Omaha Beach : The D-Day Cameraman Who Filmed Assault Waves on June 6, 1944 - WWII Then & Now

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2023
  • In this D-Day Omaha Beach mini-documentary we discover the story my the only motion picture cameraman, Sgt. Richard Taylor, that landed on Omaha Beach on the Morning of June 6, 1944.
    This mini-documentary was sponsored by MyHeritage. Sign up for a 14-day free trial and enjoy all the amazing features MyHeritage has to offer. If you decide to continue your subscription, you'l get a 50% discount. bit.ly/SNAFUDOCS
    In order to control the photo coverage as best as possible, the US Armed Forces had specific teams of military personnel within their branches trained to take film and photographs in various situations. They would go into combat operations and cover the events where civilians journalists either wouldn’t go or couldn’t go. For the Army these were the so called Signal Photographic Companies, within the US Signal Corps. The unit that was responsible for the coverage of D-Day on the American side was the 165th Signal Photographic Company. They were the Signal Photo Company attached to the US First Army.
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    Produced & Edited by: Joey van Meesen, MA (SNAFU DOCS)
    Researcher: Joey van Meesen, MA
    Researcher: Thulaï van Maanen, Florent Plana, Mattéo Grouard
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    Photographs: US National Archives
    Camera Studio: Milan 't Hooft
    Camera Normandy: Florent Plana, Joey van Meesen, Mattéo Grouard
    Studio Location: Mariniersmuseum Rotterdam
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    SOURCES USED:
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    Link to Original D-Day film: www.nearbycafe.com/artandphot...
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @SNAFUDOCS
    @SNAFUDOCS  Год назад +522

    Thank you all for the incredible support. We reached over Six million views by telling the story of Sgt Taylor! Join us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/SNAFUDOCS

    • @leeholmes9962
      @leeholmes9962 Год назад +1

      I thought it was called operation Neptune spear ✌🏻🇬🇧👍🏻

    • @geoffhajdu6269
      @geoffhajdu6269 Год назад

      hay diperstein the screenshot you show of "the fiasco that is omaha beach" is Juno beach where the Canadian's landed.
      let me give you some history of the Canadian's on that. We where the first to liberate French owned property which is a Victorian
      style house and it's still there today next too a bit of Canadian territory which has a CAN war museum. both buildings or just off the
      first shot of Canadian Troops. second Canadian Army where the only army's too achieve all their D-DAY objectives on D-Day.
      third Canadian Troops pushed so far and wied into northern France we were ordered to pull back too not embarrass the uk and us.
      now seriously american shit stein edit your fucking video too show only american troops.

    • @Edelweiss-uv5xi
      @Edelweiss-uv5xi Год назад +3

      Your camera man manages to fail at every shot you're trying to draw his attention to, and cannot keep his camera steady or moving smoothly. Yet somehow these guys under fire from the enemy during a war were better with a camera than your camera man. I hope he wasn't paid for his work here.

    • @efogg3
      @efogg3 Год назад +6

      My grandfather was there. D Day. Normandy. Omaha beach. First fleet out.( technically 2nd) He drove a jeep he called the general. He said the first fleet out didn't make it bcs they were dropped to far away. He was shot in the arm but he made it. He didn't talk much about the war. He and my grandmother raised me. Couldn't be more proud to have his last name.

    • @efogg3
      @efogg3 Год назад +8

      SNAFU 4:21 YES pls do a vid on the coverage of the American side of Dday! would like to see that video! ty.

  • @angieruggles962
    @angieruggles962 Год назад +11380

    My grandpa was there on D day. Out of 255 boys in his unit, only 4 survived and he was one of them. His friend was shot and killed instantly and his body saved my grandpa. My grandpa chet always said, ' He died so i could live,". The "Hell on Wheels " battalion was his units name. HE NEVER TOLD ANYONE HE WAS THERE UNTIL I INTERVIEWED HIM IN THE LATE 80'S FOR A SCHOOL PROJECT. WHEN THE GOVERNMENT FOUND HIM, THEY ASKED, "WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN HIDING FOR 60 YEARS, CHESTER?" YOU SHOULD HAVE RECEIVED BENEFITS ALL OF THESE DECADES, FOR YOUR BRAVERY IN SERVICE. HE GOT A PURPLE HEART BADGE AND HIS HOMETOWN MADE A BIG TO DO FUNNY, HOW HE HID THIS IN HIS ALCOHOLISM AND SHAME AND AT THE END OF HIS LIFE AT 90, HE REALIZED WHAT A HERO HE REALLY WAS. LOVE U GRANDPA

    • @lsusan
      @lsusan Год назад +507

      Thank you for sharing your grandfather’s story. ❤❤❤

    • @toninatoli
      @toninatoli Год назад +288

      Thank goodness you asked! And that he got to see how his sacrifice was valued and still is by the French people. 🙏
      So many veterans held it all in, so wrecked by what they'd been through and done. Peace to them all.

    • @airbornesoldier8104
      @airbornesoldier8104 Год назад +181

      At least Angie his heroism was finally recognised, in the UK there wasn’t any acknowledgment for the D Day veterans or any WW2 service personnel until most have died of old age . Thank you for your frank and heartfelt story, RESPECT to you and your family 🫡

    • @starchmonkey
      @starchmonkey Год назад +62

      What division?

    • @charleslaing148
      @charleslaing148 Год назад +48

      What a great man and modest RIP

  • @monolithic7739
    @monolithic7739 11 месяцев назад +2654

    Most of these men were younger than 21.. These were mostly 19-20 year old men who hadn't even had the chance to experience life, running face first into a meat grinder. These men deserve more respect than we can give.

    • @migm7428
      @migm7428 9 месяцев назад +59

      And perhaps we should consider what an astonishing blunder and mistake this was on the part of the planners in the background who didn't have to face that meat grinder. What lunatic Commander would ever send his men into such a situation? Either a lunatic or utterly incompetent.

    • @rooploverence
      @rooploverence 9 месяцев назад +30

      @@migm7428What about ww1? And thousands of battles before this one? Almost every commander sends his men to such situations

    • @donaldthetruthseeker-es3nu
      @donaldthetruthseeker-es3nu 8 месяцев назад +31

      My dad was only 19 years old and was on D day and later fought in battle of the bulge.

    • @buttered__toast_2899
      @buttered__toast_2899 8 месяцев назад +30

      @@migm7428do some research buddy. There was a bombing that failed due to heavy cloud cover and the armour couldn’t make it ashore due to the violent water

    • @migm7428
      @migm7428 8 месяцев назад +10

      The phrase comes to mind, "full steam ahead and damn the torpedoes!" I wonder about the competency of those who gave the go ahead, planned and timed the offshore artillery barrages, directed the Air Attack, given the tragic loss of life and certain death for those in many of the landing crafts. It's one thing to give your life for your country but quite another to be an Expendable Pawn from the blunders of leadership. Look at the acts of our so-called leaders today and extrapolate back in time. Were the students at West Point there because of Competency or because of family ties and wealth?

  • @GreysonCiegel
    @GreysonCiegel Месяц назад +20

    The scene where the 2 men were shot and killed is just sad and brutal. No man should ever have to endure this much pain. Rest In Peace to any soldiers who died on June 6 1944, their lives won't be forgotton.

  • @billythompson639
    @billythompson639 5 месяцев назад +475

    Many times it has crossed my mind reading comments of people saying my grandfather was there. There are very few people in existence who’s grandfather was killed in the war. The survivors went on after the war, got married and created a legacy. The ones who were killed didn’t have that opportunity….they were just someone’s son, brother or sweetheart and their lineage ended on that beach. It’s heartbreaking not hearing from the ones who never had the opportunity to speak of their grandfather.

    • @polaroidsky
      @polaroidsky 4 месяца назад +11

      True. The average age of American soldiers in WW2 was 26 years old. That didn’t leave them much time to get settled down, much less to have kids.

    • @steelcar-ru
      @steelcar-ru 4 месяца назад

      👍😔

    • @GreazeLightning
      @GreazeLightning 4 месяца назад +8

      This hit me hard

    • @petercoates2056
      @petercoates2056 4 месяца назад +10

      My great grandfather was in the british army in the durham light infantry but he got wounded and later died of his wounds but he had my grandmother so fortunately i exist today

    • @johncuccini5009
      @johncuccini5009 4 месяца назад +10

      You obviously don't realize how many men went off to war leaving behind wives and young children, I have a relative who had 2 kids when he went off to war and he died in the Pacific. He is someone's grandfather, you really should learn some history.

  • @Mag_Aoidh
    @Mag_Aoidh Год назад +4283

    That beach scene where the 2 guys go down has always been a heartbreaking scene to watch. I’m 55 and saw it most of my life and it still affects me the same.

    • @ilovenitnat
      @ilovenitnat Год назад +394

      You took the words right out of my mouth, same for me. The way his leg swings unnaturally forward and that once down he stays down one can only assume he is hit by a burst from a MG. I’ve often wondered who he was. Poor fella.

    • @jennifermcclain4478
      @jennifermcclain4478 Год назад +83

      Same

    • @KCODacey
      @KCODacey Год назад +185

      It takes my breath away every time I see this scene. I'm 69 & its impact hasn't lessened over the years.

    • @jhill4071
      @jhill4071 Год назад

      D Day the 6th of June. And America's reward for saving Russia's sorry ass. . Putin and the Russian people attack Ukraine and steal children by the thousands They are every bits as bad as the Nazi.

    • @dingusNuts
      @dingusNuts Год назад +157

      I’m 63 and it still makes me weep. I pray for these young men’s souls that they are in Heaven.

  • @bootdownthedoor324
    @bootdownthedoor324 10 месяцев назад +1175

    My grandfather landed there as a medic. He went on from D Day to fight in the Battle of the Bulge. He never talked much about the horrors he saw but one can only imagine. The fact that he made it back alive was nothing short of a miracle, & the look in his eyes as an old man seeing his grandchildren makes sense to me now more than ever at 33 years old.
    Rest In Peace grandpa, I’ll never forget you or the service you gave to our country.

