The following riveting account is the true-life recollection of a friend's father who helped land soldiers and equipment on Omaha beach on D-Day. Both these men are now deceased, but I cannot let this story sink beneath the waves ... so I am reproducing it here just as it was given to me by the son for the sake of history and in the memory of this gallant father who was lucky enough to live though the hell that was D-Day:
D-Day
as Seen From The Bridge of The U.S. LCT (6) 544
Description of the LCT
US LCT (6) 544, the navy
designation for Landing Craft Tank, was one of the approximately 5,000 vessels
of all types that participated in the 6/6/44 Normandy invasion. As a craft,
loosely defined as a vessel that could be carried aboard a ship, it did not
rate an official name, or a USS (United States Ship) designation.
The craft was a 125’ long, 25’
wide and six foot in depth flat- bottomed barge like vessel. It had a propulsion
plant of three marine diesel engines, located below deck, two rudders, a bow
ramp, two 20mm anti-aircraft cannons, and a heavy-duty stern anchor to help in
beach retraction. It was a comfortable vessel compared to a prior model. It had
a shower in a large head, hot water, and a separate galley with an electric
stove and a refrigerator. Navigation wise, there was a 12’ lamp for signaling,
a good magnetic compass, and a short wave radio including a voice channel, all
lacking in a prior model. The 12 man crew
of the 544 was composed of five veteran petty officers who had served in the
North African and Mediterranean campaigns, a skipper, and his assistant who
were recently graduated ensigns, and five seamen who were fresh out of boot
camp.
Beach Characteristics
Omaha Beach is approximately four
miles long and runs in an easterly/westerly direction. The back of the beach
consists of steep hills of five hundred feet in height breached by four unpaved
exits leading to villages situated along a road running parallel to the beach.
At each end of the beach the hills turn into sheer cliffs rising almost
directly from the sea. With an average
24 foot tide in the area there is a 150 yard stretch of exposed beach from the
low water line to the high water mark. The high water line is marked mostly
either by a concrete or wooden sea wall, about four feet high, and just beyond,
piles of shale like stones another five foot high. From there to the foot of
the hills, the terrain is either flat and grassy or pockmarked with sandy
dunes.
Beach Defenses
The German defenses were designed
to win the battle on the beaches by killing or driving the invaders back into
the sea. The defense plan was multi-layered starting with craft and tank
obstacles embedded in the tidal area of the beach designed to impeded the
landings. Many were mined, and connected electrically so that hitting one would
explode many. The land beyond the sea and shale wall was mined with
anti-personnel, and vehicle explosives. Just before the base up to the top of
the hills, the German’s had planted a murderous array of machine gun
emplacements, mortar pits, and mines. Strong points with 88mm cannon in
concrete bunkers or removed turrets from 47mm French tanks set atop concrete
holes. Each position had a panoramic
view of its field of fire painted on its wall as well as aiming settings
pre-calculated so that every inch of the beach was subjected to enfilading
fire. The bunkers were sited to point along the beach line, and were protected
from naval guns by thick concrete shields.
The idea was to kill as many
invaders as possible before or at the shoreline. For any that survived, they
would be forced to advance through the heavily fortified exits. The Germans
were prepared for a different outcome in that if the allies breached the
Atlantic Wall, they believed that the allies would be still be defeated by
units rushed from nearby reserve areas.
544 Mission
The
544’s mission in the battle of Omaha Beach, was to deliver a Headquarters 1st
Infantry Division scout team and a squad of the 5th Battalion Special Combat
Engineers to a sector of the beach known
by the code name Fox Green. The assault force mission was to capture the
eastern most exit leading to the town of Colleville sur Mere, designated as an
army marshalling area. A similar landing would be made on the western side of
the exit.
The
544’s voyage started on June 4th departing Weymouth harbor at 3:30 am for the
approximately 20 plus hour voyage to Normandy. As one of the slowest assault vessels,
making around five knots, but one of the earliest to land, it was in the first
convoy to sail. The sea was stormy with a gusting fifty knot wind and ten foot
waves. The flat-bottomed LCTs were having a difficult time keeping station.
