D-Day +1: No 47 RM Commando and the Battle of Port-en-Bessin of WW2

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
  • The morning of June 7, 1944 the men of the Number 47 Royal Marine Commando were fighting a desperate battle against a superior force to take a vital port connecting the Gold and Omaha beaches.
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Комментарии • 194

  • @dirtcop11
    @dirtcop11 Год назад +95

    When I was a child there were many veterans of WWII. Now there are very few left alive. Soon, there will be none. Preserving their acts of bravery and sacrifice is very important. No matter where they served or how they served, they deserve to be remembered and honored.

    • @tygrkhat4087
      @tygrkhat4087 Год назад +10

      I'll be 62 in August. It is within the realm of possibility that before I leave this life, there will be no more WWII veterans, no Korean War vets and very few Vietnam vets.

    • @aliciaholborn6748
      @aliciaholborn6748 Год назад +7

      @Jesse Oaks in 1981 I was in a hotel lobby waiting for friends. As I stood there, 2 men began to talk about their WWII experiences. One was beginning to tell of going to the Solomon Islands and heading down the “slot.” It was so fascinating and unfortunately my friends arrived before I could hear the end of his story. So many have gone on and their stories too. ❤

    • @vlmellody51
      @vlmellody51 Год назад +7

      ​@tygrkhat40 my dad served in Vietnam. He passed away 7 years ago. I still miss him.

    • @TrickiVicBB71
      @TrickiVicBB71 Год назад +8

      ​@@tygrkhat4087 I am 29. I remember watching the news of the last WW1 vet passing away. I definitely will see last of WW2 and Korea

    • @tygrkhat4087
      @tygrkhat4087 Год назад +4

      @@vlmellody51 My dad was a Marine DI during the Korean War. He'll be gone 15 years on Halloween. Before she passed, Mom asked me if I missed my father. I said until the day I die.

  • @manuelacosta9463
    @manuelacosta9463 Год назад +46

    To think that everything that could go wrong did, yet the Commandos went on and won. They are a unique breed indeed. The fact that the Victoria Cross was denied is bewildering and just plain disheartening but at least his deeds and that of the others are remembered.

    • @your_royal_highness
      @your_royal_highness Год назад +2

      Brits were more parsimonious in handing out the VC than the stingy Yanks with the MoH. Ridiculous. I have read lots of amazing battle accounts where NO medals were given.

    • @glenns5627
      @glenns5627 Год назад

      @@your_royal_highness Yes, the politicians who send our men into these wars are quick to ignore them afterward, at every opportunity.

  • @navret1707
    @navret1707 Год назад +77

    My father was fire control officer on a tin can providing gunfire support for D-Day. Miss you dad!
    Excellent evidence that “No Plan Survives First Contact with the Enemy” and “The Enemy has a Vote on Your Plan”.

    • @deepdragon2
      @deepdragon2 Год назад +7

      Many plans do not survive contact with reality.... let alone the enemy.

    • @robinblackmoor8732
      @robinblackmoor8732 Год назад +4

      Or as Mike Tyson said it, " Everybody has a plan, until they get punched in the mouth."

    • @stevewixom9311
      @stevewixom9311 Год назад +1

      Also i would add Murphey's law of combat #8 If the enemy is within range.... so are you

  • @theofarmmanager267
    @theofarmmanager267 Год назад +10

    There is no reflected glory but my father was in 47RM in that attack. Wounded and brought back to the UK. Our family’s service to the Corps started around 1880 with my great grandfather (Opium Wars), grandfather (WW1), then my father and now a son in 40RM. I didn’t have a great relationship with my father - very different generations - and he never talked about the War. In fact, I learned more from his papers and medals after he died. That’s life. But my admiration for him and his colleagues is unbounded

  • @RetiredSailor60
    @RetiredSailor60 Год назад +54

    Good morning History Guy and everyone watching. Never forget those who gave their lives in service to their country to defeat the Nazis and Japan.

    • @tigertiger1699
      @tigertiger1699 Год назад +5

      We literally live in their shadow 🌹🌹🌹

    • @alitlweird
      @alitlweird Год назад +3

      The Nazis weren’t defeated. Germany was.
      The Nazis were gathered up and brought over here to show DC how it’s done. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @bretfisher7286
      @bretfisher7286 Год назад +2

      I consider WWII to be the last virtuous war in which Americans fought, and therefore I join you in sacred memory of the heroism and sacrifice-- by the British, the Australians, and others as well-- demonstrated in countless battles like this one.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob Год назад

      @@alitlweird and the veterans continued to support Jim Crow

  • @ianwatson129
    @ianwatson129 Год назад +7

    We have a house in Port en Bessin. 47 RM Commando charged over my garden on D-Day plus 1. There is still a German trench just at the end of my garden.