    • @jimtom4878
      @jimtom4878 9 месяцев назад +12

      My dad told me that 5 brothers on his mother's side went in, and all made it back. One was an infantry sergeant and the other drove a Sherman and he got blown out out of 3 tanks in the Battle of the Bulge and survived. The last one put him in a coma but he was alright I don't know how long he was in a coma for.

    • @jimtom4878
      @jimtom4878 9 месяцев назад +2

      I'm not sure what the other 3 brothers were

    • @araujorm
      @araujorm 9 месяцев назад +5

      A service he gave to your country and to the whole of humanity. Bless him. I wish all the best to you and your loved ones and thanks.

    • @Curious.102
      @Curious.102 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@araujormur so nice

    • @JamesFolkers
      @JamesFolkers 8 месяцев назад +1

      My Uncle was here - he only spoke about it once in his life, when he was visiting my family when I was about 12 yrs old. His wife (my aunt) had never heard the stories he told.

  • @lwill4075
    @lwill4075 5 месяцев назад +235

    My grandfather was there on dday, but he was a cook on one of the big transport ships.. He always down played his role as a cook and felt guilty cause he wasnt on the beach front lines. I always told him, someone had to cook, so he played a very important part. Salute to my grandfather RIP

    • @longforgotten4823
      @longforgotten4823 4 месяца назад +24

      The cooks played a substantial role. Food has to sustain thousands in their mission. Though, there were plenty of soldiers that day that cursed the breakfast they had had because the rough seas, stress, and fear caused many to throw up on the landing craft.

    • @dimeadosen8372
      @dimeadosen8372 4 месяца назад +12

      My Great Grandpa was a cook during WW2 on a destroyer. He went through the Panama canal and patrolled the Pacific.

    • @NyThc
      @NyThc 4 месяца назад +10

      My great grandfather was a radar operator for ships in the navy he was there to, maybe a possibility they crossed paths. Never know

    • @amaduck2132
      @amaduck2132 4 месяца назад +11

      He be cooking 🔥 🔥 🔥

    • @lwill4075
      @lwill4075 4 месяца назад

      @@amaduck2132 on everything he was...

  • @bootle2
    @bootle2 9 месяцев назад +482

    The boats were mostly made from wood and the front ramp made from metal. They had to sit and listen to bullets bouncing off until they heard the order to lower the ramp and then the men at the front were mostly cut to ribbons. No man should ever have to endure that. These people are real men, real heroes, and should NEVER be forgotten.

    • @EngPheniks
      @EngPheniks 8 месяцев назад +17

      ...and some men got pinned down before they even get the chance to get out of their boats. German bullet spray from the MG-42 brushes you and "BAM", just like that, your life is gone.

    • @HollyMoore-wo2mh
      @HollyMoore-wo2mh 8 месяцев назад +12

      They are called Higgins boats - named after the man how designed them. (Designer Andrew Higgins based it on boats made for operating in swamps and marshes. More than 23,358 were built, by Higgins Industries and licensee.)

    • @PrestonMescher-nk3mj
      @PrestonMescher-nk3mj 7 месяцев назад +11

      God holds a place for these galliant braves

    • @ChadSimpson-ft7yz
      @ChadSimpson-ft7yz 6 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@EngPheniksOmaha is horseshoe shaped, and some boats were hit before they even made it to the beach.

    • @GameCrafter467
      @GameCrafter467 6 месяцев назад +2

      "These people are real men" maybe , but probably not the wisest , because they could simply not go to war

  • @68fmj51
    @68fmj51 Год назад +1616

    I can’t imagine what it was like for those poor boys heading in to that hell. Seasick, wet, cold, loaded down with equipment, and probably scared to death. RIP heroes.

    • @stevenbaker6417
      @stevenbaker6417 Год назад +89

      Surprised the boats stayed afloat after they dispatched, due to the weight of their enormous balls of steel…

    • @ym5180
      @ym5180 Год назад +67

      @@kinglouie63 Men can fear too. If you are human, you experience fear. Brave or not, nobody wants to die.

    • @draw4kicks
      @draw4kicks Год назад +35

      @@kinglouie63 The reason they fought was so nobody would ever have to be put in the situation they were in ever again

    • @xbman1
      @xbman1 Год назад +21

      @@kinglouie63
      Not only boys. Some are girly boys, today.

    • @xbman1
      @xbman1 Год назад +17

      @@ym5180
      True, nobody want to died.
      Some are cowards and let others died for them.
      These are true hero. They do not want to died. Known that most likely they’ll died on that beach.
      Yet, they went ahead.
      Time for peace. RIP, with million thanks.

  • @David-np3bc
    @David-np3bc Год назад +556

    Seeing that soldier fall as soon as he walks on the beach is really poignant. RIP hero. Your sacrifice shall never be forgotten

    • @vernonerickson9343
      @vernonerickson9343 Год назад +37

      Always wondered who he was, where he was from.

    • @OlSgtLove
      @OlSgtLove Год назад +45

      I always wonder too who he was...also the other Soldier who was wounded and trys to get back up ...was he able to make it to safety...or was he killed by more rounds as he tried to get off the beach....May We Never Forget ...We Remember Them ...

    • @thomasjohanthorsrud
      @thomasjohanthorsrud Год назад +21

      yeah so many lives gone before they even got to do any fighting

    • @fwwryh7862
      @fwwryh7862 Год назад +4

      He got a salary. Not a hero.

    • @Edelweiss-uv5xi
      @Edelweiss-uv5xi Год назад +1

      They fought so they could have mixed race grand kids who can have their dicks lopped off and wear dresses while smoking weed and eating themselves into the need of a mobility scooter covered in rainbow flags. Every one of my family who fought with the allies before their death came to regret and lament their involvement. They know they fought on the wrong side. It's time we honour their memories and acknowledge we goofed. The real victims are the indigenous Germanic peoples who wanted their land back stolen from them in WW1 and ended up having more stolen from them in WW2 and now are being genocided openly by endless migration funded by IsraAID.

  • @AndrewMarq94
    @AndrewMarq94 8 месяцев назад +43

    My great uncle, Tony Covatta, fought in WWII with a panzer destroyer tank division. He landed in Normandy about a week after D-Day. Fought in the infamous Battle of the Bulge in the winter. Whenever I would ask him questions about the war he would get a few questions in and then break down. It was hard to watch. Truly a bad ass, and a hero. Miss you so much uncle Tony!

  • @sirwhitecrayon2499
    @sirwhitecrayon2499 Месяц назад +7

    My grandfather landed there with the 4th ID as a corporal junior leader of his platoon. He survived, but lost most of the people in his platoon. He landed on Utah beach and later went on to liberate Paris. He received a silver star, army commendation, and a Purple Heart. He was proud of his accomplishments and never left the house without his 4th ID pin on his shirt or coat collar. I was lucky enough to have him at my Army OSUT graduation in summer of 2003 and in my send off to Iraq in late 2003 with the 1st ID. He unfortunately passed while I was deployed. I was lucky to be able to come back home and be at his funeral.

  • @Bengtsson1742
    @Bengtsson1742 Год назад +1252

    My grandfather fought in North Africa, Sicily and up through Italy. He was an ammunition truck driver. He delivered ammunition to the guys on the front line. His brother (my great uncle) fought from the north coming down south. As the mud-covered men marched into Rome in a long column, my grandfather saw his brother walking past his truck going in the opposite direction. He jumped out and they both embraced. They got a picture together standing in front of the colosseum. That picture is one of our families great possessions.

    • @nbmooselovers
      @nbmooselovers Год назад +64

      What an "Amazing" miracle that their paths would connect. What a "Joyous" moment in a living hell that must have been. 🙏

    • @NajSinghs
      @NajSinghs Год назад +12

      ❤💔❤ Bless your family

    • @Lucy-dx7vc
      @Lucy-dx7vc Год назад +71

      the sad thing is, they died for this woke bullshit we have now. it is a shame

    • @culbyj3665
      @culbyj3665 Год назад +7

      GOD I would Love a COPY of that Heirloom

    • @culbyj3665
      @culbyj3665 Год назад +7

      God Bless Your family and its sacrifices

  • @Saxxonknight
    @Saxxonknight 11 месяцев назад +1212

    My Uncle was killed near the seawall. Word is he made it there, but went back to help pull a buddy to safety and the same machine gun that had hit his friend took his life. He had fought in North Africa and Sicily prior, earning a Silver Star, Bronze Star with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters and the Purple Heart issued on his death. Rest in peace Andrew.

    • @DontcallmeaCuck
      @DontcallmeaCuck 11 месяцев назад +2

      At least he died so Transgender and gays could rule the world as victims . 🏳️‍⚧️

    • @TehSWEED
      @TehSWEED 11 месяцев назад +2

      same

    • @Weshopwizard
      @Weshopwizard 11 месяцев назад +7

      Big Red One?

    • @puppergump4117
      @puppergump4117 11 месяцев назад +36

      It takes more balls than all of us combined to run into no man's land to save someone.

    • @rickhatesmisleadia7101
      @rickhatesmisleadia7101 11 месяцев назад +7

      RIP brave soldier!

  • @vincentmcnabb939
    @vincentmcnabb939 5 месяцев назад +35

    My Grandfather lost three fingers on landing. He also served in Korea. The sacrifice of these young men should never be forgotten, but better still never repeated. War is hell and sometimes unavoidable, but avoidable wars still happen too often. Peace to all this Christmas.

  • @musicofMEC
    @musicofMEC 5 месяцев назад +98

    This is the earliest footage we have, that the cameraman never dies.

    • @badazz2969
      @badazz2969 3 месяца назад +15

      In all seriousness let's cut that shit out and respect those young men who gave thier lives for us. They'd be disgusted if they read this comment your lucky many are gone to a different place today.

    • @Spiralredd
      @Spiralredd Месяц назад +4

      ​@@badazz2969how he was absolutely right. You think cameramen were safe?

    • @Grug-xi8fv
      @Grug-xi8fv 12 дней назад

      Could have been press if it was created back then

  • @timomarieshely
    @timomarieshely Год назад +664

    I have no words… As a Frenchman I want to thank the American men who gave their life’s and left wives and children for a land that is not their own… God bless America Merci ❤️

    • @johnrudy9404
      @johnrudy9404 Год назад +23

      Thank you sir for your kind words of gratitude.