With three engines and rudders LCTs were very maneuverable in calm water, but
floating on the top of the waves, as they were designed to do, they were
difficult to control in bad weather.
Sometimes speeding up or slowing down to avoid collisions, sailing
sideways at the whim of the wind, sitting high on the top of a wave then down
the slope to a bone shaking crash to the bottom, with decks deep in water,
nevertheless the LCTs wallowed along in wavy lines towards the far shore.
A
little passed noon, British destroyers ran down the columns, and using loud
hailers orally informed the craft that they were to reverse course and return
to Weymouth. General Eisenhower had postponed the invasion because of the bad
weather. The orders were given to make a
180 degree right turn at the drop of destroyer yardarm flag. With a still rough sea and high wind the
turn, which must have looked like a Keystone cop movie scene, was accomplished
and the armada headed for home.
Arriving
at Weymouth around midnight it seemed that the 544 had just tied up to a
mooring buoy when orders were received that the invasion was on. At its
original time except 24 hours later the 544 cast off its lines and again set
sail for France.
By
dawn the crew had been up for over 32 hours, and a schedule to allow some sleep
was arranged. The sea had moderated, visibility had much improved, and station
keeping was more easily maintained than the day before. The view with these
better conditions was astonishing. The
sea was studded with landing craft of all types from horizon to horizon. Above
the skies were crisscrossed with the contrails of hundreds of medium and heavy
bombers. No warships or troopships were in sight. With their considerably
greater speed they would soon catch up.
My
final sleep period ended at 4:30am just about the time the 544 was passing
through the bombardment group’s positioning for their work soon to begin. While
I slept the column of LCTs had diminished to only those to land on Fox Green,
the others having peeled off to positions opposite assigned landing zones. About that time, huge flashes from
battleships and cruisers lit the scene behind us opening the mayhem that was to
follow.
I
have been always fascinated by the flight of the shells in these pyrotechnic
displays. Heated to white-hot temperatures, shells are clearly visible,
especially in a dark sky. Sailing along lazily in pairs from the twin gun
turrets of the warships thousands of these messengers of death and destruction
flew overhead.
By
now the warships had dipped below the horizon so that the gun flashes, without
a moment of pause, resembled a severe lightning storm blasting off in the
distance. The 544 now was at its first control point monitored by a US Navy
patrol craft. Infantry loaded LCVPs (Landing Craft Vehicle Personnel) raced by,
intent on meeting their scheduled landing. For these small boats the sea was
still too choppy for a smooth ride, as it proved to be for the DD tanks* of Fox
Green.
544 Manned and Ready
Now
some 2.5 miles from the beach the crew were at their General Quarters’ stations
dressed for the occasion with steel helmet, impregnated anti gas outer
clothing, and gas mask nearby. For the LCT general quarters required two seamen
at the bow ramp controls, a loader and a gunner at each 20mm cocked and ready
to fire cannon, one seaman to control the stern anchor, me safely behind the
wheelhouse, skipper on the bridge along with the relief officer and
helmsman/engine controller, and the craft’s cook in the galley that was set up
for first aid. I got a relatively safe station because, in all modesty, I could
really handle the craft. The relief officer had only been aboard for a short
time, not long enough to learn how to run the LCT. The skipper wanted me to
bring the LCT in if he was incapacitated. The cook as the oldest man on the
crew, married and a three time father, merits special mention. He ran a small
family abattoir and butcher business, and was a volunteer EMT with several
years experience. Those skills saved many lives on this day.
*Dual
Drive Sherman Tanks fitted with a canvas skirt for buoyancy and a propeller to
allow them to swim into the beach under their own power. They were launched
from LCTs approximately two miles from the shore.
