The quiet beaches and rural villages of Normandy, France, exploded with fire and fury in the early morning hours of June 6, 1944.
D-Day. The climactic battle of World War II.
The United States and its Allies landed nearly 160,000 men, with more than 9,000 killed or wounded, in the first 24 hours alone.
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"The Great Crusade," as it was called by Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, left a lasting imprint on the Norman people and the local landscape.
The epic battle draws an estimated 5 million visitors to Normandy each year. Many of them arrive in early June when the region is alive with festivals, memorials and reenactments celebrating an invasion the French call le debarquement — the landing.
D-Day Festival Normandy, an annual celebration hosted by the Normandy tourism board, offers scores of events and ceremonies across the sprawling 50-mile invasion-day battlefield.
It began this year on May 27 and ends June 18.
Here’s a countdown to 12 D-Day sites every visitor should see to understand the full scope of this "Day of Days."
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Major battle sites and museums are punctuated by countless private tributes from the citizens of Normandy who express their appreciation for la deliverance in many ways large and small.
American paratroopers landed soon after midnight on June 6, with the main objective of securing the far western edge of the invasion beachhead for the amphibious landings to follow at sunrise.
The Iron Mike Memorial at La Fiere pays honor to the outnumbered paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne who from June 6 to June 9 heroically repelled repeated German attacks at a bridgehead over the Merderet River.
The climactic bridge battle scene of the fictional film "Saving Private Ryan" was inspired by the ferocious fighting here at La Fiere.
The ebullient heroism of many Normandy battlefield sites that pay homage to victorious Allied troops is contrasted by a grim German cemetery just inland from the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc.
La Cambe is the final resting place of 21,000 German soldiers — the identities of many unknown — buried under short, thick, black crosses.
The stark, sober landscape pays testament to the fact that no nation’s youth suffered more under the Nazis than Germany itself. An estimated 200,000 Germans were killed or wounded in the two month-long Battle of Normandy that followed D-Day.
The scope of D-Day is almost too large to fathom.
The tales of individual heroics found throughout the region give the massive battle a human touch.
The tiny village of Angoville-au-Plain is one of those places. Two U.S. Army medics, who landed in the first wave of paratroopers, ended up in this village apparently lost to the rest of their units.
Kenneth J. Moore and Robert E. Wright turned the village's 700-year-old church into an aid station. Over two days, they saved 80 lives of both American and German soldiers; they also treated a local child wounded in the battle.
They used the pews as beds and several of the benches still bear bloodstains today.
A small cemetery outside the church includes the graves of Americans killed on D-Day.
The heroics of American paratroopers are remembered in the stained-glass windows of churches near the invasion beaches of Normandy, including in Angoville au Plain.
The pretty little village of Sainte Marie du Mont sits just inland from Utah Beach. It housed a German garrison on the morning of June 6.
American paratroopers landed in and around the village to clear and secure a causeway that would allow seaborne raiders to move inland.
In the early hours of the landing, a small group of paratroopers in Sainte Marie du Mont heroically assaulted and silenced four German heavy guns that were firing on the troops on Utah Beach from nearby Brecourt Manor.
The incredible attack is dramatically recounted in the epic HBO miniseries "Band of Brothers." A memorial marks the site today, under French and American flags.
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The small cathedral in the center of Sainte Marie du Mont offers images of U.S. troops crammed in for church services on the first Sunday after D-Day, among other haunting reminders of the battle.
Carentan is a small crossroads town on the estuary that separated Omaha Beach to the east and Utah Beach to the northwest.
The ferocious three-day battle to take the town and link up the invasion forces is portrayed dramatically in episode three of HBO miniseries "Band of Brothers."
The building that houses the Dead Man’s Corner Museum was the headquarters of the German garrison defending Carentan on D-Day. It was then taken over as headquarters of the unit of America’s 101st Airborne Division that liberated the town.
The museum gets its name not just from the deadly combat of 1944, but because the building was reportedly haunted even before the war.
The main road along Omaha Beach (D514) is speckled with apple orchards and family farmhouses, with distilleries that produce the local specialties: effervescent hard cider and an apple spirit called Calvados. Most offer samples and shops that sell Norman gourmet specialties.
The Bernard Lebrec family farm in Englesqueville la Percee, a short distance from the famous cliffs of Pointe du Hoc, is built into the turrets of an old medieval castle.
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Visitors can sample Lebrec’s cider or calvados, scan his collection of World War II memorabilia and stick a pin in one of the maps on the wall that track his visitors from around the globe.
His property — his backyard — also contains a monument to U.S. Army engineers, who turned an adjoining orchard into a landing strip in just three days, helping drive the Allies deeper into Normandy and ultimately onto victory.
This coastal village on Gold Beach in the British invasion sector is just a couple miles east of deadly Omaha Beach in the American invasion sector.