    • @johnruggio9862
      @johnruggio9862 Год назад +28

      As an American the best I can do is thank you for putting up an excellent fight against the Nazis.
      Your resistance fighters and there sacrifices were not in vain

    • @sugarkane4830
      @sugarkane4830 Год назад +36

      And the British Canadian and any other nationality that was there that day. Including the Free French. Lest we forget.

    • @Edelweiss-uv5xi
      @Edelweiss-uv5xi Год назад +1

      You're not a Frenchman though, you're Lebanese and arrived when their colony collapsed. You're not indigenous, but an invader to that region, as is your wife. The real French are such a tiny minority and are not even acknowledged as indigenous. If you consider yourself an honorable man, fight for their rights, see that the few remaining indigenous Franks are acknowledged as indigenous at least by law.

    • @Blakethornton66.
      @Blakethornton66. Год назад +2

      @@johnruggio9862 💯

  • @roypinney9748
    @roypinney9748 Год назад +1015

    My father, Roy Pinney, was also a US Army photographer at the Normandy invasion. He took primarily still photos as they assaulted the beach, until he was wounded by shrapnel to the stomach.
    Like Taylor, he was evacuated to a British hospital and later returned to the US. Fortunately for us, he lived a good and interesting life until he died at age 99 years old.

    • @fundude9938
      @fundude9938 Год назад +42

      @Potato Hero How? The U.S. was freeing occupied France from Germany. I don't see how that's wrong.

    • @bolivianbillionaire1349
      @bolivianbillionaire1349 Год назад +5

      were his photos coonfiscated by the authorities like the movie footage?........supposedly dropped the water and destroyed or some crap...............just too much for the public to see......the slaughter on the beaches ..etc etc....

    • @TioMogi
      @TioMogi Год назад +39

      ​@Potato Hero bro, literally the one war where the US was justified

    • @calebeshelman3297
      @calebeshelman3297 Год назад

      @GOATED_LORD shhh let potato be retarded In peace 💀💀

    • @weshay3699
      @weshay3699 Год назад +6

      Did he write an account of his life and experiences?
      Did he leave letters photographs?? What about audio/video
      recordings of him? He sounds like a very interesting man
      It would be a shame to have people like this memory fade
      out. My advise get it going, write a book And Roy Pinney will
      live on in history, rather than just another tombstone or urn.

  • @mollymccray6648
    @mollymccray6648 5 месяцев назад +43

    A cousin of mine died on D-Day aged 23. I have heard from a distant cousin he never made it to the beach.
    Rest in peace to all of the wonderful men who unfortunately lost their lives. And to my cousin, John Trent Kincer from Wytheville , VA.
    💙💙💙

    • @usa1144
      @usa1144 Месяц назад +1

      Covington va here. Close by. Respect 🙏

  • @john-martin
    @john-martin 9 месяцев назад +49

    My great uncle survived Omaha, he was one of the kindest souls i've ever met. ❤

  • @AR-pm9nv
    @AR-pm9nv Год назад +386

    My father was there. 5th Rangers, Company D. He was one of the luckiest. Not a scratch on D-day. He was wounded later in another battle. 19 years old. He never spoke a word about it, and I understand why.

    • @declanmcmahon7326
      @declanmcmahon7326 Год назад +6

      I'm sure he was haunted by what he saw

    • @dustyking8851
      @dustyking8851 Год назад +9

      My uncle joined after Pearl Harbor as a teenager. He NEVER spoke about what he saw or felt. I asked a couple of times after I saw how he was affected I stopped. I can't imagine what he went through as a kid. 🇺🇸

    • @aaronschneider1762
      @aaronschneider1762 Год назад +1

      I can’t even go shopping, I will fall down at some point and scrape all the skin off my knee

    • @MagnetDzn
      @MagnetDzn Год назад

      I don’t understand why tbh

    • @leviwestphal4525
      @leviwestphal4525 Год назад +5

      When I was 19 I was still very immature, thinking about partying & girls. Absolutely humbled by these brave souls & what they sacrificed. Some never given the chance to experience love, their first house, start a career, or the joy of having a child. Brave Men.

  • @kathrynbellerose6216
    @kathrynbellerose6216 Год назад +129

    My uncle was there and he never talked about it. I know he had a lot of trouble sleeping many nights. Heroes every single one. We owe them everything they saved the world.

    • @charleslaing148
      @charleslaing148 Год назад +2

      GREAT GENERARATION OF MEN TO FACE THEM MACHINE GUNS AND RUN STRAIGHT AT THEM TOOK ENORMOUS STRENGTH AND BRAVERY RIP

    • @pamelaoliver8442
      @pamelaoliver8442 Год назад +1

      Literally!

    • @vickijohnson9704
      @vickijohnson9704 Год назад +2

      My mother was a child in England during the war. I am grateful for people like your uncle. I may not have been born if it were not for him. He helped save my mother's country. How do you ever thank someone enough for risking their life for others?

    • @kathrynbellerose6216
      @kathrynbellerose6216 Год назад +1

      @@vickijohnson9704 The British people were so brave during ww2, they were put through holy hell and never surrendered to the monster Hitler. My hat is off to them. God Bless.

  • @twiggy6591
    @twiggy6591 9 месяцев назад +29

    My grandfather was J.C. Chandler and he was a paramedic on Omaha Beach. I’ve seen a few pictures and he told me a few stories but videos like this helps to remind me of the greatest generation to ever do it!!

  • @colinkerr7270
    @colinkerr7270 6 месяцев назад +19

    As an ex serviceman and one who had an uncle on D day. I am proud of the things that you do to respect and honour the memory of the greatest generation. Thank you.

  • @fredbalster3100
    @fredbalster3100 Год назад +166

    My dad landed in the third wave as a medic. The only comment he made was that they stacked bodies like cord wood to provide cover to work on the wounded. He refused to watch "saving private Ryan". He spent his whole life trying to forget. 😢

    • @chairmankaga101
      @chairmankaga101 Год назад +28

      My great uncle was also a medic on that beach. I don’t know his unit though, and he died about 25 years ago. But I was with him on June 6, 1994. I took my grandma to visit him in San Antonio. She and my mom had gone shopping that afternoon and Uncle Ralph and I were just sitting on the couch in our hotel room watching the 50th anniversary ceremony on TV, and he just started telling me what happened that day. It was harrowing. When I told my grandma later, she was shocked. He’d never told anyone in his family what had happened to him on D Day. I just happened to be with him on that day, watching that ceremony, when he decided it was time. I miss my uncle (and my grandma). He was truly the nicest, most generous man I’ve ever known. To know the things he went through and continued going through for decades afterward just made me respect him more. It’s truly amazing.

    • @jonathanallard2128
      @jonathanallard2128 Год назад +9

      "he refused to watch Saving Private Ryan"
      can't blame him. He's probably seen more than enough of that horror for himself...

    • @oscargrouch7962
      @oscargrouch7962 Год назад +11

      The veterans, cast, and crew of the Band of Brothers viewed the mini-series before it was released to the public. During the night jump scene into Normandy, some of the veterans had to get up and walk out of the theater. They could not bear several decades later to relive the most frightening event of their lives.

    • @jackmehoff5523
      @jackmehoff5523 Год назад

      Shame on that private Ryan movie for starring a few of the most anti American sacks of crap.

    • @vickijohnson9704
      @vickijohnson9704 Год назад +4

      My mother was a child in England during the war. I am grateful for people like your father. I may not have been born if it were not for him. He helped save my mother's country. How do you ever thank someone enough for risking their life for others?

  • @zachrodriguez4024
    @zachrodriguez4024 11 месяцев назад +437

    The fact that Sgt. Taylor was hit/injured and still fought to keep his camera above water is a remarkable testament to his courage and commitment to his role

  • @lizzyhuo9789
    @lizzyhuo9789 7 дней назад +4

    In 1973 there was a fire in St. Louis at the National Archives that destroyed 100's of 1000's of military records. My Granddaddy was in the 2nd infantray Brovo Company. The sad thing is we can only find his enlisting card, other than that and our memories, he never served. My mom had to fight like h@ll to get his VA benefits. All of his medals and ribbons didn't mean jack when he had a stroke because of that fire. They eventually learned to make backup copies of everything. At least some good came out of it. Thank you to everyone who served, thank you for this video and thank you Sgt. Taylor for filming it.

  • @christopherdeprenda4093
    @christopherdeprenda4093 8 месяцев назад +57

    These guys were amazing. No one can hold a candle to them.

  • @jenniferrossel5035
    @jenniferrossel5035 Год назад +198

    Thank you Joey for putting together such a wonderful documentary of Sgt Taylor's, my Dad, film work of DDay. Growing up he related only a bit of his experiences as a cameraman with the 165th Signal Corps. He did talk about getting shot almost immediately upon landing on that day. It did leave a big "crater" in his upper left arm as a result. I had never seen any of his war footage of DDay until now. While he kept many war photos, memorabilia, and letters from his life in the Army some of which were featured in this documentary, he spoke about that time very little. I am in the process of going through the volumes of materials he left. Sgt Taylor went on to film The Battle of the Bulge, Hurtegen Forest, the Malmedy Massacre, and the Liberation of Luxembourg to name just a few places.

    • @Inkling777
      @Inkling777 Год назад +10

      Many of us hope you can collect all that material into a book about your father's military service.

    • @stevebabiak6997
      @stevebabiak6997 Год назад +27

      This comment, from Sgt Taylor’s descendant, deserves to be pinned, so that viewers can express their thanks to the family of that brave soldier.

    • @jenniferrossel5035
      @jenniferrossel5035 Год назад +7

      @@stevebabiak6997 thanks.

    • @jenniferrossel5035
      @jenniferrossel5035 Год назад +4

      @@Inkling777 would like to but just don't know how to start it.

    • @davidharris7235
      @davidharris7235 Год назад +5

      You must be so proud of your dad.

