D-DAY History in an Hour
Rupert Colley
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page D-DAY History in an Hour Rupert Colley
Introduction
Background
Deception
Eisenhower
The Atlantic Wall
Bombing
Training
Eve of the Invasion
6 June: D-Day (the 1,738th day of the war)
Five Beaches
The Battle of Normandy
Liberation
What Might Have Been…
Appendix 1: Key Players
Appendix 2: Timeline
Appendix 3: D-Day and Battle of Normandy Statistics
Appendix 4: Normandy Cemeteries
Copyright
Got Another Hour?
About the Publisher
INTRODUCTION CONTENTS Cover Title Page D-DAY History in an Hour Rupert Colley Introduction Background Deception Eisenhower The Atlantic Wall Bombing Training Eve of the Invasion 6 June: D-Day (the 1,738th day of the war) Five Beaches The Battle of Normandy Liberation What Might Have Been… Appendix 1: Key Players Appendix 2: Timeline Appendix 3: D-Day and Battle of Normandy Statistics Appendix 4: Normandy Cemeteries Copyright Got Another Hour? About the Publisher
D-Day, 6 June 1944, was a date that altered the course of history. The invasion of Occupied France by Allied forces, codenamed Operation Overlord, had been years in the planning and subject to the utmost secrecy. The Germans knew that an attack would come but when and where was the subject of much speculation for Adolf Hitler and his generals. For the operation to succeed, it was vital for the Allies to maximize the element of surprise. The Allied commanders, planning the assault, could not allow the enemy to meet the attack in strength at the very moment it was at its most vulnerable – the time it took to land troops on the beaches of Normandy. The stakes could not have been higher – the liberation of Western Europe from the occupying forces of Nazi Germany, ahead of the assault on Germany itself and, ultimately, the defeat of Hitler.
In order to trick the Germans into believing the invasion would take place elsewhere, the Allies embarked on an elaborate campaign of deception. The ruse worked and on D-Day 156,000 Allied troops managed to land along a fifty-mile stretch of Normandy coastline. It was vital, also, to maintain the deception even after D-Day to oblige Hitler into keeping much of his force back in preparation for a possible assault elsewhere.
D-Day was, for the Germans, the beginning of the end. Now the prospect of liberation from Nazi rule was within reach. The sixth of June was the day that millions of people across occupied Europe had hoped and waited for. Among them was 14-year-old Anne Frank. On 22 May 1944, Anne wrote in her diary, ‘All of Amsterdam, all of Holland, in fact the entire western coast of Europe all the way down to Spain, are talking about the invasion day and night, debating, making bets and… hoping. The suspense is rising to fever pitch.’
This, in an hour, is the epic story of D-Day.
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