NORMANDY CAMPAIGN

June to Aug., 1944, in World War II. The Allied invasion of the European continent through Normandy began about 12:15 a.m. on June 6, 1944 (D-day). The plan, known as Operation Overlord, had been prepared since 1943; supreme command over its execution was entrusted to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. In May, 1944, tactical bombing was begun in order to destroy German communications in N France. Just after midnight on June 6, British and American airborne forces landed behind the German coastal fortifications known as the Atlantic Wall. They were followed after daybreak by the seaborne troops of the U.S. 1st Army and British 2d Army. Field Marshal B. L. Montgomery was in command of the Allied land forces. Some 4,000 transports, 800 warships, and innumerable small craft, under Admiral Sir B. H. Ramsay, supported the invasion, and more than 11,000 aircraft, under Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory, formed a protective umbrella. While naval guns and Allied bombers assaulted the beach fortifications, the men swarmed ashore. At the base of the Cotentin peninsula the U.S. forces established two beachheads—Utah Beach, W of the Vire River, and Omaha Beach, E of the Vire, the scene of the fiercest fighting. British troops, who had landed near Bayeux on three beaches called Gold, Juno, and Sword, advanced quickly but were stopped before Caen. On June 12 the fusion of the Allied beachheads was complete. The German commander, Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, found that Allied air strength prevented use of his reserves. U.S. forces under Gen. Omar N. Bradley cut off the Cotentin peninsula (June 18), and Cherbourg surrendered on June 27. The Americans then swung south. After difficult fighting in easily defendable "hedgerow" country they captured (July 18) the vital communications center of Saint-Lô, cutting off the German force under Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. The U.S. 3d Army under Gen. George S. Patton was thrown into the battle and broke through the German left flank at Avranches. Patton raced into Brittany and S to the Loire, swinging east to outflank Paris. A German attempt to cut the U.S. forces in two at Avranches was foiled (Aug. 7–11). The British had taken Caen on July 9, but they were again halted by a massive German tank concentration. They resumed their offensive in August and captured Falaise on Aug. 16. Between them and the U.S. forces driving north from Argentan the major part of the German 7th Army was caught in the "Falaise pocket" and was wiped out by Aug. 23, opening the way for the Allies to overrun N France.

See G. A. Harrison, Cross Channel Attack (1951); C. Ryan, The Longest Day (1959, repr. 1967); A. McKee, Last Round against Rommel (1964); A. A. Mitchie, The Invasion of Europe (1964); Army Times Ed., D-Day, the Greatest Invasion (1969); S. E. Ambrose, D-Day, June 6, 1944 (1994); R. J. Drez, Voices of D-Day (1994); R. Miller, Nothing Less than Victory (1994); T. A. Wilson, D-Day 1944 (1994).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Normandy Campaign  - 965 results

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...Jarymowycz, Tank Tactics: From Normandy to Lorraine (Boulder, CO: Rienner...English, The Canadian Army and the Normandy Campaign: A Study in the Failure of High...20 Carlo DEste, Decision in Normandy (London: HarperCollins, 1983...
...The 29th Infantry Division in Normandy . Harrisburg, PA: Stockpole...and H. Essame. The Battle for Normandy . London: B. T. Batsford, Ltd...Ralph. Ultra in the West: The Normandy Campaign, 1944-1945 . New York: Scribners...
...that some higher commanders in Normandy unknowingly and unnecessarily cast...sense The Canadian Army and the Normandy Campaign illustrates the cumulative nature...indispensable 1944: The Canadians in Normandy . The more one reads Stacey, the...
...Essame, The Battle for Normandy Philadelphia: Dufour, 1965...The Canadian Army and the Normandy Campaign Westport, Conn.: Praeger...invaluable discussion of tactics in Normandy and later campaigns. * John Ellis, The Sharp...
...particularly with regard to the Normandy campaign, see Alan F. Wilt...Rommel and the Normandy Campaign; Friedrich Ruge, Rommel...Speidel, We Defended Normandy, p. 120. Speidel...Speidel, We Defended Normandy, p. 130.
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journal articles on: Normandy Campaign  - 242 results