  • @katw22
    @katw22 Год назад +204

    Thank you for posting this. It gives me chills. My Grandfather was there on D Day. He was serving with the 116th infantry of the 29th Division and was in the first wave assault of Omaha Beach. He received the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. I am so thankful he survived. Eternally grateful for all those men. ❤🙏

    • @randylahey1822
      @randylahey1822 Год назад +4

      CHILLS BRUTHER CHILLS

    • @KaiBrunk125
      @KaiBrunk125 Год назад +3

      Wow first wave. Truly thankful he survived too❤

    • @robertkubicki126
      @robertkubicki126 Год назад +5

      God bless him! He was brave and courageous. That whole generation was. We need more people like that now or God help us the way things are going. I hate it when these communists now teach and say how bad this country is and hate it.

    • @petewilliamson1148
      @petewilliamson1148 Год назад +2

      I was in 1/116th 29th infantry Virginia national guard Lynchburg Virginia the blue and grey

    • @lizhines6294
      @lizhines6294 Год назад +2

      Just think, If BE DIDNT MAKE IT, YOU WOULDN'T BE YOU TODAY...

  • @EngPheniks
    @EngPheniks 8 месяцев назад +5

    Imagine being an American soldier fresh out of training and then deployed to Normandy beach on June 6, 1944 especially at Omaha Beach. It'd be a living hell.

  • @yotaiji012
    @yotaiji012 8 месяцев назад +25

    I never realized that there actually were cameramen and photographers on the battlefield. So brave.

    • @JourneysADRIFT
      @JourneysADRIFT 3 месяца назад +4

      Still are. Spent years of my life as a combat camera in Afghanistan for the Army.

    • @yotaiji012
      @yotaiji012 3 месяца назад

      @@JourneysADRIFT what motivated you to do it?

    • @JourneysADRIFT
      @JourneysADRIFT 3 месяца назад +3

      @@yotaiji012 I was young and the bonus $ was big. 💀

    • @yotaiji012
      @yotaiji012 3 месяца назад

      @@JourneysADRIFT big enough where you are the only one without a gun? You got some balls!

  • @brucevancamp4498
    @brucevancamp4498 10 месяцев назад +250

    My dad was captured in Anzio in the battle of the caves and was force to work the farm for 14 months until being liberated. All they were given to eat was cauliflower. He was given the purple heart for bieng wounded and other honers also. He just passed away 3 months ago at the age of 99. He still ran from the Germans every night. He and my mom were married over 70 years had 5 children and was very active in the church. God bless his soul, we are very proud of you Dad.

    • @mollymccray6648
      @mollymccray6648 5 месяцев назад +7

      God bless him!❤️

    • @chrisbelsito4231
      @chrisbelsito4231 4 месяца назад +3

      May he rest in peace now

    • @cisco1819
      @cisco1819 3 месяца назад +1

      God bless him❤

    • @bittoochatterjee2661
      @bittoochatterjee2661 Месяц назад

      Ha Ha Ha He Still Ran From Germans and that too every Night . What a Coward Person ? SOLDIER our Father Was .
      Ha Ha Ha😁😁🤣🤣😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @michaelwhisman
      @michaelwhisman День назад

      Every American, who died at Anzio, was murdered by their commanding general. There were no Germans opposing the Americans. The American General waited until the Germans moved into position for attack.

  • @johnm.caldwell1761
    @johnm.caldwell1761 Год назад +286

    I remember my late father telling me stories of my late great uncle that was a part of that great campaign on Omaha Beach and survived. My father told me that he remembered when my great uncle deployed to Europe and was not seen for over a year. My father told me he remembered the day my great uncle returned home. The correspondence was not as swift as today, so my great uncle’s arrival was a surprise to everyone. My father, only thirteen at the time, was working in the yard when he heard his dog barking at something approaching in the woods. My father looked to see what his dog was barking at to see a man carrying a duffle bag and a rifle hiking towards him. As my great uncle got closer, my father recognized who it was and ran up to hug him. My father announced his arrival to all his siblings and my grandparents and an overwhelming family reunion ensued. My great uncle told stories of the war and how he was deployed with thousands of other soldiers onto the beaches of France where he witnessed several of his comrades lost. He said that he pushed forward and focused on his mission and survived. He said that a few months later, it was announced that his tour in Europe was complete and he was allowed to go home. His military base was about twenty-eight miles from his home. They offered him a ride to his house. He told them, “No. I’ve walked about a thousand miles around France on foot. I only live about thirty miles from here. I know the way. I’m going to walk. The peace and tranquility will help me reset myself for rejoining with my family.”

    • @TehSWEED
      @TehSWEED 11 месяцев назад +3

      same

    • @mwr7
      @mwr7 11 месяцев назад +36

      That's such an awesome story. Thank you for sharing. That last part about walking 30 miles home, not being bothered by it, as he had already marched untold miles around France, the fact that he knew the way on foot, and perhaps most inspiring that he knew he needed that to center himself before finally returning home is the perfect illustration of the major generational differences, from then to now.

    • @Supernova1.980
      @Supernova1.980 10 месяцев назад +6

    • @Yo-cr9ol
      @Yo-cr9ol 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@mwr7i completely agree

    • @bsoz9759
      @bsoz9759 9 месяцев назад +6

      What a remarkable soul. I'm sure he was watched over by God or whatever Deity your family looked to for salvation.
      How fortunate he was able to return to your family and recall the events of his service.
      I sincerely hope he was able to enjoy a long and successful life!

  • @kjell-jorvikyvind5205
    @kjell-jorvikyvind5205 8 месяцев назад +18

    This one left me speechless. You paid Sgt Taylor great respect.

  • @rosslash8758
    @rosslash8758 3 месяца назад +2

    My grandfather was there, but he wasn't taking the beach. His company was coming from the land side and showed up way after the beach had been taken. Much love to all those who had family there.

  • @TrunkyDunks
    @TrunkyDunks 11 месяцев назад +96

    My grandfather never spoke of it...but I do remember when we went to go see saving private ryan in theaters with my father and brother....he started crying and said "I smell diesel and need to get some air" and walked out for about 20 minutes. He wasnt the only one who walked out. We never talked about it, but I do believe he had it bad.
    Miss you pops

    • @AllanAtuma
      @AllanAtuma 6 месяцев назад

      Hello

    • @Spiralredd
      @Spiralredd Месяц назад

      Saving Private Ryan was probably the closest you'd get to the battlefront without enlistment

  • @martinn6333
    @martinn6333 Год назад +65

    Today I reminded my 32 year old son that yesterday was the 79th anniversary of D-Day. He replied saying “many of those poor guys didn’t make it to today” ... it took me a second to “get” what he meant and increased my sadness at all those young lives lost for what was ultimately the greatest war-time endeavour of modern times.

    • @oscargrouch7962
      @oscargrouch7962 Год назад +4

      They grew up during the Great Depression then fought in WW2. Those who were killed in WW2 did not experience much else than the Great Depression and WW2.

  • @user-ou3dm6th3x
    @user-ou3dm6th3x 3 месяца назад +9

    My uncle was in the Army and served as a reporter for Stars and Stripes in both Europe and Southeast Asia during the war. He kept his notes from the interviews he did and would let me read them. Reading about the horror those young men experienced made me think how lucky they were to have survived. I can’t imagine being only 18 or 19 and going through what those young men went through. Every time I would meet a WWII veteran, I’d give them a hug, if allowed, and thanked them for saving us from Hitler and the Japanese.

  • @Conniebsheetmusic
    @Conniebsheetmusic 7 дней назад +2

    My dad came into Omaha Beach June 7 1944. Thank you for this video. It helps me to imagine what he went through.

  • @chrisjohnson9366
    @chrisjohnson9366 Год назад +200

    My Granddad just turned 100. He was in the 3rd wave on Omaha Beach. He is the last living witness of the signing of the Instrument of Surrender at the little red school house. He wrote a book about his time in the war. Called “ A Patriot’s Memoirs Of World War ll.

    • @augustopinochet3830
      @augustopinochet3830 Год назад

      I wonder if he's content with the united states as it is now. I for sure wouldn't risk my life and watch my friends get brutally killed just to be called hateful in 80 years time.

    • @LUC1FER_R1S1NG
      @LUC1FER_R1S1NG Год назад +3

      he's still alive? wow, thank him for his service

    • @nelsongay6572
      @nelsongay6572 Год назад

      @@LUC1FER_R1S1NG im pretty sure he hasnt died since the last 3 days the comment was posted

    • @fascistalien
      @fascistalien Год назад +1

      ​@@nelsongay6572he did bro, he died 79 years ago...

    • @jvjdrn
      @jvjdrn Год назад +2

      Please thank your granddad for his bravery.

  • @k.chriscaldwell4141
    @k.chriscaldwell4141 Год назад +80

    08:37 That soldier is my grandfather, Richard Exline, coming ashore on Omaha Beach. He was in the 3rd. wave. That photo is one from a series of him and his engineers unit coming ashore
    He did not know about the photos until about the mid-90s.
    He passed in 2011. He left an oral record about his Omaha Beach landing experience and of this and the other photos at the New Orleans World War II museum.
    His obit and photo can be found by searching for: Richard-W.-Exline obit
    Cheers.

    • @SNAFUDOCS
      @SNAFUDOCS  Год назад +8

      Hello there! Thank you for watching I'd love to get in touch with you! Could you send me an email?

    • @k.chriscaldwell4141
      @k.chriscaldwell4141 Год назад +3

      @@SNAFUDOCS Done.

    • @DannyPepprs
      @DannyPepprs Год назад +3

      RESPECT and RIP to your Granpa

    • @vickijohnson9704
      @vickijohnson9704 Год назад +3

      My mother was a child in England during the war. I am grateful for people like your grand father. I may not have been born if it were not for him. He helped save my mother's country. How do you ever thank someone enough for risking their life for others?

    • @SNAFUDOCS
      @SNAFUDOCS  Год назад +1

      @@k.chriscaldwell4141 Hi Chris, I don't see it! Can you try again?

  • @sondoobie1987
    @sondoobie1987 2 месяца назад +2

    The thumbnail, I remember as a child watching a ww2 documentary series, the world at war, back in the 70's. It was what gave me a massive interest in all things ww2. This scene stuck with me and to this day still gives me the same feelings as it did when I was a child. That man, just collapses from his stride, falls down and is done.. What an absolute shame. I feel for his soul every time I see it.

