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Howarth - Dawn of D-day: these men were there, 6 June 1944

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Howarth Dawn of D-day: these men were there, 6 June 1944
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Dawn of D-day: these men were there, 6 June 1944: summary, description and annotation

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Dawn of D-Day is superb history from the mouths and pens of the men who fought on that first day of the battle for Normandy.

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ALSO BY FRONTLINE BOOKS FIGHTING THE BREAKOUT Edited by David C Isby FIGHTING - photo 1

ALSO BY FRONTLINE BOOKS

FIGHTING THE BREAKOUT
Edited by David C. Isby

FIGHTING THE INVASION
Edited by David C. Isby

LONG RANGE DESERT GROUP
W.B. Kennedy Shaw

NO CLOAK, NO DAGGER
Benjamin Cowburn

SAS: WITH THE MAQUIS
Ian Wellsted

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL
David Lee

Dawn of D-Day: These Men Were There, 6 June 1944

Picture 2
A Greenhill Book
Published in 2001 by Greenhill Books, Lionel Leventhal Limited
www.greenhillbooks.com

This edition published in 2016 by

Picture 3
Frontline Books
an imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd,
47 Church Street, Barnsley, S. Yorkshire, S70 2AS
For more information on our books, please visit
or write to us at the above address.

Copyright David Howarth, 1959; Published by arrangement with Stephen Howarth, Literary Trustee to the Estate of the late David Howarth.

ISBN: 978-1-84832-890-7
PDF ISBN: 978-1-84832-893-8
EPUB ISBN: 978-1-84832-891-4
PRC ISBN: 978-1-84832-892-1

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

CIP data records for this title are available from the British Library

Publishing History
Dawn of D-Day was first published in 1959 by Collins (London) and reprinted in paperback by Fontana Books in 1961 and Greenhill Books in 2001.
This edition now appears exactly as the original edition.

Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY

CONTENTS

ILLUSTRATIONS

MAPS

INTRODUCTION When this book was first published in 1959 its subject D-Day the - photo 4

INTRODUCTION

When this book was first published in 1959, its subject D-Day, the Allied invasion of Europe on 6 June 1944 was recent history, still very much alive in the memories of all those thousands who took part and survived, and all those many thousands more whose lives were directly affected by it. As a professional writer of history myself, I know well that recent history can be very challenging: it is almost certain that after publication, when it is too late to change matters, a reader will send a letter saying (more or less politely) that the author has got it wrong, and that the reader knows, because he or she was there. So the subtitle of this edition is important: these men were there.

On first publication, Dawn of D-Day was received with acclamation all around the world for precisely the reasons that its author, my father, sets out with typical modesty in his foreword; it is not a military textbook, but an impression, drawn from the direct experiences of about thirty participants, of the greatest tri-service international operation that had ever taken place. A different thirty people might well have provided different impressions, yet had they done so, theirs would be no less valid than this. D-Day was, as the author said, such a vast adventure that no single book could possibly encompass it all. But I should say, on behalf of all those who contributed to it, that this book comes close in a very special way; of all the many volumes I have read about the invasion, Dawn of D-Day best conveys the actual experience of that momentous day, and is a work of brilliance.

I can write these things without fear of being accused of bias, for two reasons. Firstly, many other people reviewers and readers have said them before me. Secondly, after more than twenty years of writing history, I can read the book with a professional eye; and in doing so I remain greatly impressed by the authors ability. Of course it is a personal delight that he was (and though dead, still is) my dear father, and because of that I probably cannot be entirely dispassionate about the book; but he had a really outstanding ability to listen and relate to people whom he interviewed and then to tell their stories woven in with those of many others. From these authentic sources he was able to create for the reader a living narrative filled with clear, well-drawn, understandable individual characters. And even if we were not there, in reading about them we can relate to them, worry about them, fear for their safety, even laugh with them at some ludicrous event in the midst of a terrifying battle. Dawn of D-Day is, in other words, an intensely human record.

Like any sane individual my father found war abhorrent, but in writing this book he had no anti-war message to convey; he was not present at D-Day because he was fighting in a different arena for the same cause. Rather, his interest was in ordinary people undergoing experiences of great stress for differing causes that they believed just and right; and because of those qualities the book is also a work of great value, even now, many years after the events that it describes.

Following its first publication my father received many letters from readers, French, British, American and German men and women for whom this was not just recent history, but part of their own lives. Two of those letters were particularly notable. One, from an American airman, a navigator, fell into the inevitable category of the author has got it wrong, and that the reader knows, because he or she was there. But it had an unusual twist. The letter-writer was not complaining about the books overall accuracy; instead he was embarrassed to say that from his personal knowledge, a contributory interviewee a fellow American flying officer had not played quite such a part as was told. The other letter came from a Frenchman, and is notable as being much more typical of the rest. Writing for himself and his wife, he said, We could only think that the Liberation would bring to us the liberated more dead! Your work, on the other hand, offers real historic sincerity, because if in ten or fifteen years from now, someone wishes to reconstruct and remember the story of that day, the historian will search for the privileged people who took part, and will only find your book, or the dead Once again, thank you. My wife and my children join me in this.

So do my wife and children, and this is the power of Dawn of D-Day, a complex story told with wonderful simplicity. Born in 1953, I have no recollection of this book being researched and written, nor of course any direct knowledge of the action described; but today we may walk in peace along the beaches that were the battlefront. Here and there stand memorials, and not far off in Caen is one of the worlds most moving museums, the Memorial a museum for peace. Thank goodness that the Allied forces prevailed; we are indebted beneficiaries. When the wind blows on the beaches the sand stings your legs and you may look out over the sea and imagine it filled with Allied warships. You may also imagine the shock of the ordinary German soldiers, tasked with defending those beaches, when they awoke to such a sight; and in this book you may read what D-Day meant for ordinary people on both sides.

Stephen Howarth, 2004

FOREWORD

This is not a military text-book. Military histories of battles deal with military units, and the way their generals manoeuvred them; they do not usually tell their readers what individual soldiers saw or did, or what they thought or feared. But this is the aspect of battles which interests me: not only the actions and opinions of the generals who planned them, but also those of the soldiers and junior officers who had to fight them.

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