The army was ready to go. The jeeps had been prepared for traveling in
deep water. Snorkel tubes six feet long were fitted on carburetors, and wiring
and other critical parts were waterproofed so that the vehicles could operate
under water. The soldiers had tied the jeeps to the engineer’s skid of
materials. The craft’s ramp was wide enough to pull the whole lot off together.
The engineers sat perched on the skid with 303cal carbines slung over their
shoulders, the same weapon carried by the infantry, nervously cradled in the
soldier’s arms.
The infantry scouts, landing in eight jeeps, were to identify enemy
positions, organize the troops on the ground, and inform ship borne
headquarters personnel of the battle situation.
The
engineers, armed with a large Cat tractor and portable road wire, were to break
through, level the high shale wall, and lay steel tracks on the soft sand so
that wheeled vehicles could navigate the beach.
Battle Plan
The general plan was: a naval
beach bombardment for 35 minutes, and an air force bombing of German positions
at about the same time. Immediately following the bombing, tanks landing to
engage enemy positions surviving the latter actions Then on their heels,
infantry to seize and secure the sector, naval beach battalions to direct
traffic, and underwater teams in to blow paths through the obstacles. After a
half hour hiatus, infantry landings would resume at 10 minute intervals until
10:15 AM. Following would be a flood of men and machines to build up enough
strength to repel the inevitable counter attack.
What Really Happened at Fox Green and Easy Red
The first hours on Fox Green and
Easy Red had all of the elements of a disaster. First, the thirty-five minute
bombardment was not long enough to destroy all of the assigned targets. Intelligence had failed to identify many
other strong points that were not even touched. Second, a heavy overcast caused
the air force, afraid of killing allied troops, to drop their bombs three miles
inland. Bombs not only destroy defenses, but bomb craters make excellent cover
for attacking troops. Third, the DD tanks either sank in the choppy water, or
were knocked off by enemy guns as soon as they came in range. Only one tank
made it all the way to the high water mark on Fox Green of 34 launched, and
only two made it on Easy Red. The UDTs working at daybreak were easy targets
for German guns, and they suffered many casualties
Near Fox Green
Finally it was time to leave the
departure line and head for the assigned landing spot. A lane through the
obstacles had not been marked so that the approach was tentative. There was no
apparent action beyond the beach. Not the planned advance of tanks and troops
out flanking the defenders of the E-I exit. There was a thin line of troops
lying at the waters edge, the remains of four infantry companies (720 men) plus
the naval beach party that should have been there. Of the 34 DD tanks of the
741 Tank Battalion only one had made it all the way in, but was partially
destroyed. There were bodies in the
water, submerged or not depending on when they fell relative to the tide
weighted down by their equipment. Others, who managed to shed that weight
before they died, bobbed along with the tide buoyant from inflatable waist
preservers.
Much to my surprise, the skipper
shouted: “semaphore signal from the beach”. The navy had made it to the beach.
I grabbed a pair of flags, and climbed to the top of the wheelhouse. Sure
enough, there was a sailor crouching waving his flags. I signaled, King, the
letter that says go ahead. His message was: “Stay low, keep your head down”. With the possibility of serious harm standing
on the highest part of the LCT, I had some evil thoughts over that advice.
Getting up there had one
advantage. I could see that the chance of reaching the beach through the
obstacles was poor, but the chance of being slaughtered by the unchallenged
firepower of the enemy was very high. Actually 100% as the 544 would be the
only visible target on the beach. I was
still on the wheelhouse top, lying on my stomach, looking up at the skipper who
was standing on a bench inside the wheelhouse, with half of him sticking
through a hatch in the top. I repeated the message, and said “not here skipper”
better spot on the right.
I believe that he had the same
idea. The 544 went into reverse, turned right headed to the other side of the
exit. I had another little thing that I wanted to do, and that was to take some
pictures of the landing. I had bought an old bellows focusing second hand
camera in the UK, and one roll of film. I had taken one shot of Fox Green, and
another earlier, judging that there was enough light to get an exposure.
