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During the Normandy Invasion of
WWII, Carentan lay between Omaha and Utah assault
beaches, and was the location of violent fighting
before American troops linked up there on June 13.
A brief stop in the town…
Angoville au Plain
A very moving place! Our tour here
will first allow you to enter a 12th/13th Century
church where two medics of the 506th, Bob Wright and
Kenneth Moore took care of 80 German and American
wounded for over 72 consecutive hours following the
initial hours of the jump into Normandy. Write and
Moore were honored by the residents of this small
village by a Memorial, which you will see, and a recently
installed stained glass window in this famous church
in commemoration of their life saving efforts. You
will enter into the courtyard of the farm where the
colonel Sink, Commander of the 506th PIR, established
his second CP. The "Easy Company" stayed here from
June 7 to the attack of Carentan.
OVERLORDTOUR has obtained a
very special permission to enter this farm.
Drop Zone D
Our tour progresses next to the DZ
"D". This was the area where Colonel Johnson of the
501st landed. From here, he launched the attack onto
the lock of La Barquette.
Sainte Mère Eglise
Although Sainte-Mere-Eglise was the
area where the 82nd Airborne were schedule to jump
and land, the first paratroopers who landed here were
instead, members of the 101st Airborne Division. Several
groups of the 101st Division, landed here, miles away
from their Drop Zone, and instead, mistakenly landed
on top of this village. "Easy Company", for the most
part was also misdropped southeast of the town with
some men landing in the center of the Village. "Dog",
"Easy" and "Fox" Companies belonging to 2nd Battalion
506th PIR were also to jump at around 1:00 a.m. on
DZ "C", near Sainte-Marie-du-Mont. Instead, due to
all of these missed drops, Sainte-Mere-Eglise was
officially the first town liberated at 4:30 AM on
the day of the Invasion.
Sainte Mere Eglise Museum
Here you will see an actual CG 4
Waco glider, a C-47 transport plane, and a number
of historical military artifacts, which have been
professionally displayed to commemorate and honor
the D-day invasion. A film comprised of archive material
is available to visitors retracing the mission and
footsteps of the many paratroopers who landed in Normandy.
This museum is one to see in any D-Day tour!
Crash of the C47 # 66
at Beuzeville au Plain
On June 5, 1st
Lieutenant Thomas Meehan III boarded a C-47 to parachute
into Normandy. Prior to the jump however, he had just
been appointed "E" Company Commander, replacing Captain
Sobel. Meehan was in plane 66, along with the Company's
staff comprised of 16 paratroopers. His plane crashed
in a field at Beuzeville -Au-Plain. A tour of the
site of this crash will enable you to see the monument
erected in memory of Lt. Meehan, but also the field
where the crash actually occurred.
Marmion’s farm
The very first newsreel of the airborne invasion
in Normandy shown in movie theatres in the United
States was filmed at this particular farmhouse. Due
to special permission given by the owner to our tour
company, you will have the privilege of actually
entering this farm, and being in the exact locations
of many of the of the best known American press photographs
taken during WWII at this site. Some of the photos
show Stopka’s task force displaying the first
Nazi flag captured by the 101st Airborne Division.
Many famous photographs in D-Day and WWII books were
taken at this site. OVERLORDTOUR has obtained a very
special permission to enter this farm.
OVERLORDTOUR has obtained a very special permission
to enter this farm.
Utah Beach
It is impossible to visit the VII
corps sector without a brief stop on the beach.
Brecourt Manor
On D-Day, the
6th, of June, 1944, Easy Company of the 506th fought
one of its most important battles at this location.
In a field between Grand Chemin and Brecourt Manor,
a ditch line (hedgerow) with trees bordered the property.
Spaced at intervals along that ditch, were 4 German
cannon batteries consisting of 105mm guns. The guns
were zeroed in on U.S. forces landing on Utah Beach,
near Exit 2. Lt. Dick Winters of Easy Company led
a small group of Easy Company men to this site, and
systematically took out all four guns at this site,
and was awarded the Distinguished Medal of Honor for
this attack. Several other of his men were also awarded
medals for their actions as well. It is said that
the strategic tactics employed by Lt. Winters at this
particular field are now taught at the American West
Point Academy. Come and discover the field where Lieutenant
Winters and a group of paratroopers instinctively
led the attack on these batteries without elaborate
plans or briefing, saving countless American lives
on Utah beach. Permission to enter is exclusively
permitted only to Overlord Tours.
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