By Flint Whitlock

Imposing cliffs guard the now-quiet Omaha Beach in this modern view.
Imposing cliffs guard the now-quiet Omaha Beach in this modern view.
Peering warily from his concrete-reinforced gun emplacement, a German soldier contemplates the coming invasion of Europe.
Peering warily from his concrete-reinforced gun emplacement, a German soldier contemplates the coming invasion of Europe.
In the opening moments of the D-day landings, 1st Division Troops hit Omaha Beach along with the attached 116th Regiment of the 29th Division.
In the opening moments of the D-day landings, 1st Division Troops hit Omaha Beach along with the attached 116th Regiment of the 29th Division.
Support troops of the 1st Division pose as they await orders to go ashore during the Allied advance in Normandy.
Support troops of the 1st Division pose as they await orders to go ashore during the Allied advance in Normandy.
 A soldier crouches for protection in the foreground while those in the distance scramble for cover as a German shell explodes on Omaha Beach.
A soldier crouches for protection in the foreground while those in the distance scramble for cover as a German shell explodes on Omaha Beach.
Colonel George A. Taylor, commander of the 16th Regiment.
Colonel George A. Taylor, commander of the 16th Regiment.

Now it was Dawson’s turn to move out. “I felt the obligation to lead my men off, because the only way they were going to get off was to follow me; they wouldn’t get off by themselves … We dropped over [the shingle] and got into this minefield. There was a body of a boy who had found the minefield and unfortunately also found the mine and destroyed himself, but he pointed the way for us to go across him, which we did. Sergeant Cleff and myself, and Pfc. Baldridge, another man in my company, started up the hill…. There was a path and it seemed to generally go in the right direction toward the crest of the hill, so I started up that way. About halfway there, I encountered Lieutenant Spaulding with a remnant of his platoon. I think he had two squads and a person in a third squad, and they were the only survivors that I knew of at that time in E Company. He joined us at that time and became part of us; my men were still back on the beach.

Sergeant Harley Reynolds, Company B, 16th Regiment.
Sergeant Harley Reynolds, Company B, 16th Regiment.

Originally scheduled to land in front of the E-3 draw, the L Company boats beached beyond the extreme eastern boundary of Fox Green, near the shelter of low cliffs that came down nearly to the water’s edge. Organizing his company in the relative safety of the cliffs, Captain Armellino saw that his unit, although it had already lost nearly half its strength, was basically intact—the only one of eight companies in this initial wave able to operate as a unit.

Captain Joe Dawson is decorated by General Eisenhower.
Captain Joe Dawson is decorated by General Eisenhower.

K Company’s six boats came under heavy enemy fire, and two were blown up by mines. The officer corps was decimated in minutes. As Prucnal and his XO, First Lt. Frederick L. Brandt, were attempting to organize the remnants of the company, a shell screamed in and mortally wounded Brandt. Coming to his aid, Prucnal was killed by another shell. A platoon commander, Lieutenant James L. Robinson, attempted to rally the company only to fall dead at the hands of a sniper. Another lieutenant, Alexander H. Zbylut, was wounded while struggling ashore. Taking command of the rapidly dwindling unit, Lieutenant Leo A. Stumbaugh organized a patrol of what was left of the first and second assault sections, dashed through a blaze of enemy fire, and forced Germans holding a defensive position to withdraw. The right flank of the German line holding Omaha Beach was slowly, almost imperceptibly, beginning to crumble.

General Clarence Huebner, 1st Division commander.
General Clarence Huebner, 1st Division commander.

War correspondent Don Whitehead noted, “The invasion on Omaha Beach was a dead standstill! The battle was being fought at the water’s edge! I lay on the beach wanting to burrow into the gravel. And I thought: ‘This time we have failed! God, we have failed! Nothing has moved from this beach and soon, over that bluff, will come the Germans. They’ll come swarming down on us….’”

Sheltering against a cliff at the edge of Omaha Beach, members of Company L, 16th Regiment prepare to assault German positions.
Sheltering against a cliff at the edge of Omaha Beach, members of Company L, 16th Regiment prepare to assault German positions.
Omaha Beach today.
Omaha Beach today.

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