D-Day
, June 6 1944. Air-Power: Significant or not? A private who was aboard one of the first few gliders to reach Normandy expresses his feeling: "I experienced an interesting psychological change in the few minutes before and immediately after take off. As I had climbed aboard and strapped myself into my seat I felt tense, strange and extremely nervous. It was as if I was in a fantasy dream world and thought that at any moment I would wake up from this unreality and find that I was back in the barrack room at Bulford Camp. Whilst we laughed and sang to raise our spirits - and perhaps to show others that we were no scared - personally I knew that I was frightened to death. The very idea of ...
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can do about it.' I sat back and enjoyed my first trip to Europe." Yet another rifleman who was carried to the beach in the LCVP�s relates one of his incidents: "I got on the gun. I set the gun up, and we�re looking, we�re looking. He says, "See if you can spot him." All of a sudden I spotted him, about 200 yards away, and I�d say maybe 30 or 40 feet higher than me. He wasn�t firing at me. He was firing down across. So when he opened up again � the Germans, when they fire, they fire fast, they don�t fire like we did, because they change the barrels of their machine guns in seconds. Ours were a pain. We had to take the whole gun apart and screw the barrel off, and then put another barrel on. They would get hot if you fired like the Germans. We only fired bursts of three or four at a time. The Germans put their finger down, they�d run a hundred off. Because they just push a button, the barrel falls out, and they put another one on. We couldn�t do that. We had to take the whole ...
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coast, planning to use them as assault boats. But he hesitated because he realized the risks of an amphibious attack. Also, he knew that the British navy would destroy itself, if necessary in an attempt to smash a German invasion fleet. Still the idea was tempting. The British knew as well as Hitler did that if the Germans could make the landing successfully, England would be lost. Meanwhile, Royal Air Force fighter pilots in their spitfires and hurricanes, lashed back at the great German air force. And British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and the British people looked forward to the day when England would attack. Then Hitler postponed his English invasion plans. it was, from his point ...
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D-Day. (2008, November 30). Retrieved November 28, 2024, from http://www.essayworld.com/essays/D-Day/93873
"D-Day." Essayworld.com. Essayworld.com, 30 Nov. 2008. Web. 28 Nov. 2024. <http://www.essayworld.com/essays/D-Day/93873>
"D-Day." Essayworld.com. November 30, 2008. Accessed November 28, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/D-Day/93873.
"D-Day." Essayworld.com. November 30, 2008. Accessed November 28, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/D-Day/93873.
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