  • @NotiFawkes
    @NotiFawkes 9 месяцев назад +11

    when the end credits appeared, I was left with nothing but tears. The hallmark of a powerful piece. Beautifully done.

  • @Hoth1907
    @Hoth1907 Год назад +761

    My grandfather was a German soldier, saw heavy combat in Russia and Italy, and then became a POW in Lousiana for 3 years. I’ll never forget what he said about US soldiers: those where the most heroic SOB’s i have ever seen. He remained friends with GI’s he met in POW camp for the rest of his life. In his name i salute all the servicemen who fought and died at D-Day.

    • @tacey01
      @tacey01 Год назад +45

      I too had uncles who were of German descent, born in the USA but first generation anerican, who then fought in Germany. One uncle was a POW there and he spoke German. He had to hide the fact that he could understand his captors. He was liberated on VE Day and was nearly was sent to the Pacific theater but it ended before he had his orders. God bless all of our military soldiers sailors airmen the nurses and medics. All of them every one! 🙏🏻

    • @bodhiutah4501
      @bodhiutah4501 Год назад +89

      I was a soldier, stationed in Germany before 9/11. I was then dating a German woman who introduced me to her grandfather, who flew in the Luftwaffe. The stories that old man could tell you were unbelievable......I know he fought on the other side, but to hear stories from back then are just wonderful moments. He actually apologized, saying he may have taken a shot at my grandfather back then, but I told him that my grandfather went to the Pacific.........but truly, what a wonderful opportunity to hear some history.

    • @Zer0fuks
      @Zer0fuks Год назад +16

      Belleau Woods, France, 1918.

    • @tacey01
      @tacey01 Год назад +48

      @@bodhiutah4501 my mom was 100% German 1st generation USA. My father 100% Ukrainian. My Ukrainian grandfather escaped ukraine to avoid mandatory serving in the Russian army. He came to Pittsburgh Pennsylvania making steel to fight the Germans in WW1 and 2. Very interesting history.

    • @sch85718
      @sch85718 Год назад +12

      Ich hat ein kameraden...Eine Kugel kam geflogen:
      Gilt's mir oder gilt es dir?

  • @donb7113
    @donb7113 Год назад +320

    My eternal gratitude to those who fought and died at the Normandy coast invasion 79 years ago. I knew some of them when I grew up.

    • @BigLisaFan
      @BigLisaFan Год назад +19

      Once there were many, now there are only a few.
      I remember buying poppies from WW I veterans now they are all gone. Soon our WW II vets will join them.

    • @Edelweiss-uv5xi
      @Edelweiss-uv5xi Год назад +1

      We shouldn't have done it. Germany was reclaiming it's rightful territory and rejecting international banking. It was even peacefully evacuating Jewish people and others who were not indigenous to the area and seen as (rightfully) invaders in the Haavara Agreement. It may have actually been our hand that caused everything to go pear shaped by our intervention. Their invasion of Poland was righteously reclaiming their land, their invasion of France was to disarm them and stop them from murdering tens of millions of Germans another time, and their plan was to return it. When you read primary documents and listen to speeches - we've been lied to, so much, for so long. Did you know not one Englishman, Canadian,, or American who liberated prison camps found anything untoward? No suffering, no murder. They found typhus, lots of lice and typhus. But nothing untoward. Not one western leader at the time even mentioned it the prison camps were so mundane and normal. It was only after financial incentive that people started to ham it up. I truly believe we forced their hand and caused most of this. Even Churchil said 'the greatest crime (Germany) has committed is to rob international banking of their rightful dues.'

    • @patricialavallee8286
      @patricialavallee8286 Год назад +3

      AMEN

    • @Itme
      @Itme Год назад

      All sides worked together. Now WE are fighting. Maybe asshat I mean H#tler should have killed everything. Humans are stupid and forget within a few generations

    • @Edgar-kl6us
      @Edgar-kl6us Год назад

      Although I knew none of those who fought, bled, sweated, or died here, I am eternally grateful, and I went on to serve 17 months in West Germany, & a following 13 months, in West Berlin, … circa October 1 of 1972 through March 10th, 1975 w/2 Honorable Discharges, …

  • @vivalastatic
    @vivalastatic 9 месяцев назад +22

    Visited Normandy and Point du Hoc a few weeks ago and it was surreal. The amount of young men who gave their lives on those beaches.
    Thank you for this documentary it was very well done and a pleasure to watch.

    • @pecosb5221
      @pecosb5221 8 месяцев назад

      I visited Normandy Omaha Beach in 2016, I was looking at the Beach and I don't know how but I started crying.

  • @cubberly18-by4gx
    @cubberly18-by4gx 3 месяца назад +1

    It’s eerie to think this was held 80 years ago and still one of the most terrible days of man kind

  • @chuckabutty888
    @chuckabutty888 Год назад +233

    My father had survived Dunkirk and returned to land on Sword beach that morning only just making it ashore. As he came off the ramp of a LCT a single German plane came low over, he saw the wings adjust its position between his landing craft and the one next to him, it dropped one bomb straight into the other craft. He went on to fight at Caen and through into Germany. I have always had the greatest respect for all who fought for the freedom we enjoy today and get emotional when I see documentaries like this. May they all rest in eternal peace. "We will remember them".

    • @minervapenn9725
      @minervapenn9725 Год назад +7

      God bless your father and all men who fought for freedom. Eternal thankful with them.
      Pd: sorry for my english.

    • @chuckabutty888
      @chuckabutty888 Год назад +3

      @@minervapenn9725 Thank you, your English is excellent.

    • @HaggenKennedy
      @HaggenKennedy Год назад

      Holy cow. That's already a movie right there. Unbelievable that someone went through that... and that it was not fiction! I can't even begin to imagine. Wars are so costly. If Hitler had to be on the very front lines during the war taking those bullets and bombs, I'm betting he would view it differently.

    • @tonyjones1560
      @tonyjones1560 Год назад +2

      Your father’s experience sounds like that of an elderly general I got to talk to. He’d volunteered for the US Army, became an Officer through OCS, and shipped out to England early in 1944. The very first combat action of his military career was Omaha Beach. He said that when the landing craft’s ramp dropped, a machine gun in the hills erased the first ranks. Several other men drowned in the surf after going over the sides of their ship. Half his platoon died on the landing craft or in the surf. Between D-Day and V-E Day, his platoon was basically wiped out three times. He was one of only four men who made it all the way through…they had two dozen Purple Heart medals (awarded for being wounded in combat) between them. Salute to your father. I’ve heard a lot of WWII veterans say “I just did my job.” What a job…!

    • @3rdreichball525
      @3rdreichball525 Год назад

      "Fought for freedom." Have you seen the west since the 60s until today? More like fought for a mao style communism. The drug war, the gun control act of 68, the militarization of federal and local law enforcement that violates the posse Comitatus Act. The government knows that they cant use the military on usa citizens so what do they do? They militarize law enforcement and have them conduct military style operations on people for stupid crap like growing plants, weapons violations/anti 2nd amendment regulation, and a bunch of other crap.

  • @theleastsignificantbit4794
    @theleastsignificantbit4794 Год назад +108

    Thank you for making this!
    As a member of the 29th ID, my dad departed his LST and landed in that section of the beach to support the 1st ID that morning. After being separated from his assault team, he was told for the time being, he was a member of the 1st ID and fought with them until being returned to his division.
    He always told me that he believe they landed in the incorrect spot, but looking a landing table, the target sector for his LST, and evidence showing that units held in reserve were pressed into combat early at the request Gerow and other 29th commanders, I don’t think it was an incorrect landing.
    He said that men from the 1st ID that had landed in North Africa and Italy said Easy Red was the hottest beach they had ever taken.
    He had some amazing stories of the combat that morning. He was severely wounded on D+3, and returned to the States on July 4th. He was interviewed by the AP with a paratrooper from the 101st and, and the story was printed in the papers on July 12th, 1944.
    I miss you, dad.

    • @TEXAS_MAKES_MOVES214
      @TEXAS_MAKES_MOVES214 Год назад +9

      Lucky to be born from a real man, you were lucky bud

    • @Edelweiss-uv5xi
      @Edelweiss-uv5xi Год назад

      They fought so they could have mixed race grand kids who can have their dicks lopped off and wear dresses while smoking weed and eating themselves into the need of a mobility scooter covered in rainbow flags. Every one of my family who fought with the allies before their death came to regret and lament their involvement. They know they fought on the wrong side. It's time we honour their memories and acknowledge we goofed. The real victims are the indigenous Germanic peoples who wanted their land back stolen from them in WW1 and ended up having more stolen from them in WW2 and now are being genocided openly by endless migration funded by IsraAID.

    • @666BIGBLOCK
      @666BIGBLOCK Год назад +9

      My dad was 20. He was in the 1ST Division 18th RCT. Never talked about D-DAY except to say he landed on OMAHA EASY RED in first or second wave.
      Got seriously wounded 4 months later in the Battle of Aachen Germany. 10 months in hospital. Miss him a lot.

    • @peytonhorn2833
      @peytonhorn2833 Год назад +3

      Keep telling his story, rip to your dad.

    • @garyhindsleyii1846
      @garyhindsleyii1846 Год назад +2

      My gpa was a pilot in the 101st airborne... wished I could of heard his stories. True American Heros they were..

  • @junesmallwood4921
    @junesmallwood4921 4 месяца назад +1

    So sad and incredible camera men that has the courage to film while being under fire

  • @jenniferjohnson7279
    @jenniferjohnson7279 4 месяца назад +2

    My father was there, he lived.
    Your opening broke my heart as i watched the men come to the beach.
    He never talked about it, i see why now.
    I had to stop watching it affected me so badly.
    May god bless all those brave men and may they rest in heaven.

  • @theariesexperiment4642
    @theariesexperiment4642 Год назад +555

    A German diary of one of machine gunners entrenched in those bunkers said, "I felt sorry for those poor men. They walked right into a meat grinder. The bravest men I've ever seen".