  • @1murder99
    @1murder99 Год назад +14

    I was watching a documentary with my father about Operation Torch when the announcer said that the opposition at Casablanca was light. I asked my father if that was true. He said it was only light if you weren't there.

  • @efnissien
    @efnissien Год назад +1

    I love the bootneck with the PIAT on the extreme left giving his appraisal of the situation at 14;26!

  • @tango6nf477
    @tango6nf477 Год назад +19

    There must have been thousands of acts of incredible bravery and sacrifice that day which went unnoticed and unrewarded. These men just did what had to be done, no fuss or fanfare, and probable no expectation of recognition. Great men, good men, they should never be forgotten.

  • @JJ-of1ir
    @JJ-of1ir 3 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for telling us of this little known Royal Marines Mission. Half the men lost at the start of the operation and still they managed to complete it despite lost equipment. The more I learn of the bravery and grit of the British and all our Allies, the more humble I feel. Every subsequent Generation owes them so much. I watched this video on the 'Mark From the States' channel and, despite subscribing to your channel many months ago I have only just realised that I have not notified for a long time when you release a new video. I have re-subscribed so I hope that will put things right. Thanks again for all the hard work you do putting videos like this together. It's appreciated.

  • @nemo6686
    @nemo6686 Год назад +9

    I don't know if it was the same in 1944, but modern booties have a convention that Commando units not ending in zero just have the numbers enunciated - so 40 Commando would be 'forty', but 47 Commando would be 'four-seven'. They love that sort of thing.

    • @chrissheppard5068
      @chrissheppard5068 Год назад +2

      Correct and you can ping a Walt when he says he was in Forty Two and not Four Two.

    • @ColinH1973
      @ColinH1973 Год назад

      ​@@chrissheppard5068Plenty of walts about, unfortunately.

    • @bofoenss8393
      @bofoenss8393 4 месяца назад

      It's the same with RAF squadrons. You say "Three-oh-Three Squadron" for the famous Polish of BoB fame. not "threehundredandthird". No.617 Squadron, the Dambusters is "Six-one-seven".

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 Год назад +25

    It's hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that D-Day was 79 years ago. I grew up with friends who's fathers and grandfathers who fought in WW2 and listening to them is where I got my love of history, but for the most part those men are gone.
    So thank you Lance for keeping their memories and achievements alive!👍💪

    • @goldgeologist5320
      @goldgeologist5320 Год назад +3

      Yes it still lives for me as my father waded ashore in the first wave to liberate Europe as an very young man!
      All his locks were coded with Pearl Harbor date 1207. He said that date impacted his entire life.

    • @cbroz7492
      @cbroz7492 Год назад

      ...same here.. born Nov 49

    • @cbroz7492
      @cbroz7492 Год назад

      ...there was a guy who owned a luncheonette a few doors diwn from my dad's store in Fort Lee, NJ, and had his right arm mostly missing...he was in the first wave at Omaha

    • @tygrkhat4087
      @tygrkhat4087 Год назад

      @@cbroz7492 The father of my best friend growing up was in the 4th wave at Iwo Jima. That's all I know about it, and I suspect that's all his children know about it, as well.

  • @Essexyeoman
    @Essexyeoman 4 месяца назад

    My grandfather served with the 147th Essex Yeomanry and provided the 47th Royal Marine Commandos with fire support as the Commandos moved cross country behind enemy lines during the attack of Port-En-Bessin. Great video. Thank you for posting 👍

  • @HemlockRidge
    @HemlockRidge Год назад +16

    My Grandfather, a flyer, was in Stalag Luft 1 during D-Day. They heard about the landings on contraband radios. He said that a distinct shift in the attitudes of the guards was noticed.

  • @iansinclair7581
    @iansinclair7581 Год назад +3

    Probably one of the most vital objectives because it was the terminal for PLUTO (pipeline under the ocean). I can recommend John Forfar’s book From Omaha to the Scheldt. Good video.

    • @iam62goinon63
      @iam62goinon63 Год назад

      I have the book , my friend attended his funeral in Edinburgh

  • @johnpinder8121
    @johnpinder8121 7 месяцев назад +2

    My late Father was with 47 RMC his name was Jack Pinder. God bless him and all them that went with him, they will never be forgotten

  • @neilperry2224
    @neilperry2224 Год назад +6

    I’ve seen the valves for the P.L.U.T.O on the Isle of Wight, and they’ve just got a basic placard telling you what they are, and when they were used. I was 11 years old, but not now lol might not be there anymore 😢

  • @glennkeller5171
    @glennkeller5171 Год назад +23

    History that deserves to be remembered is the Vosges Mountain Campaign of 1944-45. I do not want to take away from those that landed on Normandy but the Vosges Campaign is never talked about and probably never heard of. My grandfather was a Medic attached to the 499th Armored Field Artillery Battalion who landed in Marseille, France and advanced toward Germany through the Alsace plain into the Vosges mountains. It would be great to see and episode of this campaign!!

