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    Big Red One Attends Annual D-Day Celebrations

    Big Red One Attends Annual D-Day Celebration

    Photo By Sgt. Charles Leitner | The tide rises at Omaha Beach in Normandy, France, June 1, 2024. Soldiers of the 1st...... read more read more

    COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, FRANCE

    06.05.2024

    Story by Sgt. Charles Leitner 

    1st Infantry Division

    COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, France - U.S. Army Soldiers serving in the 1st Infantry Division led ceremonies at the 80th Annual D-Day Commemoration in Colleville-sur-Mer, France, June 4, 2024.

    The day’s events took place at the 1st Inf. Div. monument on the bluff overlooking the Easy Red sector of Omaha Beach where Soldiers of the Big Red One assaulted German defenses during the opening stages of the Invasion of Normandy and at the Charles Shay Memorial, located nearby in Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer. Shay.

    “If you’ll allow me, I’d like to read something Gen. Eisenhower was given as his directive,” said Maj. Gen. John V. Meyer III, commander of the 1st Inf. Div. “‘You’ll enter the continent of Europe and in conjunction with other united nations undertake operations aimed at the heart of Germany and the destruction of her armed forces.’ That was the mission of the Allied forces. The mission of the 1st Inf. Div. was to be the vanguard of the invasion up these bluffs.”

    Members of the 1st Inf. Div. color guard participated in the ceremonies alongside Porte-drapeau (French flag bearers) and Native American service members to remember all those who lost their lives on the sands of Normandy.

    Charles Norman Shay, who served as a combat medic in the 1st Inf. Div. earned the Silver Star for his heroic actions on June 6, 1944. Before the day was done, Shay saved the lives of 20 fellow Soldiers. He earned the Silver Star for his actions.

    “Those Soldiers fulfilled their duty,” said Meyer. “By doing so they brought victory. They liberated a continent and they gave people hope that tomorrow will be better than today.”

    Of the 4,414 Allied troops killed on D-Day, 2,501 were Americans. Between June 6 and July 24, 1944, the 1st Inf. Div. had lost 657 Soldiers. Their names are etched in the stone on the monument erected on the bluff overlooking the beach taken by the Big Red One in the conjoined effort to liberate France and the rest of Europe. By the end of the Second World War the 1st Inf. Div. had lost 5,516 Soldiers.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.05.2024
    Date Posted: 06.06.2024 10:52
    Story ID: 473183
    Location: COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, FR

    Web Views: 187
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN