Garand Picture of the day #151 - D-day
Swimming through a rough surf swept by machine gun and mortar fire, Coast Guardsman carried a guide line to the beach of Normandy on D-Day and survived heavy Nazi fire that mowed down many soldiers following the line to the beach. This photo depicts how the soldier wrapped the end of the line around his middle and served as a "human anchor" in the midst of enemy fire. Of the 36 invaders who attempted to follow the line ashore, only six made it. Meanwhile, the ramp of the Coast Guard-manned LCI had been shot away by shellfire
Poort guys have carbines!
My sister's father-in-law was in the second wave to hit Omaha Beach. He said when the LSts turned around to pick up the second load of GIs, many of them were full of guts, limbs and dead men. They were told to just get in and hit the beach.
Five years ago when I met him I showed him a Carbine I had and he grabbed it and said "They gave us these pea-shooters to hit Omaha with. We had to climb down into an LST that was running with blood and guts and if you don't think that freaked us out, you're mad. Then in the midst of hell breaking loose we found ourselves splashing through the surf and that's when I realized the carbine was useless for us. The Krouts were shooting at us from 300 yards away and here we had these pop guns. Well the beach by then was littered with 03's so I threw that worthless carbine away, grabbed an 03 out of the surf half-buried in sand. Still running through the surf to get to solid ground, I opened the bolt and bent over on the run and sloshed sea water through it to wash out the sand, slammed the bolt back and ended up keeping that 03 until the '60s when I gave up using it for hunting."
I sat there listening to him stunned as usual when hearing a WWII vet tell his story. He handed me back the carbine and didn't pay any more attention to it. It's a great short rifle and certainly has an advantage in certain uses, but to give it to guys on Omaha seemed pure madness to me - and obviously him too.