It’s an ideal spot to take in the scope of the invasion.
Diners at some of the waterfront cafés in Arromanches can see the hulking steel remnants of one of the Allied "mulberries" – artificial harbors towed across the English Channel and erected almost overnight to assist the unloading of the stunning stream of men and equipment that poured into Normandy in the days and weeks that followed D-Day.
Nearby are the German guns of Longue Sur Mer – haunting concrete bunkers that housed artillery that battled with Allied warships on D-Day – and several museums.
The town square of Arromanches is a popular gathering spot for World War II reenactors.
Utah Beach marked the far western end of the five British, Canadian and American invasion beaches.
The beautiful Utah Beach Landing Museum serves as the centerpiece of the many landmarks and monuments that mark the D-Day battle here.
The museum on a low bluff overlooking the beach is surrounded by numerous other sites, including several devoted to the ships and naval forces that delivered the invaders and ran logistics on the beach during the invasion.
Among them: the Higgins Boat Monument, dedicated to the iconic landing craft made by New Orleans boat builder Andrew Higgins, the U.S. Navy Normandy Monument and the recently added Lone Sailor Monument.
Café Le Roosevelt, located across the street from the museum, is a popular stop to relax on busy tours and enjoy the taste of Norman fare.
Pointe du Hoc, a towering cliff between Omaha Beach and Utah Beach, is the site of an incredible assault by U.S. Army Rangers on D-Day.
They scaled the cliffs by ropes and ladders under fire from German defenders to take out a nest of deadly artillery overlooking the invasion beaches.
"When one Ranger fell, another would take his place. When one rope was cut, a Ranger would grab another and begin his climb again," President Ronald Reagan said on this spot on June 6, 1984, in his famous "Boys of Pointe du Hoc" speech, written by White House speechwriter Peggy Noonan.
"They climbed, shot back, and held their footing. Soon, one by one, the Rangers pulled themselves over the top, and in seizing the firm land at the top of these cliffs, they began to seize back the continent of Europe."
The ground atop the cliff is still pockmarked by artillery shells, the remnants of German batteries and monuments to the Rangers.
Nowhere is the dauntless spirit of British invaders on D-Day more evident than at Pegasus Bridge. The heroic attack, led by Maj. John Howard, is legendary in the annals of warfare on both sides of the Atlantic.
Howard’s Ox & Bucks Infantry of the 6th Airborne Division made a daring glider assault, crash landing the aircraft just after midnight, to capture two bridges over the Caen Canal and parallel Orne River.
He reported the successful capture of the two bridges with the code words, "Ham and Jam." The real battle had only just begun: Howard and his unit held off repeated attacks while awaiting seaborne relief.
The D-Day hero’s family left an incredible handwritten tribute to him at Pegasus Bridge to celebrate the 75th anniversary of D-Day in 2019.
"For our beloved Father and Poppa … remembered with pride and love every day. Ham & Jam Poppa!"
This village a few miles inland of Utah Beach is celebrated as the first town in France liberated on D-Day and is the center of many celebrations of the battle.
An effigy of American paratrooper Pvt. John Steele hangs in perpetuity from the church steeple in constant memory of the incredible events in the village on June 6.
The horrific scene of D-Day fighting in Sainte Mere Eglise served as the dramatic centerpiece of the 1962 ensemble-cast war epic "The Longest Day" (based on the much better book of the same name by Irish war correspondent Cornelius Ryan).
By sheer coincidence, villagers and dozens of German soldiers had formed a bucket brigade in the town square that very evening to put out a large fire in the center of town – just as American paratroopers began to fall from the sky far from their intended drop zones.
Many GIs were slaughtered by the German troops who turned their guns to the sky – at least one American died horrifically as he fell into the flames.
Steele was shot as he hung from the church steeple but somehow survived and was taken prisoner. He quickly escaped, found his fellow paratroopers and rejoined the battle.
Steele and fellow U.S. paratroopers remain legendary folk heroes in Sainte Mere Eglise, honored with monuments, street names, museums and an array of tributes.
The American Battle Monuments Commission operates dozens of cemeteries around the world commemorating U.S. war dead and missing in action.
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Many are larger, but none are more famous, pristine, haunting or hallowed than Normandy American Cemetery Overlooking Omaha Beach, where allied invaders suffered the greatest carnage on D-Day.
Visitors first pass through a museum that gives context to the battle and the meaning of the pristine rows of crosses and Stars of David that line the cemetery; guests can also look up the location of individual soldiers.
The cemetery also highlights the daunting challenge that faced American troops on D-Day.
They first had to cross a vast, wide sandy beach that was littered with obstacles, then make their way up a surprisingly high bluff – all while under withering enemy fire.
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Steps lead down from the cemetery to the beautiful, wide placid beach.
Visitors today collect sand as a souvenir or splash in the gentle surf that ran red with American blood on June 6, 1944.