  • @jkilby27able
    @jkilby27able Год назад +12

    Excellent...
    June 6, 1944, the day the allies counted on (an average of) 24 year Olds to save the world!!

  • @richardmourdock2719
    @richardmourdock2719 Год назад +54

    As a baby-boomer, now 71, it saddens me that my generation has forgotten or disregards the importance of our parents in WWII. Thank you HG for keeping it front and center.

    • @jp-um2fr
      @jp-um2fr Год назад +6

      NO - I haven't.

    • @goldgeologist5320
      @goldgeologist5320 Год назад +5

      Me either!

    • @Pseudonym-aka-alias
      @Pseudonym-aka-alias Год назад +4

      I’m 70 and presently staying in Longues-sur-mer for the d-day commemorations….I’ll never forget✌️

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Год назад +3

      ​@@jp-um2fr I don't think those of us with parents in that war have forgotten.

    • @sullivanspapa1505
      @sullivanspapa1505 Год назад +6

      perhaps other generations have diminished appreciation as they would of any long passed sacrifice but for myself never! However, I am sorely disappointed in veterans who allow the sacrifices of men such as Senator John McCain go ridiculed by coward and traitor Rump and say nothing!

  • @chrislondo2683
    @chrislondo2683 Год назад +5

    My grandfather was at Gold Beach when his LST unloaded there.

  • @alansmith3327
    @alansmith3327 Год назад

    My Father was a "Royal " ( commando) in WW2. Joined up 1939 but unfortunately had a accident on the firing range making him deaf in one ear and removed from Combat service. Much to his annoyance. He only spoke to me once about MANY of his friends serving and not returning!! At his Funeral in 1992 the Marines sent a Bugler in full dress to play the "Last Post" during the service. ONCE A ROYAL ALWAYS A ROYAL !!

  • @DRFelGood
    @DRFelGood Год назад +4

    Thank you “THG” ❤

  • @carolynmanning5959
    @carolynmanning5959 Год назад +6

    I was a child but at 88 I still relive June and D day.

  • @barrylarking8986
    @barrylarking8986 Год назад +2

    Much appreciated - British pronunciations and recording this overlooked action among many more.

  • @tomkey7120
    @tomkey7120 Год назад +6

    I stayed in Port-en-Bessie last year when visiting the D-Day sites. It’s a nice little town we’ll located for seeing the entire invasion area. The view from the fortifications for the western feature is spectacular. Even at dockside, you could see the mulberries at Arromanches-les-Bains in one direction, and Omaha Beach in the other.

  • @kendrickpi
    @kendrickpi 3 месяца назад

    My father’s father was a combat medic in X-Troop 47RMC, I took my father to the beaches and PenB to see for himself that the French never forget, show their gratitude, and know what it means to be liberated. Let we forget. This story deserves a film!

    • @johnpinder8121
      @johnpinder8121 3 месяца назад

      Please can you tell me who your grandfather was ?.

  • @joegordon5117
    @joegordon5117 Год назад +2

    When I was a very young boy, there was a semi-retired old chap at my dad's workplace, George. Lovely, quiet old chap with a ready smile. George had been a Commando during the war. I only knew him as an old man, god alone knows what he saw and had to do when he was young, along with his incredibly determined comrades. I often wish I'd been older when I knew him, to ask him, maybe record some of his memories, but I was just a boy, and I doubt he would have talked much about it, most of those men rarely do. He's been gone many decades now, but every time I hear "commando", I think on old George and his pals, and what they must have endured for the sake of the generations that followed them

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 Год назад +1

      Well, you can tell your countrymen that you knew a true hero of Great Britain. Greetings from Texas.

  • @tigertiger1699
    @tigertiger1699 Год назад +3

    Incredibly humbling… still🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @martiniv8924
    @martiniv8924 Год назад +6

    Glad you did this, I stopped here (port en Bessin) on the long way back from ‘Classic Le Man’s ‘ Tough job to secure the port 🙌🏻

  • @51WCDodge
    @51WCDodge Год назад +3

    I am lucky enough to know Goldbeach and Ver Sur Mer. I have friends there. I can assure all that none who fought and died to free France are forgotten. Few now survive, but over the years I have hasd the Honour and Privilige to escort various of D-Day vetrans in France. They Will NEVER be forgotten. I recomend Storm From The Sea by Peter Young. One of the first 'Commandos'

  • @frederickpotthoff8893
    @frederickpotthoff8893 Год назад +6

    Thank you for an amazing informative article.

