Archives Document related to Overlord May 28 1944 British Assault Area and the Naval Operations for Normandy.
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Posted by Vicky | Comments : (0)
Category : Archive Stories, Kay Summersby
Tags: 101st Airborne Division, Addison Road Station, Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory, Air Ministry, Algiers, American Red Cross, Anthony Eden, Anvil, Anzio, Army Group's Bryanston, Associated Press, Aussies, B-17, B-29, Belgians, Berkeley Square, Bovington, Bovington Airport, Britain's West Point, British Military Assistant, British War Cabinet, Bryanston Square, Cairo, Canadians, Capri, Chesterfield Hill, Churchill, Col Ivan Cobbald, Court Calendar, Czechs, Darmouth, Dominion Prime Ministers, Duke of Norfolk, Dutch, Edgeware Road, Edward Stettinius, England, European Theater Ribbon, Field Marshal Jan Christiaan Smuts, Free French, Gen Charles Corlett, Gen Charles de Gaulle, Gen Maxwell Taylor, Grosvenor Square, Hackbridge Kennels, Hampton Court, Harvey Gibson, Hays Lodge, House of Lords, Hyde Park, Indians, Ireland, Irish, Italy, Kensington, King of England, LCT, London, LST, Lt Col Jimmy Gault, Luxor, Marrakech, Mayfair, Montgomery, New Zealanders, Newbury, Norfolk House, North-Africa, Norwegians, Overlord, Palestine, Paris, Park West, Piccadilly Circus, Poles, President Roosevelt, Prestwick, Richmond Park, Russian, Ruth Briggs, Salisbury, Sandhurst, Scots, Scots Guards, Sicily, Sir Louis Gregg, Snuffy Nixon, South Americans, Telegraph Cottage, Tenby, Times Square, Tooey Spaatz, Torch, Tunisia, Tunisian Victory Lunch, Welsh, Wes Gallagher, World War I, XIX Corps, Yorkshiremen
Suddenly the plane shot upward, roaring away from the airfield. We all smashed back against our seats. Maybe the wheels won’t come down, someone said in a small voice. Snuffy Nixon, the navigator, stuck his head in the cabin and broke the silence. Don’t worry, folks. I just got mixed up in my figuring and picked the wrong country. Not France ! we cried. No, said Snuffy, it’s not France. But it’s not England, either. He grinned over at me. This is Kay’s home. We almost landed in southern Ireland !
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Posted by Vicky | Comments : (0)
Category : Archive Stories, Kay Summersby
Tags: Admiral, Admiral William P. Leahy, Algiers, American Expeditionary Force, Amilcar, Archive Stories, Axel Munthe, Bari, Bay of Naples, Britain, C-54, Caacie, Cairo, Capri, Caruso, Caserta Palace, Chemical Warfare, Chief of Staff, Chief of the Imperial General Staff, Clark, Dakar, Distinguished Service Cross, Egypt, Eisenhower, Ellen Ruthmann, Flying Fortress, Gen Carl Tooey Spaatz, Gen Mark W. Clark, Gen Walter Bedell (Beetle) Smith, Harry Hopkins, Italian POWs, Italy, Legion of Merit, London, Maj Gen Leroy H. Watson, Malta, Marrakech, Marshall, Mattie Pinette, Mediterranean, Mike Reilly, Mount Vesuvius, Naples, Nazi Europe, North-Africa, Overlord, Pacific Theater, Palestine, Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt, Prime Minister, Prince Urnberto, Red Cross, Rome, Sarah Oliver, Sicily, Signal Corps, Sir Alan Brooke, Sir Winston Churchill, Smith, Spaatz, Sue Sarafin, Telek, Tunis, Washington, Watson, White House
Returning from Cairo to Algiers, I began digging away at the minor mountain of paper accumulated on my desk. Memories of Egypt and Palestine faded completely as I worked late each night to reduce those piles of the General’s fan mail. Like everyone else at headquarters, however, I was still busier on unofficial duties… working overtime on the old rumor that Gen Marshall, not Gen Ike, would head the new American Expeditionary Force building in Britain, and that Ike would go to Washington to become Chief of Staff.