The 544 sailed parallel to the
shore not too far off the beach. With all of those weapons in the hills, I had
a vision of a carnival shooting gallery with the 544 as one of the ducks running
by on a belt being picked off by an army of showoff marksmen. Yet not a shell
came our way. It soon became obvious that the German’s preferred killing zone
was the high water line. There was plenty of cannon, mortar, and machine gun
fire raining down on the virtually helpless troops huddled behind the shale
wall.
544 on Easy Red
It was less than a mile to the
other side of the Exit within the Easy Red sector. There were more troops there than at Fox
Green, and a LCT (540) was on the beach. Comparatively, Easy Red looked like
home. The order was given to turn left, and with throttles wide open, and on a
racing flood tide, there would be no tentative safe path searching, the fate of
the 544, of its crew and passengers rested in the benevolent bosom of dumb
luck.
The stern anchor, our insurance against being
stranded, was dropped, and in a short time the LCT smashed into a sand bar. We
were beached at last. The bow ramp was dropped with a splash, and without a
moment’s hesitation the big Cat with its blade elevated roared off dragging
skid, jeeps, and personnel behind. Well above the shale wall the Cat attracted
every machine gunner in range. Bullets showered on the blade from every
direction. That firing woke up the 544 gunners, and, although the location of
the enemy was obscured due to concealment and smoke, they sprayed the foot of
the hill with 20mm shells.
The
craft was still around 50 yards from the high water mark. Directly in front of
the ramp was a runnel, a deep pool caused by tide and current. Into it steamed
the tractor. The skid was high enough so that the engineers stayed dry, but the
infantry in jeeps was not. I watched
each pair of jeeps go down the slope of the pool, occupants stretching their
necks backwards in a vain attempt to keep breathing, then disappearing until
reappearing at the other side.
To avoid running over the men
ahead, the Cat driver turned left, and headed down the beach towards Fox Green.
Just before this maneuver the jeeps cast off on the fly, and headed for shale
wall shelter.
There was plenty else going on
nearby at this time. The LCT 540 was retracting, her bow had been damaged so
that the ramp apparently couldn’t be raised. Later it was learned that her
skipper had been killed, and others wounded. Off to the right the LCT 305 was
in and tanks were coming off firing as they cleared the vessel. The LCT 30 was
shelled, probably by the 88mm to our right. Seen the next day I saw that it had
broken in half with numerous shell holes visible. The LCT 25 with a cargo of Half-Tracks (A
Half-Track was an opened armored truck.
Instead of rear wheels it had a tank tracks and conventional front
wheels. It was armed with a 37mm cannon and twin 50cal machine guns) landed to
our left. As the first vehicle was racing down the ramp it was hit and burst
into flames. Instantaneously the rest of the craft and its contents blew up in
a violent bust of exploding ammunition and flame.
LCVPs
were landing unloading and retracting. They were prime targets mostly carrying
infantry. One landed alongside the 544, and was targeted by unseen guns, the
infantry left in a hurry, but some were hit. The LCVP coxswain didn’t bother to
wait for his deck hand to raise the ramp, or turn his craft around, with wood
chips flying in the air as the bullets hit the hull, he gunned it out in
reverse zigzagging wildly to avoid being hit.
The Destroyer Command Takes Over
If there was any army offensive
action it wasn’t apparent. Even the few tanks making it to the shale wall
stopped, content with what seemed to be desultory random shots into the hills.
Suddenly, like the cavalry in an old western movie, several US Navy destroyers
came thundering towards the shore. As near as they probably dared to go in
relatively shallow waters, they started to pound the hills and casements with
their five inch guns. There were four arrayed behind the 544. One destroyer’s,
located almost directly behind the 544, shells came whistling overhead, tearing
great chunks of concrete out of the slanted shield of casement walls, and then following
the angle of the target they ricocheted high in the air. The noise wasn’t
deafening, more of a crack than a bang, but the concussion from the blast had
ears ringing. They traversed the shoreline, back and forth, in a no holds
barred, eyeball-to-eyeball street fight with the enemy forces concealed in the
hill.
