June 6, 1944 was not a day like any other—it was one of the most important, consequential and remarkable 24 hours in America’s existence and, arguably, the known history of the entire world. But why? It wasn’t when World War II started or ended—two milestones that are usually marked in major conflicts—and it wasn’t even the occasion of the war’s largest skirmish (that was the Battle of the Bulge, which commenced on Dec. 16, 1944, and ended on Jan. 28, 1945.) What D-Day recognizes is the moment the United States entered the war in Europe, which was key to helping the Allies beat back Nazi Germany. Rarely has combat been remembered so nobly. As U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt explained to Americans in announcing why Allied soldiers were invading: “They fight not for the lust of conquest. They fight to end conquest. They fight to liberate.” This message not only resonated in its time, it remains some 80 years later a rally to remember that—at least sometimes—bloodshed is just and worthy.
D-DAY REVISITED
OUR DEFINING MOMENT • WHY WE REMEMBER D-DAY
01 THE FIELDS OF BATTLE • A BRIEF HISTORY OF WORLD WAR II PRIOR TO THE NORMANDY LANDINGS
02 PREPARING FOR VICTORY • THE AMBITIOUS OPERATION OVERLORD
03 THE DECEPTION • THE CHESS MATCH OF OPERATION BODYGUARD
04 THE KEY PLAYERS • NOTABLE FIGURES OF THE INVASION
05 THE CONDITIONS • WEATHER WAS AN IMPORTANT VARIABLE TO THE SUCCESS—OR FAILURE—OF D-DAY
06 THE LANDING • THE START OF OPERATION NEPTUNE
07 THE TROOPS • WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO LIVE THROUGH D-DAY?
08 THE IMPACT • HOW D-DAY SHIFTED THE WAR
09 THE LEGACY • WHY WE STILL MAKE TIME TO HONOR THE NORMANDY INVASION
D-Day Revisited - The 80th Anniversary of the Normandy Landings
PHOTO CREDITS