65th anniversary of D-Day NORMANDY 101st airborne Sector In the Heart of the Landing Beaches Thursday 4 June ANGOVILLE-AU-PLAIN : 11:30 : WWII reenacted parachute jump from C-47 aircraft on the original Drop Zone 'D' Friday, 5 June SAINT-COME-DU-MONT : Opening three day outdoor exhibition at the D-Day Paratrooper Historical Center in the field at Dead Man’s Corner. The 3rd Battalion of the 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Airborne Medics Airborne War Correspondents & Special Motion Pictures Unit CARENTAN : 21:30 Liberation Ball. Salle des Fetes at the Port of Carentan. Open to all, dancing to the Swing Dance Orchestra. Singers include Flash Back and Kelly Ann Sproult to give a true 1940's ambience. US Veterans attending. Saturday 6 June SAINT-COME-DU-MONT : Opening three day outdoor exhibition at the D-Day Paratrooper Historical Center in the field at Dead Man’s Corner. 101 Airborne meeting and book release: ‘Tonight We Die As Men’ and it’s companion DVD ‘The Forgotten Battalion,’ at Dead Man’s Corner Museum. Bill Galbraith, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Manny Barrios 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Ralph Bennett, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Sunday 7 June SAINT-COME-DU-MONT : 10 h 00 : 500 Paratroops of the ‘BIA March’ gather in the village for the ceremony to Joe Beyrle. Arrival of the veterans and Honor Guard. 15 h 15 : Marchers arrive at «Dead Man’s Corner Museum» to form up for final phase. 15 h 45 : Marchers move down Purple Heart Lane in formation to Carentan. CARENTAN : 9 h 00 : Depart of the BIA, Place du Grand Valnoble (registered participants only) 16 h 30 : Recreation of the famous medal ceremony in the square at Carentan. Arrival of the veterans and Honor Guard. Followed by a short ceremony attended by town officials. Brothers in Arms March V Road to Carentan In the footsteps of the 101st Airborne Division The Carentan Historical Foundation in association with the D-Day Paratrooper Historical Center and the Municipalities of Carentan and Saint-Côme-du-Mont in Normandy is organizing its 5th annual march on Sunday 7th June 2009. The 18km trek follows the historic trail carved out by the 101st Airborne Division as its soldiers fought bravely to liberate the region in 1944. This being the 65th anniversary of D-Day we are expecting more than five hundred participants to take part. The marchers who include people from the USA and Japan will be dressed in US Airborne clothing (authentic to the period) to commemorate the sacrifice of the young American paratroopers who went on to capture Carentan. The day will start in the heart of the battlefield at Saint-Côme-du-Mont with a ceremony to honor Technical Sergeant Joseph R. Beyrle. Joe was a paratrooper from the famous 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, who was taken prisoner after he landed on the church roof on June 6th 1944 by German paratroopers from the 6 FJR. Three of his comrades in arms will be making a special trip from the USA (two of them for the first time since the war) to participate at the ceremony and to promote a new book ‘Tonight We Die As Men’ and it’s companion DVD ‘The Forgotten Battalion,’ at Dead Man’s Corner Museum, about their exploits in Normandy during June 1944. Bill Galbraith, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Manny Barrios 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Ralph Bennett, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division TONIGHT WE DIE AS MEN THE UNTOLD STORY OF THIRD BATTALION 506 PARACHUTE INFANTRY REGIMENT FROM TOCCOA TO D-DAY By Ian Gardner and Roger Day Taking their title from a brief prayer by 3rd Battalion C.O. Lt. Col. Robert Lee Wolverton (who would be killed during the early morning hours of D-Day) said shortly before boarding their C-47 "Skytrain" aircraft for the flight to Normandy, Gardner and Day have produced a highly detailed study of one battalion's harrowing first weeks fighting in France. As Ed Shames, a veteran of the 506th, writes in the Foreword, Tonight We Die As Men is "the most detailed history ever written about the battles that began the drive to free the European continent of the German armies. Many books and accounts have been written about the invasion of Normandy, but never have you read one that has been more accurate about the facts and events of this period of warfare." The battalion's D-Day objective was to land at Drop Zone ‘D’, east of Saint-Côme-duMont and seize control of two small wooden bridges - one for foot traffic and the other for vehicles - over the Douve River east of Carentan. The mission was vital, for the Germans had built the bridges a few months earlier to enable them to rush reinforcements into the