  • @Dad_Life_Marine_Vet
    @Dad_Life_Marine_Vet 3 месяца назад

    Excellent stuff, a story that not many know about.

  • @Lee-70ish
    @Lee-70ish Год назад +3

    The two things that my dad remembered well as an Able Seaman on one of the LCAs
    was an LCT that ran full ahead infront of his little flotilla of LCAs exploding the tella mined obsticals to create a clear path .
    When it backed out all that was left was the loading deck bulkhead back to the stern
    The front two thirds had been blown to bits.
    He landed the ramp went down and an officer ran out shouting follow me.
    There was a bang in front of him .
    He stopped and looked down at where his foreams had been and just said my god .
    Two crew grabbed him dragged him back aboard and wrapped his stumps as they went back for another load of marines

  • @Solhai
    @Solhai Год назад +3

    Thank you for a continuation in another detail of Operation Overload. I watched many videos and speeches yesterday thinking it's Tuesday today in 2023 as it was in 1944. The weather was warmer though this year than then. And peaceful. It is not taken for granted.

  • @aliciaholborn6748
    @aliciaholborn6748 Год назад +6

    This was an amazing story. I’m so glad you shared it, as I’ve never heard anything about it before. Thank you.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 Год назад +10

    Thank you Hi Guy🤓👋 for your brilliant narration and top Shelf content. As usual!

  • @rebelscumspeedshop
    @rebelscumspeedshop Год назад +6

    Thank you, It's a pleasure to hear more about what the other forces did on D-Day . Nothing is no less important.

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513 Год назад +3

    The troops pictured at frame [1:35] are Americans. While they are wearing the Brodie Helmets, this was GI Issue until the M1 steel pot came on line in 1942. Gas mask bag is US GI. And so is the US Rifle, Cal .30, M1917 [Enfield]. Probably a Chemical Warfare unit, as they were issued the WWI vintage Enfields when a shortage of M1 Garands meant they went to infantry units first. Fatigue coveralls are consistant with chemical unit issue.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  Год назад +3

      You are correct that this photo is misplaced, and these are not commandos. I apologize for the error. The photo description says that these are men of the Royal Army Service Corps in 1942.

  • @elizabethhoward7774
    @elizabethhoward7774 Год назад +2

    My Dad was in 47 RM Commando, he died in 1979 so my brothers and I never had the opportunity to find out more about his experiences. I worked at the D-Day Museum in Southsea and had the opportunity to meet some real life heros.

    • @seasoldier3902
      @seasoldier3902 Год назад +2

      Do you know that there is a 47 Royal Marine Commando Association? Sadly there are now no known veterans alive but their relatives enjoy membership of this association. We annually visit PeB and have strong links with the town and the 47 Raiding Commando Royal Marines as well as the Royal Marines Association.

    • @elizabethhoward7774
      @elizabethhoward7774 Год назад +1

      @Sea Soldier Hi, yes I knew, my brother has visited PeB and met some wonderful people.

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the lesson.
    Not to detract from this story.
    For those interested who may not have heard.
    The WW2 channel Time Ghost History did a 24 hour presentation about DDay.
    Thank you again History Guy for bringing history to life.

  • @alanmoffat4454
    @alanmoffat4454 Год назад +4

    AGAIN THANKS TO THE HISTORY GUY , NEVER HEARD THIS ONE THANKFULLY WE ARE NOT ASKED TOO DO IT NOWADAYS 😮.

  • @chrisgramza8582
    @chrisgramza8582 Год назад +1

    I had to turn this off for a while... knowing that the men who fought there couldn't. Thank you History Guy. This will not be forgotten. Semper Fi.

  • @geodes4762
    @geodes4762 Год назад +7

    Something perhaps not well known. In the movie the Longest Day, the Battle of Ouistreham was actually filmed at Port-en Bessin. The present day parking lot that abuts the shore line is where a large mock casino was built to replicate the Ouistreham Casino. This is the scene where French Commandos come under withering fire from the rooftop of the casino and the fire from a large caliber gun in the lower level. The commander of the Commando unit goes for tank support by crossing a small footbridge that the Germans put under fire, destroying it. All of the landmarks are still there from the time of the movie. Last visited there in 2002. The guns of Longue are close nearby.

    • @andyharman3022
      @andyharman3022 Год назад

      That scene is one of my favorites in the movie. The long continuous tracking shot at the opening of the scene is marvelous.

