Stephen E. Ambrose's D-Day Invasion

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June 6th, 1944, the day people say was a terrible and horrific day. The day many lives were lost but heroes were born. This day in history we know as D-Day. The book by Stephen E. Ambrose tells us that more than one hundred and sixty thousand troops were deployed and landed among a fifty mile stretch across the beaches of Normandy. Dwight D. Eisenhower called the operation a crusade in which, “we will accept nothing less than full victory.” More than five-thousands Ships and thirteen-thousand aircraft supported the D-Day invasion, and by day’s end, the Allies gained a foot-hold in Continental Europe. The cost in lives on D-Day was high. More than nine-thousand Allied Soldiers were killed or wounded, but their sacrifice allowed more than one-hundred …show more content…

1942 in August the nineteenth, there was raid on the French port of Dieppe that had resulted in heavy losses convinces D-Day planners to land on the beaches, so discussions and preparations to have an Allied invasion across the English Channel. The Americans and British had a meeting called the Trident Conference which was a British and American strategy meeting on the war. In Washington, DC, Winston Churchill, President Roosevelt and their military advisers discuss, among other things, crossing the English Channel. The Germans thought they were a lot smarter than anyone else in the war and they had there on plans about when and where people would try to attack them and they thought they knew exactly how to stop them and beat them in any circumstances. Hitler was a man who thought he had it all figured out and nobody could out smart him. The Germans were known as the country who was trying to take over everyone and any place they could get their hands on. In 1944 the Germans were had it figured out that there was going to be an invasion along the north coast of France, but they had trouble of where exactly it would be. So they started to build up their troops and artillery near Calais where the English Channel was the narrowest. Somewhere between eleven pm through 3am, thirteen thousand paratroopers and gliders carried heavy armed

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