    • @Mauzzewulf
      @Mauzzewulf 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@ridvansen7108the nickname by the Americans, bruv

    • @frankierzucekjr
      @frankierzucekjr 11 месяцев назад +4

      You're right, i saw that in another documentary about D day

    • @Gats8479
      @Gats8479 11 месяцев назад +1

      He was lucky that he didn't killed

    • @moshedayan2810
      @moshedayan2810 11 месяцев назад +4

      I wonder if they could have done it with fewer losses

    • @thepantyraid
      @thepantyraid 11 месяцев назад +34

      ​​​​​@@moshedayan2810things could have gone a lot smoother if they went as planned. Before the attack started air support was called in to bomb the heavily defended areas of the fortification. Unfortunately the munitions missed and hit behind the fortified bunkers. This was one of the biggest reasons such heavy casualties were sustained

  • @motor2of7
    @motor2of7 Год назад +175

    Just got back from a trip to France. Went to Omaha Beach and the American cemetery twice. A heartfelt thank you to all who fought, bled and died for our freedom. May we be wise enough to sustain it.

    • @idigress7865
      @idigress7865 Год назад +4

      God bless, friend. 🇺🇸

    • @Idekwtph
      @Idekwtph Год назад +4

      I went last year and visited the same places. It was the single most incredible and emotional experience of my entire life

    • @stephgabb7107
      @stephgabb7107 Год назад

      Our liberties and freedoms are being taken away from us on a daily basis by technocrats.

    • @walsertaler
      @walsertaler Год назад +2

      Freedom that was a good on. You mean rather Imperialism? 😂😂🤷🏻‍♂️🤦‍♂️

    • @dosmundos3830
      @dosmundos3830 Год назад

      Russia is sustaining freedom for the World now.

  • @user-ot9qb9yx6o
    @user-ot9qb9yx6o 10 месяцев назад +5

    My uncle landed on Omaha beach in the first wave and he survived it. He never spoke of it. I didn’t know he received 2 Purple Heart a bronze star and a silver star for his actions on d day and the rest of the war!!

  • @benr277
    @benr277 8 месяцев назад +3

    CAMERAMAN NEVER DIESSSS...

  • @Frptlinyy
    @Frptlinyy Год назад +37

    Thank you! I am 78 and my dad was in both WWII and Korea. As a child I do not remember the horror of war, I remember my mother’s anxiety and her joy every time she received one of dad‘s letters. Again thank you for the excellent job to put a name to the camera man who took the film that’s so many of us have seen so of the landing at Normandy on this 79th anniversary of D Day.

  • @darrinlumby3296
    @darrinlumby3296 Год назад +110

    You guy's are getting to the point of being the best WWII documentary makers of all. I can't begin to thank you enough, that would be impossible, and your persistence on getting things right is nothing short of awe inspiring!! It simply means the world to those of us who have lost our loved ones, as well as those of us who welcomed loved ones home with injuries and scares far too deep to heal.
    God bless all of you involved,
    You have no idea what your dedication and talent mean to us.

  • @williemclean3224
    @williemclean3224 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’m not from the US, I came here at 6 months old . I’m now 69 and have an appointment to be come a US citizen on Feb 8 of this year. This is the greatest country on the face of the earth. I’m well aware of what these soldiers sacrificed so me and my family can have the life we have. My brother went on to serve in the military m. God bless all these heroes who gave it all for so many.

  • @briannovak8612
    @briannovak8612 Месяц назад

    As a former Air Force Combat Cameraman, thank you for putting this together. It's very much appreciated.

  • @HotPockets-40k
    @HotPockets-40k Год назад +154

    My grandfather was part of the air assault. He was army airforce paratrooper. Was a air gunman but was trained as a paratrooper right before the invasion. His chute was caught in a tree and got taken in as a POW. He was declared dead to his family until recovered towards the end of the war. Never once talked about his experience with family. One of the best men I have ever known

    • @JoseIvandaSilvaIvan
      @JoseIvandaSilvaIvan Год назад

      O pior tipo de serumano que já existiu na fase da terra xamase nazista

    • @JeffMerrill-gn2lr
      @JeffMerrill-gn2lr Год назад +11

      My grandfather never once talked about his story on D-Day. He never even liked war movies. When saving private Ryan came out, he was convinced to go and watch. Within the first 5 min of the movie he got up in tears and said I've seen this movie before and walked out. This is the only emotion I've seen my grandfather, RIP, show in his life other than a smile. My Papa was a great man.

    • @soarerfilms9843
      @soarerfilms9843 Год назад +1

      They knew your grandpa was a jew serving robot homosexual and they took him prisoner. Haha

    • @justsomeguy8597
      @justsomeguy8597 Год назад +2

      @@soarerfilms9843 what is lil bro waffling about 💀

    • @judeathknowshisgun5290
      @judeathknowshisgun5290 Год назад

      ​@@soarerfilms9843 and now the germans have the weakest army in nato

  • @hueyman624
    @hueyman624 Год назад +121

    What a great way to honor these men. RIP, your lives were not lost in vain.

    • @powerstar550
      @powerstar550 Год назад

      Really....are you certain of that

    • @patricialavallee8286
      @patricialavallee8286 Год назад +2

      Look at what all politicians and powers that be are doing to this once great country of ours. Destroying it from within. May all the soldiers of all wars rest in eternal PEACE. I'm sure they're wondering what they fought for, as they spin in they're graves.

    • @empireoflizards
      @empireoflizards Год назад +1

      @@patricialavallee8286 What they fought for still resonates within a big portion of us from all generations. Despite the traitors and crooks who are systematically taking over our government and education system, the soldiers we saw on that beach are immortalized because it tempers all of us as Patriots...and, fortunately, there is a revived appreciation in what these men did and what they endured, while we wake up to the tricks being played by the sociopaths at the top of our food chain.

    • @patricialavallee8286
      @patricialavallee8286 Год назад +1

      @@empireoflizards agree. Well said!

    • @idigress7865
      @idigress7865 Год назад +1

      It wasn’t in vain; it lives on in the spirit of courage, sacrifice, selflessness, perseverance, faith.
      I do understand the point but I am refusing to give in and give up. We simply can’t.

  • @demondeano
    @demondeano 6 дней назад +1

    The solider at 00:45 seconds gets his right leg blown off! Absolutely heart-breaking footage!

  • @windit5877
    @windit5877 9 месяцев назад +4

    The horror they felt running into the unknown must be beyond words. There was no tv before that showed you how war looks like. What weapons there are or what you will expect.

  • @robertnick6403
    @robertnick6403 Год назад +35

    I am forever humbled and rendered speechless whenever I consider what these brave men did for us and their loved ones on that day

    • @Spiralredd
      @Spiralredd Месяц назад

      Yeah war may be bad now but we forget it used to be 10 times worse

  • @emicore675
    @emicore675 11 месяцев назад +438

    My great grandpap was a POW in Stalag 17-B and he never told anyone anything about his time during WW2 until my mom interviewed him for a school project--the most random of times to finally open up about his service. So much came out of that, a lot that he didn't even tell his son (my grandpap). He flew in a B17 Flying Fortress and was shot down. After being captured, he spent I believe close to a year if not longer in the camp until they escaped. There were piles of bodies, many of which overrun by rats which became food. They were really only given a half a loaf of bread and often not everyone got anything to eat. The guards would constantly hose everyone down, so they only had muddy ground to be in. Eventually, the guards stopped patrolling and only the guard dogs were keeping watch. They'd lure a dog over to the fence, and kill it for food, eating it raw. Eventually, after the guards weren't showing for a few days, they decided to make a plan to break for it by running in pairs in all 4 directions with the hope that at least some of them will survive. Luckily, it turns out the camp was abandoned, but my pap and whoever he was with made it all the way to France by foot, hiding in any place they could find. Piles of cow manure were the best spot since the search dogs couldn't find them, but they eventually stole a German jeep, looted along their way, and made it back. Along the way they had no idea where they were, or if they were still in enemy territory or not. They had no idea what the state of the war was like, so everywhere was behind enemy lines to them. He's 6'3 and went in service at around 190lbs, and came back at 105lbs. Love you pap, I wasn't able to grow old enough to get to really know you, but I'll always be proud of where I'm from.

    • @a.thiago3842
      @a.thiago3842 10 месяцев назад +23

      I never read a history like this one. This would be a great movie!! I really hope more people read this, cause not everyone can read more than 2 lines unfortunatelly.

    • @bytheway333
      @bytheway333 10 месяцев назад +7

      God bless your pap!

    • @segatheegr8
      @segatheegr8 10 месяцев назад +9

      May he rest in peace and god bless your soul.

    • @jelsig6783
      @jelsig6783 10 месяцев назад +8

      Those B17 guys had serious courage. Only like half of them survived. They had the job of flying over Germany and bombing targets unprotected when the Luftwaffe was still the best air force in the world and at full strength. They weakened the Nazi war machine and made victory on land possible.

    • @billsmith130
      @billsmith130 10 месяцев назад +6

      That’s an incredible story, thanks for sharing it!

  • @tek3920
    @tek3920 9 месяцев назад +1

    An American football field is 120 yards. The men at Omaha Beach had to run 3 football fields soaking wet, half drowned,weighed down by gear while trying not get shot or killed by explosion. Now ur telling me a man crossed the 300 yards of Mg fire with just a camera. The men of ww2 truly were a different breed of man.

  • @TotallyNoCat
    @TotallyNoCat 4 месяца назад +1

    Camera man never dies

  • @alanconnors8881
    @alanconnors8881 Год назад +139

    Thank you once again for what you do to help keep this most important day in the history of the world alive.

    • @Gamer_Kot
      @Gamer_Kot Год назад +5

      He lost 99.9% of the d day footage he accidentally dropped on the water

    • @leeholmes9962
      @leeholmes9962 Год назад

      @@Gamer_Kot IN THE water 👍🏻

    • @daedae1522
      @daedae1522 Год назад +3

      @@leeholmes9962 No,the footage was so epic and American it couldn’t sink it floated.

    • @phunkyjunkee
      @phunkyjunkee Год назад +3

      4/5/33AD was the most important day in world history. 4/3/33 was the second most.

