By Eric
Hogan
Tuesday,
June 06, 2023
The single
most important day of the 20th century was 79 years ago on June 6, 1944: D-Day.
The official code name for the World War II Allied campaign launched that day
was Operation Overlord.
On that
momentous day, it was determined whether the Allies, who had assembled the
largest amphibious force in history, would successfully establish a beachhead
on the Normandy coast of France. From there, they would begin the liberation of
Western Europe from the four-year occupation of Nazi Germany.
The
Allies had designated five landing beaches along the Normandy coast, from west
to east: Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno, and Sword. The Germans had been fooled into
believing that the most likely invasion beaches would be farther northeast up
the French coast near Calais, the narrowest point in the English Channel.
In the
greatest intelligence deception of World War II, the Allies had convinced the
Germans that the feared General George Patton would lead an amphibious assault
across the channel to seize the Calais area. This effective deception played an
important role in allowing the actual landings on all the Normandy beaches —
except one — to go relatively smoothly with fewer casualties than expected. The
one exception was Omaha Beach, which came frightfully close to becoming a
disaster.
Two-thirds
of the invasion troops from the United States on D-Day assaulted a
four-mile-long beach overlooked by steep bluffs fortified with numerous enemy
gun emplacements and blocked off at either end by limestone cliffs. It became known as “Bloody Omaha.”
The
American 1st Infantry Division and 29th Infantry Division would be badly mauled
in their dawn landing at Omaha Beach. Rough seas from marginal weather
conditions, mined obstacles on the beach and mines in the bluffs, a sea wall to
overcome, barbed wire, and heavily armed concrete fortifications beyond waylaid
them. The concrete fortifications also included the deadly German MG-42 heavy
machine gun that could shoot 1,200 rounds per minute, more than twice as many
rounds as American and British machine guns. The MG-42 laid down a withering,
suppressing fire with a distinctive sound that earned it the nickname ““Hitler’s
buzzsaw.”
At the
western end of Omaha, the first wave of soldiers was all but wiped out, barely
able to shoot back against the Germans. Succeeding waves piled up on the sea
wall. Chaos reigned. The Americans were paralyzed, unable to mount an attack
against the German defenders.
With
more than 1,000 dead in just a few hours and bodies strewn everywhere on the
beach, the American high command began to consider evacuating the beach. This would have
left a German-controlled beach area between American troops on Utah Beach and
the other three British/Canadian beaches — a serious problem for the Allies.
Amid
this looming tragedy, a company of roughly 150 men from the 1st Infantry
Division commanded by Captain Joseph Dawson miraculously landed on the beach where there was a
tiny gap between the interlocking fields of heavy gunfire coming from the
German fortifications. They safely got to the sea wall and reorganized to
prepare an attack on the strong fortifications as their orders dictated.
The
famous historian Stephen Ambrose chronicled in his book D-Day that
when Captain Dawson observed the piles of bodies to his left and right and
sized up the grim situation, he decided to ignore his orders, which were to
make a direct, suicidal attack against the formidable German fortifications.
Instead, his company would move straight inland between the fortifications and
try to pick its way between some smaller hills and ravines, with the goal of
reaching the high bluffs overlooking the beach.
In his
personal combat memoirs, Captain Dawson recalls that as, his company began to
move inland, he saw a couple of dead soldiers who had been killed by a
detonating landmine, so he used extreme caution leading his men through the
minefield unharmed. Continuing to move forward and higher by crawling and
crouching, the company eventually came under fire of a German machine gun up on
the bluff that wounded several of his men.
After
telling his men to find cover, Dawson began crawling through the brush and sand
to work his way up and to the side of the machine gun position on the bluff.
According to his memoirs, he looked back down and saw another platoon of
Americans commanded by Lieutenant John Spalding
coming up the hill to the side of his company. Lieutenant Spalding’s platoon
had landed in almost the same spot on the beach a few minutes after Dawson’s
company and decided to follow it inland, given the human carnage on the beach.
Using hand signals, Dawson managed to get the attention of Sergeant Philip
Streczyk, a
seasoned combat veteran on whom the inexperienced Spalding relied. Dawson
directed Streczyk and his man to put a suppressing fire on the German
machine-gun nest so he could sneak the rest of the way up the bluff undetected
by the Germans.
As
Dawson reached the top of the bluff to the side of the machine-gun nest, he
pulled the pin out of two hand grenades. The Germans spotted him about ten
yards away and quickly tried to turn their gun on him, but he made two perfect
throws with his grenades and killed all the Germans. At this moment in time,
Dawson was probably the first American to reach the top of the bluff towering
above Omaha Beach. The first opening was now cleared for Americans to exploit
and turn the tide of battle.
Dawson
then waved for all the soldiers to join him at the top of the bluff to
formulate a plan. He instructed Spalding and Streczyk to head west to attack
one of the strong German fortifications that was savaging the men on the beach.
Dawson would move his company east toward the village of Colleville-sur-Mer, to
the rear of another strong German fortification. They also sent men back down
to the beach to direct more American units to ascend to the bluffs and attack
the Germans from the flanks.
Spalding
and Streczyk successfully neutralized the strong German fortification they were
after, along with several smaller positions they encountered. The experienced
warrior Streczyk primarily led the attacks, which involved extensive
close-quarters combat. Some more rapidly moving American troops joined Dawson
near Colleville-sur-Mer in the early afternoon. They attacked from the rear and
destroyed the other strong German fortification. Even as the brutal fighting
continued, control of the situation at Omaha had now shifted to the Americans.
Once the
invasion began and troops were landing on the beaches, the outcome of the
battle was transferred from the higher commanders to the men on the beach.
There was no brilliant decision that Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D.
Eisenhower or Operation Overlord Field Commander General Omar Bradley could
make that might affect the outcome. It was in the greatest tradition of the
average G.I. Joe American soldier that a trio of Americans found themselves in
a desperate, perilous situation on Omaha Beach and recognized that their
existing orders were useless. They then assessed their situation, recognized an
opportunity, took the initiative, and adapted and improvised their tactics to
be successful.
Captain
Dawson, Lieutenant Spalding, and Sergeant Streczyk were all awarded the
Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest medal for valor given by the
U.S. Army. Streczyk was a highly decorated soldier. He was also awarded four
Silver Stars and six Bronze Stars for bravery. He served 440 days in combat: in
North Africa, Sicily, France, and Germany. He suffered physical and emotional
problems after the war, tragically committing suicide in 1958, at 39. At the
huge Normandy festivities celebrating the 50th anniversary of D-Day in 1994,
the Army honored Captain Dawson by asking him to introduce President Bill
Clinton (as the keynote speaker of the celebration).
Dawson,
Spalding, and Streczyk, and the men they led, managed to slip in between strong
German fortifications that were slaughtering the troops on the beach and to
fight their way to the top of the Omaha bluff, clearing a path that others
could follow. Using the element of surprise by attacking from the rear, they
methodically destroyed many German defenses. Besides saving hundreds, perhaps
thousands, of American lives, these three unsung American heroes were probably
most responsible for transforming the D-Day battle at Omaha Beach from a bitter
defeat into a glorious victory. Surely, these three men deserve to be fondly
remembered as “the Angels of Omaha.”
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