D-Day and the Normandy Campaign | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2024)

Topic

On June 6, 1944, the Allies launched the long-anticipated invasion of Normandy, France. Soldiers from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and other Allied nations faced Hitler's formidable Atlantic Wall as they landed on the beaches of Normandy.

D-Day and the Normandy Campaign | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (1)

Top Photo: "Into the Jaws of Death" — US troops wade through water and Nazi gunfire, June 6, 1944. Records of the US Coast Guard (NAID 355).

Buildup and Training

The planning for an invasion in northwest Europe began years in advance, although it was not until December 1943,when General Dwight D. Eisenhower was appointed Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force, that preparations for the future operation, code-named Overlord, intensified.

The Plan

Operation Fortitude successfully deceived German High Command into expecting a landing at Pas-de-Calais. Instead, the Allies targeted a 50-mile stretch of Normandy coastline. The plan had two components: Operation Neptune, the naval assault phase, and Operation Overlord, the broader invasion strategy. Approximately 160,000 Allied troops were to land across five beaches: Sword, Juno, Gold, Omaha, and Utah, with British and American airborne forces landing inland.

Featured Article

Planning for D-Day: Preparing Operation Overlord

Despite their early agreement on a strategy focused on defeating “Germany First,” the US and British Allies engaged in a lengthy and divisive debate over how exactly to conduct this strategy before they finally settled on a plan for Operation Overlord.

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D-Day

Initially set for June 5, D-Day was delayed due to poor weather. With a small window of opportunity in the weather, Eisenhower decided to go—D-Day would be June 6, 1944. Paratroopers began landing after midnight, followed by a massive naval and aerial bombardment at 6:30 a.m. American forces faced severe resistance at Omaha and Utah Beaches. Despite challenges, including mislandings and fierce opposition, Allied forces established a critical beachhead in Normandy.

Hedgerow Fighting

For all of the preparations made for Overlord, the Allied forces were ill-equipped to fight in the hedgerows they quickly encountered in Normandy. The Normandy bocage presented unexpected challenges with its dense hedgerows and narrow roads. German forces used the hedgerows defensively, creating deadly killing fields that Allied troops had to cross. The Allies had to adapt their tactics to overcome these obstacles and advance.

The End of the Normandy Campaign

American forces isolated and captured Cherbourg by June 27, while British forces secured Caen by July 9. Despite these victories, progress was slow. On July 24–25, American forces launched Operation Cobra, breaking through German lines near Saint-Lô. This marked the end of the Normandy Campaign and the beginning of the Allied push to liberate northern France and Paris.

D-Day 80th Anniversary Media Resources D-Day Timeline

Must Reads

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    D-Day: The Allies Invade Europe

    In May 1944, the Western Allies were finally prepared to deliver their greatest blow of the war, the long-delayed, cross-channel invasion of northern France, code-named Overlord.

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    Operation Neptune: A Tale of Two Landings

    While the Overlord operation was a combined effort of land, sea, and air forces, the amphibious assault plan was given the code name Neptune.

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    'A Pure Miracle': The D-Day Invasion of Normandy

    This column is the first of three D-Day columns written by war correspondent Ernie Pyle describing the Allied invasion of Normandy.

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    Planning for D-Day: Preparing Operation Overlord

    Despite their early agreement on a strategy focused on defeating “Germany First,” the US and British Allies engaged in a lengthy and divisive debate over how exactly to conduct this strategy before they finally settled on a plan for Operation Overlord, the D-Day invasion of Normandy.

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    Gold, Juno, and Sword Beaches on D-Day

    The British landing area lay between Port-en-Bessin and Ouistreham where they would link up with 6th British Airborne Division along the Orne River, after their landing to protect the eastern flank of the Allied lodgment.

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    'The Horrible Waste of War': The Wreckage after D-Day

    This column is the second of three D-Day columns written by war correspondent Ernie Pyle describing the Allied invasion of Normandy.

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    Why D-Day?

    If the US and its western Allies wanted to win this war as rapidly as possible, they couldn’t sit around and wait: not for a naval blockade, or for strategic bombing to work, or for the Soviets.

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    Practice Makes

    Slapton Sands taught the Allies lessons, at a high price.

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    The Reception: The Germans on D-Day

    How the sheer raw power of the Alliesoverwhelmed the Germans.

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    Heroic Beauty: Exposing Omaha Beach

    How a Signal Corps photographic team took one of the most iconic images of Omaha Beach.

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    The First Ships of Operation Neptune

    The first to cross the English Channel on D-Day, minesweepers cleared the way for the invasion of France.

Watch videos about the D-Day invasion of Normandy and listen to oral histories and firsthand accounts from WWII veterans.

Watch Now

To commemorate the 80th anniversary of D-Day—a day now known as the greatest amphibious landing in history—The National WWII Museum will explore the epic battle through events on Thursday, June 6, and Friday, June 7, 2024, on its campus in New Orleans.

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Oral Histories

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  • Event Recap

    Beyond the Beaches: D+1 and the Battle for Normandy

    At this free daylong public symposium, guests heard from leading historians on the challenges, battles, and victories that followed the June 6 Allied landings and made the liberation of Europe from Nazi oppression possible.

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    The Airborne Invasion of Normandy

    On June 5, 13,400 American paratroopers boarded C-47 aircraft for the largest airborne operation in history. Problems began as they crossed into France.

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    FDR's D-Day Prayer

    On June 6, 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt's usual "fireside chat" would be replaced with a joint prayer with the American people.

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    Article

    'A Pure Miracle': The D-Day Invasion of Normandy

    This column is the first of three D-Day columns written by war correspondent Ernie Pyle describing the Allied invasion of Normandy.

    Learn More

  • Article Type

    Article

    D-Day: The Allies Invade Europe

    In May 1944, the Western Allies were finally prepared to deliver their greatest blow of the war, the long-delayed, cross-channel invasion of northern France, code-named Overlord.

    Learn More

  • Article Type

    From the Collection

    A Bond Broken Only by Death

    On June 6, 1944, two brothers from Kansas landed at Omaha Beach in Normandy, France. They promised to meet on the beach after the fighting was donea promise that would remain unfulfilled.

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    From the Collection

    The First Man on the Beaches of Normandy

    US Army Captain Leonard T. Schroeder Jr. was the first man down the ramp and straight into waist-deep water at Utah Beach. As he trudged toward the shoreline, his M-1 helmet stayed firmly affixed to his head as he tried to avoid enemy fire.

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    From the Collection

    D-Day behind Barbed Wire: Hope for POWs

    On June 6, 1944, news of the Normandy invasion spread through German prisoner-of-war camps like wildfire, igniting hope in Allied POWs.

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  • Article Type

    Article

    Operation Neptune: A Tale of Two Landings

    While the Overlord operation was a combined effort of land, sea, and air forces, the amphibious assault plan was given the code name Neptune.

    Learn More

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    Article

    D-Day Doctrine: Six Elements for a Successful Landing

    Planning the Overlord assault didn’t just happen overnight. It was a result of a prewar doctrinal framework built upon six identified components for an amphibious assault.

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  • Article Type

    Article

    'At Last We Have Come to D-Day'

    In the June 7, 1944, edition of her newspaper column My Day, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt reflected on the news of the D-Day landings in Normandy and the long path ahead to victory in Europe.

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    'A Long Thin Line of Personal Anguish'

    This column is the last of three D-Day columns written by war correspondent Ernie Pyle describing the Allied invasion of Normandy.

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D-Day and the Normandy Campaign | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2024)
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