Wading or swimming ashore on June
6, 1944, were some of World War II's bravest soldiers. Whether
demolition experts, rangers trained to scale the cliffs of Normandy,
bulldozer
operators ready to create a new network on roads, or just infantrymen
primed to establish positions, these men all shared a strong sense
of determination to take the fight to the enemy and take France back
from the Germans.
"Probably the only reason I survived is that
the Germans weren't worried about that first person up ahead."
Claud
Woodring’s job on D-Day was challenge enough.
Scheduled to be among the first soldiers to land on the
beach on D-Day, he was to demolish barbed wire so that
the troops could advance unimpeded. But he found himself
swimming ashore when his boat hit a mine several hundred
yards from shore. Despite horrific casualty rates, Woodring
and his men achieved their objective, only to face a new
challenge: fighting the Germans amid the hedgerows of Normandy.
"What
I thought were piles of cordwood I later learned were the bodies
of 2500 men, killed by withering fire from the Nazi gun emplacements
built into the cliff."
-- Tracy Sugarman
"...you
could practically walk from one ship to another to cross
that bay."