Normandy: the Sailors' Story

Nick Hewitt

£20.00

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Yale University Press
2 April 2024
ISBN: 9780300256734
Hardback
464 pages

From the publisher

The first account of the Allied navies’ vital contribution to the success of the D-Day landings and the Normandy campaign
 
The Allied liberation of Nazi-occupied Europe is one of the most widely recognised events of modern history. The assault phase, Operation Neptune, began with the D-Day landings in Normandy—one of the most complex amphibious operations in history, involving 7,000 ships and nearly 200,000 men. But despite this immense effort, the wider naval campaign has been broadly forgotten.
 
Nick Hewitt draws on fascinating new material to describe the violent sea battle which mirrored the fighting on land, and the complex campaign at sea which enabled the Allied assault. Aboard ships ranging from frail plywood landing craft to sleek destroyers, sailors were active combatants in the operation of June 1944, and had worked tirelessly to secure the Seine Bay in the months preceding it. They fought battles against German submarines, aircraft, and warships, and maintained careful watch to keep control of the English Channel.
 
Hewitt recounts these sailors’ stories for the first time—and shows how, without their efforts, D-Day would have failed.