This D-Day

80 years since that very important day!

And another day where things got in the way and I didn’t write a proper post.

10 thoughts on “This D-Day

  1. Good morning, Paul. I’ve been having a few weeks of something getting in the way of me posting. But I am enjoying exploring and updating my travellist for 2025.

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  2. D-Day…How the day unfolded: The Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied France was unprecedented in scale and audacity, using the largest-ever armada of ships, troops, planes and vehicles to change the course of World War II.

    I was a kid at that time. The war did have an impact on me. The blackouts, people I knew fighting the war. And my grandmother, a ham operator, had contact with another operator in Germany, to find out the status of our town’s military “boys” fighting in the war. 🇺🇸 Christine

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    1. I have just finished reading in our local paper: Last WWII vets converge on Normandy for fallen friends. It was a very moving account that included, “More than 4,400 Allied troops were killed on D-Day, including more than 2,500 Americans.” I was born a little later in 1944 so, I guess, you are a tad older than me!

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      1. Christine, then you most certainly were affected. And you telling of your grandmother who was a radio ham having contact, presumably using the Morse code, with a German ham. That article that I referred to went on to say: “But the presence of an ever-dwindling number of veterans keeps the commemorations real, inevitably raising questions about whether the memories, pathos and lessons of WWII will fade when they are gone.” One hopes not!

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      2. Not likely forgotten. Memories will be kept alive. My second son in his early 60s, has had an interest in WWII history for years. Maybe one of my great-grand children will pick up the interest. There are plenty of movies to watch, too. 🇺🇸🎶

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