    • @geodes4762
      @geodes4762 Год назад +1

      @@andyharman3022 That was filmed in the days before drones using a helicopter. There was a complete discussion of how and where various scenes in the movie were filmed in a British publication called “After the Battle”. I read it over 40 years ago so I do not know if it is still being published

  • @sicks6six
    @sicks6six 5 месяцев назад +1

    My science teacher was a commando and was on the beach the first day of invasion. He wss 6'3'' 15 stone solid muscle shaven headed always sleeves rolled up and neat as could be. He took no s**t from the kids and if you worked your ticket he would thrash the living daylights out of you. He had 3 grades of belts to lash you with and a cane tipped with a brass cartidge shell. I liked him and loved his lessons. He used to say if anyone didn't want to be in his class leave and sit in the corridor. Some did and it bother him one bit. It was a boy's only class I don't think he could have coped with girls. He was to gruff and didn't do nice very well.
    Sid Towns RIP.

  • @chucksmith465
    @chucksmith465 Год назад +3

    The best channel of its type on RUclips

  • @richardthornton3775
    @richardthornton3775 Год назад +2

    Great video about an often forgotten action, thank you.
    Just a little detail🙏 when one is describing the units of the RM Cdo, it’s said as ‘Four Seven’ Commando, not as the number 47. It’s the same for all RM Cdo units, Four Five, Four Two, Four Three etc. Never as the number numerically 😁👍

  • @JackLowry1313
    @JackLowry1313 Год назад +3

    I spent 10 days in Normandy in Oct, 2021 visiting all the beeches and drop zones but didn't see anything about this. Thanks for the history.

  • @robb1068
    @robb1068 Год назад +2

    Toured the Normandy area in the spring of 2000 and dragged my family from one D-Day site to another. It was a retired British army tour guide that brought me to Port-en-Bessin though. I was aware it had been captured by the British Commandos on D-Day (a map of the beaches with RM 47 so close to Omaha looks unusual), but didn’t appreciate the significance of the port being the site for the PLUTO pipeline until we began to discuss how the Allied armies were supplied for Overlord and beyond. Good stuff to learn!

  • @tomtheplummer7322
    @tomtheplummer7322 Год назад +3

    Lance, I was wondering why you didn’t cover D-Day yesterday, but a +1 makes sense. 👍🏻

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  Год назад +2

      I post on Monday/Wednesday/Friday. This year June 6 didn't happen to be a posting day. ruclips.net/p/PLSnt4mJGJfGiRitPDNunBd3GaA03jy2Vm

  • @garywagner2466
    @garywagner2466 Год назад +23

    Very interesting and timely. As usual, the mainstream media more or less ignored the D-Day anniversary (again). Very few of us care any more, and these stories are not being told in school. They are worried about kids transgendering, which is much more important apparently. What a bizarre world this is!

    • @cdjhyoung
      @cdjhyoung Год назад

      What happened in WW II are the stories our parents taught us. For the current generation of students, the equivalent would be the conflicts the US has been involved in in the Middle East. History IS worth remembering, but it is to educate us, not to revel in and seek past glories. Try not to criticize current classroom curricula if you are also unwilling to step and do some teaching yourself. A lot of history has occurred since 1944, quite a bit of it more relevant to current students in discovering their place in the world.

    • @garywagner2466
      @garywagner2466 Год назад

      @@cdjhyoung, who is “revelling in it and seeking past glories?” You must be hallucinating. I pay taxes so teachers teach history that is important to the growth of my country, not to make up bullshit issues, confuse developing minds, and lie to the students. I taught my kids about WW 2 because their great grandfather fought there, and because nobody else was doing it. That’s what I am responsible for. Maybe you should give your head a shake.

    • @geodes4762
      @geodes4762 Год назад +4

      @@cdjhyoung The criticism of the last poster is legit. This generation of educators has very little interest in teaching the basics of math, English, government and history. They are tied to a broken ideology that favors teaching things like self esteem, racism and transgenderism. You best believe that is what is going on. When a school system puts out a cat box because one of their young students identifies with being a cat, something is drastically wrong! These guys who freed Europe would roll over in their graves if they ever knew their sacrifices were squandered for this crap!

    • @Roadglide911
      @Roadglide911 Год назад

      @@geodes4762 exactly and those who forget history are destined to repeat it. Without those brave men giving all for their countries all the sicknesses being thrust upon children today would not be possible. Some obviously think the past has no influence currently or in the future. Our society has a sickness of which I’m afraid there is no cure. Our educational systems in this country are a joke. Long gone are the days of just receiving an education that’ll help you succeed in the world. It has been replaced social engineering which seeks to normalize mental illness.