New Task for the 544
Our orders were to land, unload,
and report by radio to our control vessel for another assignment. However,
there were dead and wounded in the area. Of necessity some of the crew stayed
on their stations, but whoever was free helped medics and other army personnel
to bring wounded soldiers and no doubt sailors on to the LCT. The living quarters were soon filled, then
the inside spaces, then every available free spot on he deck. There were only a
few litters, and they were used over and over. The bearers would move the
occupant on to the deck, and then hustle off for another trip.
There was no end to the supply of
wounded. Each troop landing would inevitably result in a new supply. Finally
the beach became so chaotic that landings were suspended. For a while the 544
was the only vessel on Easy Red except for the knocked out sister LCTs.
Around 11:30am the tide showed
signs of ebbing. It was time to leave. The 544 had survived almost four hours
on Easy Red, reputed to be the most dangerous of the invasion. The last of the
wounded were rushed aboard, ramp raised, and using the engines and the power of
the winch the craft slowly backed off into deep water, and headed out towards
the troop ship anchorage, a 12 mile trip. Empty, sailing with the tide induced
current, and running flat out, the anchorage was reached in less than two
hours.
On the way out, as they had done
while on the beach, our cook and the army medic did all they could to aid the
wounded. Supplies were meager, little blood plasma was available, and most of
the aid was restricted to using waterproof wound packets of bandage gauze and a
pouch of powdered sulfur disinfectant that soldiers and sailors carried. Nevertheless,
its possible that even that simple form of first aid was a factor in saving
some that may not have survived otherwise.
The 544 had a 12” carbon arc
signal lamp so that it was possible to signal from some distance to the closest
troop ship informing them of our situation, and to ask for assistance. The
response was come along side. By the time the 544 was alongside the ship’s four
booms were deployed with twin wire cage litters rigged, ladders were out, and
navy corpsmen were on the rail ready to board the 544. Well trained corpsmen,
with MDs in attendance, and sufficient supplies available the ship’s medical
team went to work rapidly checking conditions, and starting proper treatment.
The crew was perfectly content to
let the ship’s personnel take over. New
orders from control were to anchor in the vicinity, and to expect a new
assignment at dawn. Although everyone was bone weary, all turned to clean the
LCT for a fresh start in the morning. The outside deck was littered with
discarder bandages, morphine capsules, bits of tissue, and clothing. Crew
bunks, mattresses, and blankets were soaked with blood. These items were
brought outside and thrown overboard. The fire pump was rigged, the ramp
lowered, and the decks were flushed with seawater pushing everything into the
sea. Finally personal items were moved to a dry location and the inside spaces
were hosed down and mopped dry.
Watches were set, and the crew
settled down for some welcome sleep. Some of the bunks had not been used in the
evacuation of the wounded and they were rotated among on watch crew members and
those off watch. The rest, using life jackets as pillows got as comfortable as
possible.
Shots in the Night
Around midnight anti-aircraft
firing started on the western edge of the anchorage, and grew as each ship
picked up the presence of enemy aircraft. The 544 went to general quarters
immediately. On a dark night, without radar, the 544’s guns presented more
danger to allied ships than to the Germans so that its guns remained silent. Gravity
being what it is, dictates that what goes up must come down. All of those
shells fired at planes, soon return to earth as fragments sounding much gentle
rain falling on the vessel’s hull. The downside from this idyllic vision is the
deafening sound of firing guns, and the stifling odor of burnt cordite.
Not all of the shells explode in
the air. Invariably some are defective, and return to earth as destructive
missiles. One hit the 544, landing on a mesh platform steel bridge joining the
two cabins on each side of the vessel, exploding on impact. The relief officer
standing with his left side out of the wheelhouse, caught fragments of the
shell from his calf to shoulder. The 544’s de Facto cook/ EMT cleaned the
wounds, though numerous, were not serious. With a shot of morphine,
transferring could wait until the dawn. There was much irony in being a victim
of friendly 12 miles or so from the main battle. Especially since Easy Red,
where the 544 sat for almost four hours has been considered the most dangerous
of any US battleground in WWII. More so than even Tarawa, the most fierce of
the Pacific landings.
544 and the USS Susan B. Anthony
I had the watch at daybreak. The
transport area was almost empty. Apparently some troop transports free of
troops had returned to the UK to reload. Others with army reserves aboard had
moved closer to shore to reduce the distance that their LCVPs would have to
travel to shore. A transport signaled by blinker “to come alongside
immediately”. In response, I started to explain that the 544 had orders to
remain at anchor, when the ship broke in with the message “We are sinking”. I
jumped off the top of the wheelhouse, ran into the crew quarters, kicked the
engineers awake shouting: “get underway”. The 544 never got underway so
quickly. A fleet tug boat and a LCI was already along side embarking soldiers.
The 544 maneuvered to make a sliding broadside turn to a position against the
transport’s hull. Cargo nets were dropped by the transport’s crew, and soldiers
scrambled down them onto the LCT. The ship in distress was the USS Susan B.
Anthony carrying a reserve infantry division scheduled to land on Utah beach
that afternoon. The ship had hit a mine, possibly one dropped in the air raid
the night before. They were put aboard a troop ship on its way to the UK,
presumably to be reequipped. The transport also agreed to take our wounded
crewman.
Back to Work for the 544
The 544 was then ordered to pick
up a load of 81mm mortar shells and deliver them to Fox Green. It was early evening
by the time we loaded, and made the trip to Fox Green. We were not concerned
about darkness as daylight persisted until 22:00 in those northern climes.
Coming in on a rising tide we were confident that the LCT would be unloaded
before ebb tide trapped us. The beach master told us that the shells were badly
needed, as the Germans were counter attacking through the gap between British
beaches and Omaha’s Fox Green.
Half of the crew pitched to help
unload, and the skipper sent the rest to two partially destroyed and abandoned
LCIs to salvage enough bunks, blankets, and mattresses to replace those lost
the day before. Salvaging personnel effects was not permitted, except for a
washing machine and small jute box.
Most of the shells had been
unloaded when shelling of the beach began. We were told to depart, stay out of
range, and return in the nest morning.
The 544’s War Ends
When the 544 departed Fox Green on the
evening of D-Day plus one anxiously watching German shells exploding on the
beach it would be hard to convince the crew that they had seen the last of
combat. Landing the next morning it was obvious that the American army was
there to stay.
The
beach; however, was a sad place. Strewn among the piles of debris were the
dead. In clusters, singularly, burnt remains in burned out vehicles and landing
craft, lying in shallow water weighted down by equipment, but all appearing to
be moving forward towards the enemy. Graves registration teams were moving
bodies into neat lines beyond the shale wall to save them from further
mutilation.
Nevertheless,
engineers, Seabees, stevedore troops, and beach masters were hard at work
preparing the beach and the now liberated exits for the massive flow of men and
material required to sustain the invasion.
The
LCT was a cog in the supply system for the balance of its time in Normandy.
Except for stormy days when it was too rough to work, activity went on for 24
hours a day seven days a week.
Finally,
in September the vessel was ordered to return to England for comprehensive
maintenance. That was a break for me and the other Mediterranean veterans. At
the time the Navy’s policy was to rotate personnel after 24 months of overseas
duty for a thirty-day leave.
A
Presidential Unit Award was recommended for the crew of the 544, but it was not
acted on. Our skipper was recommended for the Silver Star, but it was not acted
on. The cook received the Navy and Marine Corps Medal with a V device for valor
in combat, and the seaman who was first on the beach recovering wounded
soldiers was awarded a Silver Star. The relief skipper was awarded a Purple
Heart.
The father and writer of this recollection was Russ Seymour ... his son was by the same name. I never met the father, but the son was also a former U.S. sailor and all-around good guy. May you both rest in peace.
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