coastal area in the event of an Allied landing. The fierce and costly battle for these two bridges is the focus of Tonight We Die As Men. The Germans, too, knew the importance of the bridges and would not relenquish them without an all-out fight. The two British authors take the reader back to Toccoa, Georgia, and the initial training received (some would say endured) by the men of the 506th PIR, commanded by Col. Robert F. Sink, then on to airborne training at Fort Benning and Camp Mackall. They also flesh out the personalities mentioned in the book so that by the time the regiment is in England and preparing for its baptism of fire in Normandy, the reader has developed a fondness for each trooper. This personalizing of the men also serves to intensify the feeling of loss when the soldiers are killed in the savage fighting on D-Day and the month after. Of the 575 officers and men who jumped on D-Day, the unit lost 93 killed and 73 listed as missing in action. Scores more were wounded. It will be hard to find a better book about a single airborne battalion in World War II. Mason B. Webb WWII History Magazine The marchers will then step back in time to discover the Norman Bocage that was so familiar to the soldiers of 101st Airborne. The final leg of the event takes the participants, lead by tanks and a host of military vehicles including a L-4 airplane - down the now famous "Purple Heart Lane" across the Douve bridges before ending in Carentan. All participants please note: US Para and airborne troops combat uniform, 101st Airborne Division is required. At 15:15 approx, members of the public can expect to see the marchers lead by their vehicle escort arriving in ‘Purple Heart Lane’ for the final leg of the event before crossing over the Douve bridges and finishing in Carentan at 16:00. BIA March Information & registration: Carentan Historical Foundation Email : brothersinarmsmarch@orange.fr Tel : +33.2.33.42.00.42 T/4 Joseph R. “Jumpin Joe” BEYRLE “I” Company, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Joe Beyrle is thought to be the one of only a handful of American soldiers to have served in both the United States Army and the Soviet Army in World War II. “The invasion of Normandy was on,” recalled Joe (who has since passed away). “We flew approximately 90 minutes from England before crossing the Normandy Peninsula. Flying at approximately 700 feet the formation started taking AA and ground fire. Several of our planes were hit and exploded or crashed. We got the stand-up and hook-up, red light, green light and jumped at approximately 400 feet directly over the town of Saint-Côme-du-Mont.” Under fire from a machine gun located in the church tower he landed on the church and slid feet first down it’s high-pitched roof but somehow managed to check his fall. A barn was burning some distance away at Tammerville, lighting up the area, and the Germans had now turned their fire in its direction. Alone, Joe decided to head west back down the line of flight where he hoped to locate other members of his stick. During the hours before daybreak he located and attempted to destroy a mobile generator near the center of town and using hand grenades attacked a group of Germans who were gathering nearby. Whilst trying to find a safe way out of the town he crawled through a hedgerow and stumbled into a well-defended German MG42 position and was surrounded by enemy paratroopers and taken prisoner. Faking a back injury, two of the enemy soldiers took him to an aid station in the town recently established and run by his battalion surgeon Dr Stanley Morgan, who had also been captured by the Germans. After a failed escape attempt he was marched to a nearby prisoner-holding area before being taken to a German underground HQ in an apple orchard south of Saint-Côme for interrogation. Pfc. Manuel M. “Manny” BARRIOS “I” Company, 506th PIR 101st Airborne Division Flying into Normandy on D-Day, twentytwo year old Manny was on Joe Beyrle’s plane and landed in a garden on the eastern edge of Saint-Côme-du-Mont. Alone and separated from the rest of the stick he spent the next three days fighting for survival until being injured by allied shellfire (ironically on his 23rd birthday). Seriously wounded by shrapnel, Manny encouraged a passing German doctor (at gunpoint) to treat him. His ordeal came to an end after being discovered by soldiers from the 101st as they pushed forward into Saint-Côme. He was evacuated back to England by hospital ship around June 10th and returned to active duty six months later at Bastogne. Manny lives in Whittier, California where he is an active member of the 101st Southern California Chapter. Sgt. Ralph BENNETT “H” Company, 506th PIR 101st Airborne Division As a 60mm mortar