    • @cdjhyoung
      @cdjhyoung Год назад

      @@geodes4762 Stop with the cat box lie. Do you really want to know why a class room would have a bag of kitty litter in it? The reason is how frequently grade schools suffer shelter in place orders where the students are locked in their rooms for hours. How long do you think an eight year old can go with out using a bathroom? So some schools proactively place a bag of kitty litter and a pail in the classroom closet. Most also include a case of bottled water and some type of snacks. I'm directly in contact with teachers currently. They don't teach racism. Teaching students that everything in the past concerning race was not great is not teaching racism. Most adults would call that the truth. If you are not in a class room to actually observe what is going on, don't be repeating the crap you hear on Fox news here. They don't really know, and are only telling you what you want to hear to be upset.

  • @MiketheMadness
    @MiketheMadness 4 месяца назад

    An assault force attacking while outnumbered 4 -1, suffering over 50% casualties, and still taking enemy position after enemy position to achieve the objective. The absolute brass balls on those men, I'm shocked they could drag themselves off the beach at all.
    The denied VC takes the cake though, British military has always had a weird thing about awarding medals.
    We will remember them.

  • @OrionBlarg
    @OrionBlarg Год назад +2

    The guy in the lower part of the picture around 3:45.
    Man I know exactly how he feels.

  • @terrancecoard388
    @terrancecoard388 Год назад +1

    World War2 Channel dropped an hour by hour recount of D-day on the anniversary. As much as I watch stories of the war...within an hour I learned two new things...23 hours left of this epic retelling of the day. I highly recommend.

  • @PeterOkeefe54
    @PeterOkeefe54 Год назад +4

    Fantastic narrative!!! so much for the story of how easy english men had it on D-day

  • @Tiger313NL
    @Tiger313NL Год назад +4

    I've been in Port-en-Bessin in 2009.

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt Год назад +3

    thanks

  • @adequatemagic
    @adequatemagic Год назад +9

    First Like! ❤
    Wow! That is an impressive and tragic story! Thank you for sharing this treasure!
    I'm a USNavy veteran and I tried for the SEAL team but didn't make it through BUDS. Deepest respect for the badasses of the Royal Marines. ❤️🇬🇧❤

  • @Bronco46tube
    @Bronco46tube Год назад +1

    That was quite a fast wardrobe change there at the end! Interesting material. I've done a lot of reading on this subject. But, I had missed mention of this unit's exploits. Thank You.

  • @colvinator1611
    @colvinator1611 Год назад +1

    Great, if sobering history with excellent presentation. Thanks a lot.

  • @raytrevor1
    @raytrevor1 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this video and for using British English terminology and pronunciation! Suprisingly there are now many on British TV that use the American pronunciation of lieutenant even when referring to British army officers.

  • @honodle7219
    @honodle7219 Год назад +1

    They rose up and got the job done in the face of determined resistance and terrible losses. The U.K. is rightly proud of them.

  • @jp-um2fr
    @jp-um2fr Год назад +4

    Fighting for your homeland and family is quite an incentive.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 Год назад +5

    Back in the Saddle Again Naturally

  • @jeffbangkok
    @jeffbangkok Год назад +1

    Good morning

  • @infoscholar5221
    @infoscholar5221 Год назад +1

    My father was fighting half a world a way, in the South Pacific, but he told me, in 1984, on the 40th anniversary of D-Day; "When we heard the news (about the Normandy landings) we all knew, that, one day, before too long, if we could just stay alive, we'd all be going home." for him, it would be long year and a half, but John Phillips would finally come home to DeArmanville, Alabama, I would be born, to my older parents, over twenty years later.

  • @josephnardone1250
    @josephnardone1250 Год назад

    Great video. An untold heroic story of WWII that everybody should know. Those were men of "The Greatest Generation."

  • @seasoldier3902
    @seasoldier3902 Год назад

    There is a Utube channel dedicated to 47 Royal Marine Commando. Some 48 videos on this channel show the good times during their annual reunions in Port en Bessin each June.
    It wasn't all about commemoration but celebration as well. Their families, retired and serving Royal Marines also attended the June events with full support from the townspeople. We even have a German whose father was garrisoned in the port at the time of the invasion.
    There is a book written by Doctor John Forfar, the units medical officer, that tells the story From Ohmah to the Schedt, It is worth a read,
    Thanks for producing this video.

  • @BasicDrumming
    @BasicDrumming Год назад +1

    I appreciate you, thank you for making content.

  • @jimmyyu2184
    @jimmyyu2184 Год назад +2

    If anyone is wondering what PLUTO stood for, Petro Line Under The Ocean. =)) No, it was not named after W. Disney cartoon character. (Or at least that's what I was told...)