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Panzer Campaigns 2: Normandy 44 Panzer Campaigns 2: Normandy 44. CD-ROM. HPS Simulations (http://hpssims...processor, 32 MB of RAM, and 200 MB of hard-drive space. Normandy 44 is the follow-on to HPSs Smolensk 41, which the...
...pertained in the Normandy campaign. Although General...operations during the Normandy campaign. Moreover, these...translate into a campaign of parallel warfare, of course. Campaigns require an awareness...parallel war had in Normandy. To Winston Churchill...
...the phases of the campaign. The distributed...landings along the Normandy coastline to the march...story. In doctrine, campaigns are targeted on strategic...the success of the campaign include seizing beaches...armies move inland. Campaigns, because of their...progresses. In the Normandy campaign, the final phase...
...the Canadian Army in Normandy (12-13). Copp sets...primary records from the campaign, Copps impassioned...combat effectiveness in Normandy. In looking particularly...in the 1944 Normandy campaign. It adds important...military history, the Normandy campaign, and the controversy...
...2008. 575 pages. $50.00. Normandy to Victory is a must-read...a masterful publication in Normandy to Victory but also is singularly...When one thinks of the ground campaign and the accomplishments of...panoramic accounts found in Normandy to Victory is especially illuminating...
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magazine articles on: Normandy Campaign  - 277 results

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...Russell Chamberlin THE BATTLE OF NORMANDY, which marked the opening of...closed and so ended the Battle of Normandy. Those eighty days form the...Day Landings and the Battle of Normandy. Here the campaigns have been reduced to a dozen...
...months of the Norman campaign in Charles Messengers...Atlas: Anatomy of the Normandy Campaign (176 pages...the best books on the Normandy campaign--notably Robin Neillands...the book to take to Normandy if anyone wishes to...
...by Simon Trew The Battle for Normandy Antony Beevor Viking 592pp...provocative things to say about the campaign. However, readers may wonder...researched account yet of the Normandy campaign, are convincing...Golden Beach: Battle Zone Normandy (The History Press, 2004...
...exhibitions, and the Battle for Normandy was a mosaic of little battles...most important of the whole campaign since it required a demonstration...to the south, and certainly Normandy was one of the main areas of...Somerset Light Infantry in this campaign in his book 18 Platoon describes...
...celebration at Pegasus Bridge, a key Normandy objective of British parachute...1898. Intoned a chaplain of the Normandy Veterans Association, "At the...died during the entire, 80-day Normandy campaign. On Omaha Beach, just below Colville...
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newspaper articles on: Normandy Campaign  - 487 results

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...Scale of the Sacrifice Made in the Normandy Campaign. Paul Groves and Jennifer Sym Report...who fell in the three-month long campaign are buried there. The graves are...British war cemetery in Bayeux, Normandy, northern France
...described as the emotional return to Normandy of Grandads Army. Sixty years...more than 700 casualties in the Normandy campaign. But others boasting better health...and terrified as dawn broke on Normandy. Breakfast of bully beef and powdered...
...William Carson rolled towards the Normandy sands and the ramp doors rattled...men from his division during the Normandy Campaign seemed senseless. It was only...days, as the Allies took hold in Normandy, Prime Minister Winston Churchill...
Salute to Fallen of Normandy; ANNIVERSARY: New Mayor to Lay...Warwickshire who lost their lives in the Normandy campaign. Wreaths will be laid in the towns...the bloody campaign following the Normandy invasion of 1944 and Riversley Park...
...1944; Queen Leads Tribute on Normandy Beach. HEROES of the liberation...pilgrimages to sites throughout Normandy to recall their memories of friends...the beginning of an 80-day campaign to liberate Normandy which involved three million...
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encyclopedia articles on: Normandy Campaign  - 18 results

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NORMANDY CAMPAIGN June to Aug., 1944, in World War II. The Allied invasion of the European continent through Normandy began about 12:15 a.m. on June 6, 1944 (D-day). The plan...
...Calvados dept., N France, in Normandy. Once an important textile center...the castle of the first dukes of Normandy. The town also has a chateau...Falaise was a key point in the Normandy campaign of World War II and was heavily...
...naval forces in the disastrous Gallipoli campaign (1915) of World War I. Amphibious...amphibious warfare was the invasion of Normandy by the Allies from England on June 6, 1944 (see Normandy campaign ). That action was a prime example...
...Poland. While this campaign ended with the partition...see North Africa, campaigns in , by the Italian...Allies in N France (see Normandy campaign ) and a secondary landing...After heavy fighting in Normandy, Allied armored divisions...the completion of the campaigns in the Solomon Islands...
...of Calais in the Hundred Years War. U.S. troops used Dartmouth as an embarkation point for the Normandy invasion (see under Normandy campaign ) in World War II. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press...
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