked out the initial line of defenses of the much-vaunted Atlantic Wall.

Allied airborne toll light, leaders say

London, England (UP) –
Casualties among Allied airborne troops in France have been light, Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces announced today.


‘They can’t stop us’ is the watchword as invasion opens

By Sandor S. Klein

Washington (UP) –
An American sergeant, packing concentrated destruction, peered into the darkness toward France and said, “They can’t stop us.”

His four words, from an “invasion front” dispatch to the War Department, were uttered as the greatest military operation of history began “very quietly and without tension” from a small British town whose inhabitants had little idea that anything unusual was going on.

From this town, the War Department dispatch said, the liberation of Nazi Europe “began in a small way” as assault troops – relieved of practically everything but weapons – walked calmly aboard their blunt-nosed landing craft “without attracting the slightest bit of attention.”

Thus started what in a matter of hours became a roaring, flaming, crashing inferno as the battle was joined on the northern coast of France and Allied airplanes swarmed against any targets, however small, which might have “a bearing on the strength of the armies
”

The men had been briefed carefully. They knew exactly what their mission was. At the last moment, the War Department dispatch said, they were relieved of “practically everything except their arms and ammunition.”


Picked Yanks spearhead attack, blast way through vaunted wall

Washington (UP) –
Specially trained, picked assault teams of the U.S. Army made the initial attack on Fortress Europe, knocking out pillboxes and other fortifications of the vaunted Atlantic Wall, the War Department said today.

Putting to use tactics perfected in North Africa, Sicily and Italy, the assault units hit the beach under cover of heavy naval and artillery fire.

These units, actually infantrymen, were given special training to spearhead the massive assault. These men were equipped with special engineer weapons.

Preparation for the assault was provided by artillery, by naval guns, by air bombardment and by waterproof tanks firing hull-down in the water.

The purpose of this is not only to knock out pillboxes but to tear up the enemy’s field of fire by providing shell craters as cover for attacking units.

First men clear mines

Each assault section is composed of 30 men – one officer, and 29 G.I. Joes. This is the capacity of the assault boats, and it is also the most convenient size unit for a single pillbox.

It is the job of the first men ashore to locate the mines, and mark safe lanes with special tracing strips. As part of this operation, the wire itself must be cut, and American soldiers have an efficient weapon for this purpose.

It is the Bangalore torpedo, which comes in long sections capable of being made into any length necessary, depending upon the depth of the barbed wire.

One member of the assault team, under cover of small arms, fixes the Bangalore, sets the fuse, and ducks for cover. The torpedo explodes with a terrific blast, blowing a wide swath through the wire. The other members of the team follow through the wire and move up the beach.

Composed of seven teams

An assault section is composed of seven separate teams of varying sizes, beginning with the riflemen who build up a line of fire to protect the others.

They are followed by wire cutters who clear out wire not blown by the Bangalores. Next in line is the Browning automatic rifle team, whose mission is to deliver fire on portholes of the emplacement and keep the heads of the enemy down.

Then there is the next team – the gunners, firing the famous bazooka rockets. Their mission is to attack the pillbox and aperture to silence enemy fire.

The climax of the entire operation is played by the soldier with flamethrower and the man with the demolition charge. These are engineer weapons, but the infantrymen have become proficient in their use.

‘Pole charges’ do trick

The final assault is accomplished by the demolition men, equipped with what are known as “pole charges.”

The “pole charge” is a device resembling an ordinary bricklayer’s hod, and upon it is placed a block of TNT. The purpose of this design is to enable the demolition men to lean the charge against the pillbox aperture.

As soon as the pillbox blows up, the entire section moves forward for another attack. During a landing operation, these tactics are repeated by many squads along a considerable front.

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President calls Army, Navy chiefs for a council of war in capital

Washington (UP) –
President Roosevelt summoned top Army and Navy chiefs to the White House today for an invasion conference and prepared to lead the nation in a prayer he wrote last night as the Allied armada moved across the English Channel to France.

Mr. Roosevelt called in Gen. George C. Marshall (Army Chief of Staff), Adm. Ernest J. King (Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Fleet) and Gen. H. H. Arnold (commander of the Army Air Forces).

Meanwhile, reports poured into the White House from the War and Navy Departments on progress of the invasion.

In his prayer, which the President will deliver at 10:00 p.m. EWT – and in which he asked the nation to join – Mr. Roosevelt asked for divine battle strength “to conquer the apostles of greed and racial arrogance.”

‘We shall prevail’

The President’s prayer said:

With Thy blessing, we shall prevail over the unholy forces of our enemy.

Lead us to the saving of our country, and with our sister nations into a world-unity that will spell a sure peace – a peace invulnerable to the schemings of unworthy men. And a peace that will let all men live in freedom, reaping the just rewards of their honest toil. Thy will be done, Almighty God.

White House Secretary Early said Mr. Roosevelt began writing the prayer several days ago. He completed it, Early said, last night after he delivered his radio “fireside chat.” He was sitting in his bedroom at that time receiving telephonic reports on progress of the invasion, Early said.

The prayer was made public hours in advance of the President’s broadcast tonight in order that it might be printed in newspapers during the day so the people would know it and could say it with the President in their homes tonight.

House hears prayer

At the request of Speaker Sam Rayburn, the prayer was read in the House of Representatives when it convened today. The first copy of the prayer after it was transcribed from the President’s own handwritten copy was sent by special motorcycle messenger to the Capitol.

The President will have his first opportunity to discuss the invasion publicly when he meets at 4:00 p.m. with his regular press and radio conference.

Acting Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius Jr., meanwhile, said this is not the time for rejoicing but the time for everyone at home “to put everything he has into his job to speed the day of victory.”