sergeant, Ralph Bennett’s job in Normandy was to provide direct fire support to 3rd platoon H Company. He was among the lucky few who landed on drop zone D and actually made it to the road bridge at Brévands. From first light on June 6th his team played a vital defensive role until the bridge was partially destroyed by an allied air attack on D +1. Ralph took part in the horrific battle of ‘bloody gully’ on June 13th when the German 6th Parachute Regiment together with the 17th SS began a fearsome but unsuccessful counter attack on Carentan. After promotion to 3rd platoon sergeant Ralph went on to win a Silver Star in Holland and played an active part in the defence of Bastogne. In 1945 he returned to the UK and married his English sweetheart June Earl. Ralph lives in Highland, Michigan with June and their four children. Pvt. William P. “Bill” GALBRAITH “I” Company, 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division Machine gunner Bill Galbraith landed on the southwestern edge of drop zone D and begrudgingly joined with the 501 for the attack on the La Barquette locks. He returned to 3/506 on the evening of 8th June only to find that they had been totally decimated. He also fought at ‘bloody gully’ on June 13th and recalls, “I don’t think there were more than 28 of us left in I Co after the battle”. While on leave after Normandy Bill met and fell in love with Anna. After being promoted and transferred to S3 (Bn Planning & Operations) Bill’s war ended in Holland when on September 18th he was seriously wounded while entering the outskirts of Eindhoven by German artillery. After spending three years in hospital Bill finally married Anna in 1948 - just after Christmas. Bill now lives in Murrieta, California with Anna and their nine children. Press release : Saint-Côme-du-Mont, Normandy 65th anniversary of D-Day TONIGHT WE DIE AS MEN EXPOSITION Dead Man’s Corner Museum Friday 5, Saturday 6 & Sunday 7 June 2009 The D-Day Paratrooper Historical Center in association with the Dead Man’s Corner Museum and the Municipality of Saint-Côme-du-Mont in Normandy is organizing a three day outdoor exhibition from Friday 5 June until Sunday 7 June 2009 at Dead Man’s Corner Museum. FREE ENTRANCE Information : Carentan Historical Foundation Email : d-day@skynet.be Tel : +33.2.33.42.00.42 Displays The 3rd Battalion of the 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division D-Day, the 3rd battalion of the 506th PIR jumped over Saint-Côme-du-Mont. Their objective was to seize and take control of two small wooden bridges crossing the Douve River east of Carentan. The mission was vital. The Germans had built the bridges a few months earlier to enable them to rush reinforcements into the coastal area in the event of an Allied landing. Rare memorabilia and photographs relating to the exploits of these elite paratroopers in Normandy are presented to the public together with a new and incredible book ‘Tonight We Die As Men’. Written by Ian Gardner and Roger Day this is a highly detailed study of one battalion's harrowing first weeks fighting in France. To accompany the book and unveiled publicly for the first time is ‘The Forgotten Battalion’ - a new film in which nine surviving third battalion veterans tell their own frank and moving story from Toccoa to D-Day. To further enhance the exhibition, a living history group will be recreating camp life to commemorate the sacrifice of the young American soldiers who went on to capture Carentan. Bill Galbraith, Manny Barrios and Ralph Bennett, all three from the 506th PIR, 101st Airborne Division will be making a special trip from the USA (two of them for the first time since the war) to participate in this event and to meet with the public. Airborne Medics Organic airborne medical units supported the 101st Airborne Divisions during World War II. The equipment and techniques that were employed during this period are being presented in a display accompanied by a living history group recreating a medical evacuation station commemorating the sacrifice of the young American soldiers. Airborne War Correspondents & Special Motion Pictures Unit In June 1944, The Special Motion Picture Unit operated from its base camp in Carentan conveniently situated between Utah and Omaha beaches. To highlight the incredible work done by Hollywood filmmaker George Stevens we are showing the extraordinary color footage shot by his special unit of Army cameramen during the Allied invasion of Normandy. There will also be a display of memorabilia and equipment from Army Signal Corps airborne war correspondents. A living history group wil recreate George Stevens’ and his Army Signal Corps Special Motion Picture Unit - commemorating the sacrifice of the young American soldiers.