    • @DerekShort-mb3sx
      @DerekShort-mb3sx Год назад +3

      History can only be forgotten, it never dies, we see as it repeats

  • @geigertec5921
    @geigertec5921 Год назад +66

    My great grandfather was at Omaha Beach, he lost both his ears to two seperate bullets that whizzed past his head. When asked how he felt afterward he replied "What? I can't hear you, I have no ears!" Then he laughed, he could hear fine, and was just so happy to be alive.

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Год назад +11

      Wow, that’s a crazy story and God bless your Grandfather. My family also fought in the war. They truly were the greatest generation.

    • @mwhitelaw8569
      @mwhitelaw8569 Год назад +8

      I honestly laughed at what he said
      Being alive is a damn good place to be

    • @ignaciogodoy7095
      @ignaciogodoy7095 Год назад +3

      He was a surviver

    • @dtx214-fg1yz
      @dtx214-fg1yz Год назад

      ❤❤

    • @vickijohnson9704
      @vickijohnson9704 Год назад +1

      My mother was a child in England during the war. I am grateful for people like your relative. I may not have been born if it were not for him. He helped save my mother's country. How do you ever thank someone enough for risking their life for others?

  • @AJeepADroneAndAnOldMan
    @AJeepADroneAndAnOldMan 7 месяцев назад +2

    Amazing work, incredible story and haunting music. Very very well done

  • @chrisyoung1436
    @chrisyoung1436 9 месяцев назад +1

    The shot from the beach looking up at where the nest were, and the people were, and actually being able to see the distances. The scene where you could see the people, it was awesome. The dimensions. I've watched everything out there and waited for that shot to, to be there to put me there. Frigging awesome

  • @cathyheston3029
    @cathyheston3029 Год назад +13

    You asked if we wanted to see more, ABSOLUTELY YES!!! This is HISTORY that should NEVER BE FORGOTTEN ❤😢 Thank you for your service in bringing this to us........

  • @realnikonlover6207
    @realnikonlover6207 11 месяцев назад +108

    My late father (5/28/24 to 9/11/93) was there on Omaha Beach on DDay. Many in his squad died and he was fragged by a mortar round and sustained a severed sciatic nerve, shrapnel in lip (I still have the piece), and shrapnel in leg and behind ear. On occasion a piece of shrapnel worked its way out of the tissue well after he returned home. After he was injured on the beach he was evacuated to England and brought home to the US via the Queen Mary which was converted to a troop ship for the war. He was taken to NYC went to a hospital and then moved to Salt Lake City area for rehab until he returned to his home in Southern California after 6 months of rehab. He NEVER talked about it and any information I got from him was from blunt questions. His was the same story as shown in the movie and told by various viewers here of their Fathers, Grandfathers and Great Grandfathers. I was fortunate in that my Dad left behind a large Army footlocker full of all the documentation, rare photos, telegrams, medals and his WWII Army dress uniform still in mint condition. My Dad was 6' 4" and swaggered like John Wayne due to his leg injury. He was tough. He joined the fire service in 1952 and retired from that in 1970 and still had another 23 years of work. He was to retired in December of 1993 but sadly passed in his sleep unexpectedly on Sept. 11, 1993. I was one of the paramedics who responded on my own Father. He prepared me to be tough and work hard and how to deal with PTSD. Bless all of you who say positive things about these brave men of the Greatest Generation. ***The National Archives lost all of the World War II service records in a huge fire years ago. I scanned all of my Dad's documentation and sent it to them in print and CD format. If you have or find WWII documentation it can be used to build their database and restore accurate history.***

    • @Supernova1.980
      @Supernova1.980 10 месяцев назад +6

      what a journey your father lived. u could share the photos with us

    • @np5541
      @np5541 10 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for sharing the story.

    • @francinefleming4126
      @francinefleming4126 10 месяцев назад +6

      I have some WWII film pertaining to my father who was stationed on an island in the South Pacific. It' been rolled up so long it won't lie flat to make prints. Do you think the National Archives has a method to flatten it? I'd love to see the photos he took. He was a bombardier on a B-24 Liberator. In the movie Memphis Belle there' a part about them being the 6th plane in a formation. The 1st 5 were hit making them the lead. They were hit and the pilot & co-pilot were covered in red, believed to be blood but was tomato soup. This actually happened to my father and his crew & was written about in the March 1945 issue of "AIR FORCE" "The Official Service Journal of the U.S. Army Air Forces" entitled "Shell Game." My father was Lt. Frank E. Turner, who is mentioned in the article. Their plane was destroyed. Do you think they would want it? Francine [Turner] Fleming

    • @frayayank497
      @frayayank497 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@francinefleming4126that sounds really interesting. It seems like you want to preserve the artifacts and stories that go along with them. I definitely think you should look into it. Worst they can say is they’re not interested however I find that highly unlikely. What you do now dictates if these stories will live on or not.

    • @marioortiz7953
      @marioortiz7953 8 месяцев назад

      Proud of ur daddy bro,bring tears to my eyes, greatest generation

  • @chrismithchrismith
    @chrismithchrismith 9 месяцев назад +2

    Matching the pics to the locations at the end was emotional.

    • @Spiralredd
      @Spiralredd Месяц назад

      It's sad to see how peaceful it is today knowing that not even all that long ago it was full of gunfire and dead bodies

  • @annesacilowski-wq8jd
    @annesacilowski-wq8jd 8 месяцев назад +1

    My former Lancaster NY neighbor Jack Huffman from hometown of Manchester NY was in the Red One First Infantry Division. He once showed me his patch , Purple Heart and a helmet with bullet hits on it. He was a gentle quiet gentleman and when I learned he was at this invasion I was floored. When movie Saving Private Ryan came out I asked him if he was planning on seeing it that it was about Normandy …He replied “ no I saw it once and that was enough”. RIP Big Red One Jack !!!

  • @rollotomassi6374
    @rollotomassi6374 Год назад +76

    The bravery to attack under heavy enemy fire is amazing……these men had honor….RIP all who perished that day.

    • @jjhout5988
      @jjhout5988 Год назад

      There is no honor to run into a blaze off bullets because some general told you to do it. It is called SUICIDE.
      If real men stop doing what they are instructed by military/politician psychopaths there will be less suicide.

    • @Spiralredd
      @Spiralredd Месяц назад

      I honor them forever which is why I get offended when people make WW2 content and do it no justice *cough call of duty vanguard*.

  • @HertogJan70
    @HertogJan70 Год назад +97

    To all the service men who died to liberate Europe and my country, Thank you for your sacrifice!
    My thoughts and gratitude go out to all the families who lost family membe(s).
    We in The Netherlands remember the start of the road to freedom to this day and beyond!

  • @johnrobertd748
    @johnrobertd748 2 дня назад +1

    It brought me to tears. The first beach scene you see, there are two men on the left. One is wounded, and the other is killed. The wounded guy tries to get up. The guy killed never moves. Why do we do this to ourselves??

  • @user-ly6zr7en4x
    @user-ly6zr7en4x 7 месяцев назад

    The EDITING in this video with the music outro song is INCREDIBLE. Amazing work guys

  • @ermancroney3805
    @ermancroney3805 Год назад +198

    My father was in the 2nd or 3rd wave of men hitting the Normandy beach. He told us he ran for 100 yards across dead bodies before he stepped on dirt/sand. Dad was shot in this invasion, but survived. He was in the 29th Division 116 th infantry. He could not read or write, but was an excellent shot called a marksman. He spoke of some of the events, but not much about the greatest of pains he lived and died with. He died at age 69 in 1985. He was from the Ozarks of Missouri. He was a great patriot who loved our country. All of these men were heros fighting for our freedom. We must not forget!!

    • @CathyA-kj7nl
      @CathyA-kj7nl Год назад +5

      God bless your dad🇺🇸😇❤️

    • @MrProsat
      @MrProsat 11 месяцев назад +2

      My uncle was in the 29th, also. Missed D-Day but was wounded at St. Lo. There is an online site for the 29th division, you may be able to find out more about your father's unit or whether he was wounded, since the site does give a bit of that for individuals and what day they were wounded and returned. Found out my uncle was listed MIA because he stepped on a mine at the German border and was completely annihilated, so no body parts. Only after the war did they list him as KIA - I guess enough people saw the results of the blast....

    • @KB-ke3fi
      @KB-ke3fi 11 месяцев назад +4

      both of my uncles were at Normandy. They survived and came back home to Texas...minus a few body parts like hands and fingers and schrapnal in em....and they never said a word about it until they were about 88 years old...they just came home, went to work in the refineries in Houston and raise families for 60 years.

    • @AlphaAchilles
      @AlphaAchilles 11 месяцев назад +2

      Being a “marksman” isn’t some kind of job. It’s something all soldiers earn in basic.

    • @ermancroney3805
      @ermancroney3805 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@AlphaAchilles True to a point, but some were even better shots.

  • @valeriehartman3705
    @valeriehartman3705 Год назад +707

    I am French born, now living in the United States and I obtained my citizenship in 2022. My father grew up in occupied France. Through him, I am so thankful and honored for all the brave soldiers and young men who came and rescued us. I will never forget. Never.

    • @gordoeinstein
      @gordoeinstein Год назад +45

      I am embarrassed and sickened by today's generation who take the sacrifice for granted. Tell your story to as many as possible so that these things can not be forgotten.

    • @valeriehartman3705
      @valeriehartman3705 Год назад

      @@christophevilleneuve911 Hein ???

    • @valeriehartman3705
      @valeriehartman3705 Год назад +14

      @@gordoeinstein Thank you. The young generations of today are not interested in those stories. But also look at what they teach in schools... it's crazy.

    • @chrisbowers7111
      @chrisbowers7111 Год назад

      Should all be great for America we was strong and brave and now America will be China ran and home of weak and not brave its sad

    • @chrisbowers7111
      @chrisbowers7111 Год назад +8

      My grandpa got his guts blew out in Korea in war now we let anyone in our country wow

  • @mattkelly3575
    @mattkelly3575 8 месяцев назад +1

    The lost film rolls I know what happened to them. First of all, I have to say, awesome job on the documentary!! I have seen probably every documentary on WW2 from different countries and this one answered a lot of questions and played a lot more footage of those few clips that are in EVERY documentary. Very good job on showing the area now I found that very interesting.
    I was born in England and there is a documentary done in the early 70’s, only 20 years after the war. Everything was extremely fresh and relevant. One interview, they were all very candid, was with a British D-Day cameraman. It was very interesting and he explained how all the reels taken that day were put in a bag and was sent back to England. Unfortunately it got dropped over the side into the water!
    Your video explains how those clips made it, he kept them on him and returned that night because he was wounded. Definitely explains how that made it.
    Thanks again for a great video.

