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Destination Normandy - Three American Regiments on D-Day (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R1,991
Discovery Miles 19 910
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Destination Normandy - Three American Regiments on D-Day (Hardcover, New)
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Bennett collects oral histories from men of three United States
regiments that participated in the invasion of Normandy on June 6,
1944. The 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment was the most widely
scattered of the American parachute infantry regiments to be
dropped on D-Day. However, the efforts of 180 men to stop the
advance of an SS Panzer Grenadier division largely have been
ignored outside of France. The 116th Infantry Regiment received the
highest number of casualties on Omaha Beach of any Allied unit on
D-Day. Stationed in England through most of the war, it had been
the butt of jokes while other regiments did the fighting and dying
in North Africa and the Mediterranean; that changed on June 6,
1944. And the 22nd Infantry Regiment, a unit that had fought in
almost every campaign waged by the U.S. Army since 1812, came
ashore on Utah Beach quite easily before getting embroiled in a
series of savage fights to cross the marshland behind the beach and
to capture the German heavy batteries to the north. Each
participant's story is woven into the larger picture of the
assault, allowing Bennett to go beyond the largely personal
viewpoints yielded by traditional oral history but avoiding the
impersonal nature of studies of grand strategy. In addition to the
interviews and memoirs Bennett collected, he also discovered fresh
documentary evidence from American, British, and French archives
that play an important part in facilitating this new approach, as
well as archives in Britain and France. The author unearths new
stories and questions from D-Day, such as the massacre of soldiers
from the 507th at Graignes, Hemevez, and elsewhere. This new
material includes a focus on the regimental level, which is all but
ignored by historians, while still covering strategic, tactical,
and human issues. His conclusions highlight common misperceptions
about the Normandy landings. Questions have already been raised
about the wisdom of the Anglo-American amphibious doctrine employed
on D-Day. In this study, Bennett continues to challenge the
assumption that the operation was an exemplary demonstration of
strategic planning.
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