    • @jackmcgonegal8728
      @jackmcgonegal8728 Год назад +2

      Close. Pipeline Under the Ocean.

    • @jimmyyu2184
      @jimmyyu2184 Год назад +1

      @@jackmcgonegal8728 Well, I'll be doggone... Thanks for the correction.

  • @kennyhagan5781
    @kennyhagan5781 Год назад +3

    The actor DAVID NIVEN was involved in building the Commandos, along with a bunch of other very notable people. I'm a fan of his and was amazed to find this tidbit in his autobiography, I never realized what a badass he was outside of acting...
    Christopher Lee, him I knew about, and he's a personal hero of mine....
    Hey, how about a video on what the enlisted movie stars accomplished in that war? I think that it would be a surprise for those viewers who don't know that Jimmy Stewart was a pilot, or that Jack Palance landed his fighter on a carrier while he and it were on fire.
    Whaddya think?

    • @chrissheppard5068
      @chrissheppard5068 Год назад +1

      David Niven did not help in building the Commandos. Fine man and officer tho he be.

    • @ColinH1973
      @ColinH1973 Год назад

      ​@@chrissheppard5068Also Christopher Lee was known to exaggerate his exploits and experiences behind enemy lines during the war. Fine actor and good man that he was.

  • @wwiibuff9862
    @wwiibuff9862 Год назад

    Another great video! Port-en-Bessin is one of my favorite places to go when I visit Normandy. Besides the intense action there of 47 RM Cmdo., it was also a filming location for The Longest Day movie. It stood in for the Riva Bella Casino in Ouistreham.

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 Год назад

    Sad but had to be done all those years ago.....Thank THG🎀

  • @yt.personal.identification
    @yt.personal.identification Год назад

    RIP Leo Kelly
    I grew up hearing about this story.
    The last time I heard him tell it, there were some rather dark details that had been omitted when I was younger.
    Those boys went through too much.

  • @unclenogbad1509
    @unclenogbad1509 Год назад +1

    Excellent video, and you're right: a key fight that's not well enough remembered.
    On a lighter note, one quick detail from the UK. In the photo you show at 14:23 , the soldier on the left, standing next to the bicycle, is not showing a V-for-Victory salute, and I'm betting he was perfectly aware. In the UK, the two fingers with the palm outward is 'victory'; but with the back of the hand outward, it's the same as a single finger in the US. Took Churchill a while to figure that one out, as can be seen in various famous photos. I'm guessing the soldier here is directing it at Hitler, or maybe sussed that the photographer was as posho, and therefore wouldn't spot the difference.

  • @derekbowbrick6233
    @derekbowbrick6233 Год назад +3

    The 352nd of the German army was not at the time of the D-Day invasion considered a first class unit. Many of the soldiers were Russians, old warriors, or brand new recruits.
    Very nice recap of the Royal Commandos raid and the portrayer's of the story.

  • @jjohnsonTX
    @jjohnsonTX Год назад

    Lest We Forget.

  • @jmevb60
    @jmevb60 Год назад +2

    There is no such thing as "light activity" if someone is shooting at you in particular !

  • @Hew.Jarsol
    @Hew.Jarsol 6 месяцев назад +1

    The Commandos created the US Rangers in 1942 (1st and 29th Rangers). These were the predecessors of the US green Berets, SEALS marine raiders etc.

  • @glendaquick9290
    @glendaquick9290 Год назад

    I appreciate hearing the Sacrifices other countries made and the way that everyone worked together to accomplish the German defeat.

  • @chrisholland7367
    @chrisholland7367 11 месяцев назад

    The Duke of Albanys Maratime regiment of foot was established on the 28 of October 1664 to counter the threat from the Dutch.
    The Royal Marines traditionally were employed as ships security, as sharpshooters ,boarding parties and cutting away crews in the days of sail.
    Although they've fought all over the globe in many land and sea battles during their 359 year history the Royal Marines have the battle honour Gibraltar as part their corps emblem. Gibraltar was captured by Dutch and British Marines in 1704 .
    They also served with distinction during ww1 on the western front as part of the Royal Naval Division and at Gallipoli.
    Until the 1920s the Marines had served as two separate branches the Royal Marines Light Infantry and the Royal Marines Artillery (costal defence gun battery's)
    The Royal Marines were based at great naval ports in the UK. Plymouth, Portsmouth Chatham and Woolwich.
    There based primarily now in Plymouth.

  • @berthalloway8182
    @berthalloway8182 Год назад

    Let’s never forget what was done in our past. Then never repeat it again

  • @jeffw1246
    @jeffw1246 Год назад +4

    We really need this history taught in schools so kids understand how precious and precarious freedom is.
    Now they're being taught only the dark chapters and that America is bad.
    Who was it that said "Freedom is only one generation from being lost"?