Early told reporters the President’s fireside chat discussion last night about the capture of Rome had the effect of a psychological diversion. The Germans and others undoubtedly listened to it with interest, he said, and replied “I think you might call it that” when a reporter asked if it was a psychological diversion.

Mr. Roosevelt, in his talk last night, had warned that victory over Germany “will be tough and costly.” People in the capital recalled the somber warning when they awakened to discover that the long-awaited invasion had begun.

Roosevelt slumbers as D-Day news breaks

Washington (UP) –
When the invasion came early today, President Roosevelt was sound asleep and the White House was quiet except for a message center through which came official reports of last-minute developments.

Being one of the few persons in Washington who knew exactly when the invasion would occur, the President retired early in the evening after his radio broadcast, but was undoubtedly up early canvassing the latest official dispatches.


Editorial: Our job at home is to match spirit of the invading forces

American soldiers, the sons, brothers, husbands and friends of all of us, have at last hurled themselves against Hitler’s Europe, where they will fight it out with the Nazi armies for the cause of world freedom.

They are united with the British in an undertaking which is recognized as the most difficult in military history and one which could not succeed unless it had been planned with care and skill and driven forward with irresistible might.

It will end triumphantly, however, because of the certainty that it is being directed brilliantly, that every essential element of power has been provided and that the men of all ranks will bring to their task a high order of resourcefulness and courage.

Naturally, the hopes and the fears and the pride of all Americans go out in these hours of terror and of trial to the men who swarm upon the beaches of Europe behind a curtain of fire from guns on the ships and from bombers, and who make their way forward through a veritable inferno to their objective.

No one at home can visualize the scene. Attempts to describe it must necessarily be feeble and futile. It will bring a test of human valor against all of the genius and the cunning that have gone into the Nazis’ long preparation to meet the challenge of this day – a challenge which involves their survival.

The German soldier dies hard. This much must be conceded to him. He mans his gun to the last and goes down fighting. The invaders know this as they start on the long road to the Reich and to the gleaming goal of peace.

Our job at home, now that the suspense is ended and the battle is in progress, is to capture as much as we can of the spirit which the soldier brings to his rendezvous with history. This is a stern mood, one which precludes baseless hopes and delusions, which takes into account the strength of the enemy, also his vulnerability. It is a spirit of quiet confidence, of dogged determination, with little passion. Nor is there anything in this deadly enterprise that even vaguely resembles glamor.

The soldiers on the beaches realize, of course, that this is a job that has to be done and they are bent on doing it well, regardless of the cost. Half a world away, they are setting the tone for the home front – a tone influenced by faith that whatever they give to the cause of victory during these next few months as the tide of battle sweeps in from the Channel and the sea and over tine continent toward the Reich will be worthwhile.

These young men are fighting for old ideals and old rights. It is not enough to be with them in spirit as they struggle forward. Unless those who remain at home work tirelessly and endure bravely, they will fall short of being worthy of those who represent them on the churned, blighted battlefields of the world.


General’s wife backs attack by selling bonds

Washington (UP) –
While Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark leads his 5th Army forward north of Rome, Mrs. Clark is preparing to fulfill her “partnership in this war” by assisting in the 5th War Loan Drive.

The energetic wife of the 5th Army commander said she was “very excited and very humble” when she heard the news of the fall of Rome – and very grateful that her husband had been spared.

She said:

But my heart was heavy because I couldn’t help thinking of the families of all those who fell in Italy before the 5th Army got to Rome.

Victory can’t be unmixed and give only joy, because we must think of those who die and are wounded.

To do her part at home, Mrs. Clark is active in the sale of bonds, having traveled more than 300,000 miles in previous drives.

Urging women to accept their responsibility in the bond drives and other war work, Mrs. Clark said:

There has never been a time in history when women could do so much as they can now – and I have no patience with those who are idle.


‘Stand ready!’ Eisenhower urges patriots

London, England (UP) –
**Gen. Eisenhower warned millions of patriots in Europe today against a premature uprising as the Allied forces landed in France, but urged them to prepare and stand ready for the signal that will hurl them into the greatest revolt in history.

Eisenhower said:

The day will come when I shall need your united strength. Until that day, I shall call on you for the hard task of discipline and restraint
 follow the instructions of your leaders
 be patient. Prepare.

Eisenhower’s message went out over Allied radios to all the peoples of Western Europe, where an underground army estimated at more than 8,000,000 has been built up during the four long years of occupation.

The Allied commander said:

I know I can count on your steadfastness now, no less than in the past.

Messages from underground leaders reaching the United Press said the patriot armies were prepared to strike and were awaiting only the signal from the Supreme Allied Command.

De Gaulle in London

Gen. Charles de Gaulle, leader of the French liberation forces, arrived in London and conferred with Eisenhower and Prime Minister Churchill, apparently on military matters. De Gaulle was believed to have told Eisenhower that French resistance forces were prepared for an all-out effort when the Supreme Command was ready for them.

The French resistance movement, which military experts agreed was one of the finest underground armies in Europe, is estimated to contain 150,000 armed patriots. Led by the Maquis, the patriots have battled the Germans continuously for four months and forced the Nazis to keep troops, badly needed in Russia and Italy, on French soil.

Supplies and material have been pouring into Europe’s underground caverns for many weeks.

In accordance with Eisenhower’s plea against recklessness, exiled leaders of Norway, Belgium and the Netherlands appealed to their people by radio today to wait and obey Allied instructions and be wary of German trickery.

King Haakon of Norway told the Norwegians they “must not let their enthusiasm lead them into a premature uprising.”

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