  • @ChristianGrest
    @ChristianGrest 12 дней назад

    My wife and I were just there earlier this month. Being a military vet myself, into WWII era firearms with many of my family throughout history serving in our military and both my grandfathers serving during WWII it had been a bucket list visit for me to pay homage to those brave soldier who landed there. Such a spectacular sight to see and couldn't imagine being in their shoes that day and the days after.
    Outstanding job bringing this history to life in your documentary... wished I had found it before I visited.

  • @idigress7865
    @idigress7865 Год назад +106

    This makes me nostalgic for my Grandparents generation; the part I was exposed too, several decades after they served in the War. As a child I felt it in their ways of being. They had gratitude for what they had. Really weren’t terribly big on complaining.
    God bless all who sacrificed for my freedom. 🇺🇸

    • @judgejimbobrowntown3214
      @judgejimbobrowntown3214 Год назад +7

      Amen I feel it deep in my soul my pap was first wave on Iwo Jima

    • @robertkubicki126
      @robertkubicki126 Год назад +2

      Absolutely agree with you!

    • @GooogleGoglee
      @GooogleGoglee Год назад +3

      New generation should take more examples from them. Nowadays we have too much and we do not appreciate and often waste it.

  • @pasi173
    @pasi173 11 месяцев назад +67

    Sgt. Richard Taylor is the best example that the cameraman never dies. RIP to all the fallen soldiers

  • @gwbaker
    @gwbaker 8 месяцев назад +2

    Very, very nice. Very much appreciate you making this tribute.

  • @chrisg9627
    @chrisg9627 6 месяцев назад

    And thank you SNAFU for the care and dedication to bring this history to life.

  • @pablob4390
    @pablob4390 Год назад +18

    I am 61. I adopted the US as my home 20 years ago. Since I was a kid, I read about D Day and WW II. Always fascinated me. I saw the beach scene all my life on film, just like someone else mentioned.
    I dreamed all my life with the possibility of seeing that place to witness with my own eyes what those guys must've gone through.
    This September, my wife and I will be setting foot on those beaches. I waited all my life for this moment. I know I will contemplate, will take many, many pictures, will sit down and will cry for the ones that fell that day. I expect to spend the whole day there. It will be emotional.

  • @Bastii311
    @Bastii311 Год назад +281

    I am German and born in 1990. When I see pictures like this I'm just thankful for our freedom and a life in peace. thanks to the liberators who sacrificed so much!

    • @davidran9317
      @davidran9317 Год назад +28

      You people are good people and in history worse wrong leaders brought down fall to so many good nations.

    • @kimbradley9595
      @kimbradley9595 Год назад +3

      No comment

    • @strfltcmnd.9925
      @strfltcmnd.9925 Год назад +8

      You grew up in Germany the Federal Republic.These men were fighting a Germany that no longer exists.

    • @Edo_Aelio
      @Edo_Aelio Год назад +6

      @@SabreVellerium OK they were heroes for him, not for you. That's it

    • @FrecherLuchs
      @FrecherLuchs Год назад

      ​@@sand8777of course you're fcked up.

  • @JoeyWancewicz
    @JoeyWancewicz 12 дней назад

    The camera man truly never dies

  • @Jennifer-hv2bc
    @Jennifer-hv2bc 22 дня назад

    Thank you for doing such a good job on the video and giving credit to the men responsible for it. Love and prayers ♥️🤍💙

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 Год назад +47

    We can never say, "Thank you," enough to those guys and their brothers-in-arms. NEVER forget them. -- A USAF vet

    • @Edelweiss-uv5xi
      @Edelweiss-uv5xi Год назад +1

      They fought so they could have mixed race grand kids who can have their dicks lopped off and wear dresses while smoking weed and eating themselves into the need of a mobility scooter covered in rainbow flags. Every one of my family who fought with the allies before their death came to regret and lament their involvement. They know they fought on the wrong side. It's time we honour their memories and acknowledge we goofed. The real victims are the indigenous Germanic peoples who wanted their land back stolen from them in WW1 and ended up having more stolen from them in WW2 and now are being genocided openly by endless migration funded by IsraAID.

  • @michellescarborough16
    @michellescarborough16 Год назад +164

    How this touches your heart. These young men were so brave. It was hard to see those two young men go down. So young and filled with hope. We owe a lot to these men of that generation who fought. My heartfelt thanks to them. I'm 60 and this wasn't even my generation, but I feel like they were so much more mature than what I see today.

    • @jackmehoff5523
      @jackmehoff5523 Год назад +10

      I'm 60. We are nothing compared to the men of WW2

    • @G82_M
      @G82_M Год назад +7

      @@jackmehoff5523I have been in the army for 20 years and I can honestly say that no truer words have been spoken. When men were men. We live on the shoulders of giants.

    • @jackmehoff5523
      @jackmehoff5523 Год назад +9

      @@G82_M my dad fought in Germany in ww2 he never spoke of it except the fact he knew a little German. He passed in 1979. I'm presently looking into finding out about his military history I do have his dog tag. He suffered from frostbite and scrap metal wounds I'd say the frostbite was the worst for him his feet were bad. A very humble man along with my best friends dad who fought in the Japanese theater and was wounded in action. I can honestly say these men would be shocked to know what our country has turned into. Thank you for your service to our country you are a fine American. God bless you.

    • @OfficialStreamSagaTv
      @OfficialStreamSagaTv Год назад

      And one day we NVM

    • @robertfelty7290
      @robertfelty7290 Год назад +1

      Best recollection was that 4,417 men died on the beaches during D-day invasion June 6th.

  • @bocfat
    @bocfat 7 месяцев назад

    What an Honor what you did making this, lots of work but it helps to honors these heroic boys who were there and those who didn't come home! Thank You.

  • @bbadstdad4423
    @bbadstdad4423 29 дней назад

    Thank you! That was a refreshing new approach to a d-day story. Much richer than the typically dry documentary, your telling of Sgt. Taylor's story is very interesting. Well done, sir!

  • @Meriale46
    @Meriale46 Год назад +371

    My father was there. It took him decades to talk about it because he lost many friends... He went through hell seeing young men drowning and not being able to help them because he struggled to reach the beach himself because he was smaller than the other soldiers and his pack weighed him down... A fellow soldier saved his life. After reaching the beach they were under heavy fire and many young never got to shore. He suffered from PTSD most of his adult life. He ran with his heavy pack with his head down and zig zagged until he reached what was left of his battalion. He was an explosives expert so his job was planting C4 plastic explosives to the German concrete bunker's. He'd crack them open and the other soldiers would light them up as the poured out of their shelter's.
    PS- it wasn't C4 plastic explosives it was TNT. I am not an explosives expert, my father was I just assumed that was what they were using. Sorry for the mix up.

    • @214TwoOneFo
      @214TwoOneFo Год назад +5

      Ima say it bro this is probably not true or just mistake they used composition B c4 never existed till the late nineteen fifty’s

    • @214TwoOneFo
      @214TwoOneFo Год назад +3

      @Mike yea but composition b was the bunker buster, but I believe it’s either a mistake and I’m being pedantic , pero the bunkers specifically here the Widerstandsnest weren’t like reinforced concrete bunkers, maybe she’s talking about Utah beach, but eh, it’s whatever.

    • @214TwoOneFo
      @214TwoOneFo Год назад

      @Mike or it could just be her pops watched SPR but was just tryna flex on the kids lol idk not worth it to go further

    • @Luked0g440
      @Luked0g440 Год назад +10

      The way in which our troops were landed was just criminal, I think. They should’ve been landed in armored personnel carriers, landed by Landing Craft Tank (LCTs), instead of friggin’ Higgins boats. Those things were death traps, plus, troops had to wade/run through several hundred feet of open ground, in order to reach either the cliffs, or sea wall for any cover. A lot of guys, if they weren’t drowned outright, had to drop their packs and weapons, just to avoid drowning. So, even if they made it across the killing field alive, many were stuck with no weapon, ammo or supplies/equipment. APCs landed by LCTs would’ve largely alleviated this, as well as preventing them from being slaughtered trying to cross that open beach.

    • @Luked0g440
      @Luked0g440 Год назад

      @@214TwoOneFo Yeah, Comp-B, or, in some cases, regular dynamite charges were used too.

  • @Landesign58
    @Landesign58 Год назад +123

    Without those brave men that day, it would be a very different world today. All I can say is thank you!

    • @ermining1
      @ermining1 Год назад

      Nah it wouldn't the soviets were already winning, Italian front was losing. They were already on mainland Europe

    • @hinezy3724
      @hinezy3724 Год назад +7

      ​@Tristan focus on 1 front would be Hitlers glory but instead, he had multiple fronts and he met his doom 🤓

    • @ermining1
      @ermining1 Год назад +2

      @@hinezy3724 totally but saying that the world would have been different without d day is a massive overstatement, just on the number of casualties the number are very low compared to action on the eastern front. This is not to downplay the actions of the men of d day, but to say that there are many others who deserve more credit than they get in the Anglo american world.

    • @johnwelsh2769
      @johnwelsh2769 Год назад +9

      @@ermining1 If you want to discuss the Russians, then you must also bring Lend-Lease into the argument. 16 million tons of supplies from the U.S. sent to Russia from 1941-1945. 400,000 jeeps and trucks, with fuel!. 14,000 aircraft. 13,000 tanks. Boots, Food, ammunition, Without Lend-Lease, the Russians were unable to move.

    • @ermining1
      @ermining1 Год назад +1

      @@johnwelsh2769 yes agreed. I'm talking war front though and lives lost

  • @mitsidstevgttab2677
    @mitsidstevgttab2677 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this! 🙏🏼 we must never ever forget.