  • @exmoorfarmer4880
    @exmoorfarmer4880 3 месяца назад

    I was there yesterday! A quick heads up - the Commando Units are pronounced 4,7 not forty seven. It's important to ex RM. Cheers for a great video.

  • @davidgray3321
    @davidgray3321 Год назад +1

    Just for the record old boy, when the RMC fight the enemy they are never repeat never fighting a superior foe, the foe may be more numerous, but never superior. By sea and by Land.

  • @Guangrui
    @Guangrui Год назад

    👏👏👏

  • @ashergoney
    @ashergoney Год назад +1

    Green Rolls in the Region definitely Grassos From Before Went Out Fishing..

  • @HM2SGT
    @HM2SGT Год назад +3

    I don't actually have anything to say, no facts or trivia to contribute- I am simply writing something to have written something, contributing nothing except my participation... like most posts.

  • @j.dunlop8295
    @j.dunlop8295 Год назад +1

    As of this posting less than 1% of the veterans of WW2 are left, of 14 million. Mainly those soldiers who joined young at the end of the war!
    I had two uncle's who were paratroopers WW2, Olen 82nd and Jesse 101st., They never talked about it, except to tell two younger brothers survival tips for the front lines. 1.) Don't group up, it'll make you a bigger target and men will distract each other! 2.) You can't say "no" to an order, but you can tell why it shouldn't be done. Officers can shoot you for saying "no!" Olen was ordered to set his MG up in the clear on a MG nest. He told the new officer, "I'll killed if I do, no cover!" The officer, ordered another G.I. MG to set up there, he was cut in half. The officer stepped back out of defelade, top of his head was blown off! Late in the war, in Germany.

  • @ROBERTN-ut2il
    @ROBERTN-ut2il 11 месяцев назад

    Churchill had a fit when he read in the news that British "SS" Brigades (Special Service) were fighting in Europe. They were hurriedly renamed Commando Brigades.

  • @ddraig1957
    @ddraig1957 Год назад

    I've seen that film clip of that calm looking Commando in the front of that landing craft many times. I always wonder who he was and what became of him.

  • @Jarrosnshajahwh
    @Jarrosnshajahwh Год назад +1

    Brilliant video, although it was pronounced four seven commando not forty seven 😂👍👍👍👍

  • @F4Insight-uq6nt
    @F4Insight-uq6nt Год назад +1

    Proof of all Claims are Required.

  • @merlinwizard1000
    @merlinwizard1000 Год назад +2

    69th, 7 June 2023

  • @southernloff1494
    @southernloff1494 Год назад

    It is often forgotten that the designated beach landing areas, " Sword, Gold, Omaha, & Utah ", were widely separated by distance, as well as the nationalities involved. Sword & Gold were, as I remember, British & Canadian, while Omaha & Utah were American.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson Год назад

      There were five beaches, the fifth was Juno which was also British.

    • @southernloff1494
      @southernloff1494 Год назад +1

      @@Dave_Sisson Oops! Forgot that one. Thanks.

    • @hughledger7835
      @hughledger7835 Год назад

      Technically 6. Band beach was not used

  • @jamesbrown4092
    @jamesbrown4092 Год назад

    In almost every documentary I've seen about D-Day has had a clip of the young man in this video's thumbnail. I'm curious if anybody knows who he is.

  • @bobf.8403
    @bobf.8403 Год назад +1

    At 4:04 of the video there is a picture of a commando in the very front looking to his right. I remember his picture since I was a little kid. Does anyone know who he is and if he survived?

    • @mildandbitter
      @mildandbitter Год назад

      Yes he looks so calm and relaxed unlike the rest his comrades in the boat!

    • @bobf.8403
      @bobf.8403 Год назад

      I suppose the Commando Association in Great Britain might have lead on this fellow.

  • @martyhardman3892
    @martyhardman3892 Год назад

    😢

  • @know-body2519
    @know-body2519 Год назад

    "Mr. T.H.G."
    Would you do a video about the "Treaty of Delaware" and it's ramifications please & thank you?
    (Not covered in my H.S. civics-programming)

  • @ROBERTN-ut2il
    @ROBERTN-ut2il 11 месяцев назад

    The choice of a commando instead of a infantry battalion was totally wrong. Despite its training and high quality it had too few men - 420 against 845 and few heavy weapons (two 3 inch mortars and two Vickers machine guns) vs six 3 inch and four 4.2 inch mortars and twelve Vickers Guns - and that doesn't account for six 6 pounder (57mm) antitank guns. It was organized and equipped as a raiding force, not as assault troops.