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Posted by Vicky | Comments : (2)
Category : Archive Stories, Kay Summersby
Tags: 5th Army, 7th Army, 93rd Evacuation Hospital, Admiral Cunningham, Advance Command Post, Air Chief Marshal Tedder, Algiers, American, Amilcar, Anzio, Arkansas, Averell Harriman, Bea Lillie, Beetle Smith, Benito Mussolini, Bernard Law Montgomery, Bizerte, Bob Hope, British, Canada, Cape Bon, Cordell Hull, Darlan Fiasco, Donald Nelson, Drew Pearson, France, Frank Knox, Fredric March, French, French Committee of National Liberation, Gen Brehon Somervell, Gen Giraud, General de Gaulle, Gibraltar, Governor of Algeria, Grand Cordon, Henry L. Stimson, Henry Morgenthau, Hobart (Hap) Gay, Husky, India, Italian, Italy, James Landis, Kasserine Pass, King of Britain, King of Sicily, La Marsa, Lancaster, Legion of Honor, Lisbon, Lord Louis Mountbatten, Maison Blanche, Malta, Margaret Chick, Messina, Montgomery, Nana Rae, Naval Aide, Noel Coward, Overlord, Palermo, Patton, Prime Minister, Red Cross, Ruth Briggs, Secretary of War, Sicily, Sidi Athman, Sue Sarafin, Tooey Spaatz, Torch, Tripoli, Tunisian Campaign, United States, USO, Vivian Leigh, WAC, Washington
The King’s visit was so hush-hush that we drove to Maison Blanche airport just as usual, with only the motorbike escort to clear our way. No special guards were provided. At the field, we moved down to a distant corner and joined the British High Brass, including Admiral Cunningham and Air Chief Marshal Tedder. Butch whispered he would open the door for His Majesty.
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Posted by Snafu | Comments : (0)
Category : Archives Movies, Patton's 3d Army
Tags: 2nd Division, 32nd Division, 37-VIIC-HQs-Rolandsdeck, 3A-HQs-Mayen, 3A-III-C-HQs-Polch, 3A-IVC-HQs-Cochen, 42nd Division, Adenau, Ahrweiler, Altenkirchen, Austria, Berlin, Chaumont, Coblenz, Cochem., Czechoslovakia, Engers, France, Gen John J. Pershing, General Order-198, Hachenburg, Limburg, Lt Gen Courtney Hodges, Lt Gen George S. Patton Jr, Lt Gen Hunter Liggett, Lt Gen Walter Krueger, Maj Gen Charles Muir, Maj Gen John L. Hines, Maj Gen Joseph T. Dickman, Maj Gen William G. Hahn, Marshal Ferdinand Foch, Mauthausen, Mayen, Neuwied, November 7 1918, Overlord, Remagen, Rhens, Stadtkreis Trier, Third Army, Third Army III Corps, Third Army IV Corps, Third Army VII Corps, Treaty of Versailles, Trier Regierungsbezirk, Weimar, Westerburg, World War One
The Third United States Army was first activated as a formation during the First World War on November 7 1918, at Chaumont, France, when the GHQ-AEF issued General Order # 198 organizing the Third Army and announcing its headquarters staff. On the 15th, Maj Gen Joseph T. Dickman assumed command and issued Third Army General Order # 1 The third Army consisted of three corps (III, Maj Gen John L. Hines; IV, Maj Gen Charles Muir; and VII, Maj Gen William G. Hahn) and seven divisions.
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Review from Christine Henning, USA
The story of the paratroop and glider corps, who landed in France the day before D-Day and cleared the way for the invasion, is told with first person narration. It’s actually a fairly compelling story, which impresses you with the bravery of the men involved. The footage is excellent, giving you a real feel for what it must have been like to be over there.
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