In this Sept. 12, 2019, file photo, World War II veteran Lawrence Brooks holds a photo of him taken in 1943 as he celebrates his 110th birthday at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. Brooks celebrated his 112th birthday on Sunday with a drive-by party at his New Orleans home.
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In this Sept. 12, 2019, file photo, World War II veteran Lawrence Brooks celebrates his 110th birthday at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans.
10 things you might not know about D-Day
1. Many photos were taken, but then lost.
War photographer Robert Capa, who said, “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you aren’t close enough,” landed at Omaha Beach on D-Day. He took more than 100 pictures, but when the film was sent to London, a darkroom technician dried it too quickly and melted the emulsion, leaving fewer than a dozen pictures usable. Even so, those shaky and chaotic photos tell the story of Omaha Beach.
A member of staff poses for photographs next to Hungarian-born photographer Robert Capa's 'American Soldier Landing on Omaha Beach, D-Day' during a press preview for the photo exhibition 'Eyewitness: Hungarian Photography in the 20th Century' at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, Tuesday, June 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Akira Suemori)
2. Crossword puzzles were a concern.
In the weeks before D-Day, British intelligence was concerned about crossword puzzles. The London Daily Telegraph’s recent puzzle answers had included Overlord and Neptune (the code names for the overall operation and the landing operation) and Utah and Omaha (the two American invasion beaches).
Agents interrogated the puzzle-maker, Leonard Dawe. Turned out, it was just a coincidence.
Members of an American landing unit help their exhausted comrades ashore during the Normandy invasion, June 6, 1944. The men reached the zone code-named Utah Beach, near Sainte Mere Eglise, on a life raft after their landing craft was hit and sunk by German coastal defenses. (AP Photo/INP Pool/Louis Weintraub)
3. The people who planned D-Day were bigots.
That was the code word — bigot — for anyone who knew the time and place of the invasion. It was a reversal of a designation — “to Gib” — that was used on the papers of those traveling to Gibraltar for the invasion of North Africa in 1942.
A company commander briefs his men, using a model of the French invasion coast, prior to the June 6 landings in northern France. Note tense expressions on faces of these men, who study details of terrain during his huddle somewhere in England, June 1944. (AP Photo)
4. A few notable names
Among those who landed at Normandy on D-Day were J.D. Salinger (who went on to write “Catcher in the Rye”), Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (the president’s son, who died of a heart attack a month later) and Elliot Richardson (attorney general under President Richard Nixon).
FILE - This Thursday, Jan. 28, 2010 picture shows copies of J.D. Salinger's classic novel "The Catcher in the Rye" as well as his volume of short stories called "Nine Stories" at the Orange Public Library in Orange Village, Ohio. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta, File)
5. Code name 'Fortitude'
The Allied effort to hoodwink Adolf Hitler about the invasion was code-named Fortitude, and it was nearly as elaborate and detailed as the invasion itself. The Allies went so far as to parachute dummies — outfitted with firecrackers that exploded on impact — behind enemy lines as a diversion.
U.S. paratroopers prepare to jump June 6, 1944, over Normandy in France.
6. D-Day secrets were almost exposed in Chicago.
A package from Supreme Headquarters in London arrived at a Chicago mail-sorting office a few months before D-Day and was accidentally opened. Its contents may have been seen by more than a dozen unauthorized people. The FBI found that a U.S. general’s aide of German descent had sent the package to “The Ordnance Division, G-4” but had added the address of his sister in Chicago. The FBI concluded that the aide was overtired and had been thinking about his sister, who was ill.
Pair of landing craft hit Utah Beach in Normandy, France, June 1944. (AP Photo)
7. Not an 'invasion of Norway'
Woe be unto a politician who commits a gaffe during a D-Day remembrance. In 2004, Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin referred to the “invasion of Norway” when he meant Normandy. Years later, at an event with President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown cited “Obama Beach” when he meant “Omaha Beach.”
From left, U.S. President Barack Obama, Britain's Prince Charles, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy arrive at the American Cemetery at Colleville-Sur -Mer, near Caen, Western France, Saturday, June 6, 2009 to attend the 65th Anniversary of the D-day landings in Normandy. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)
8. Andrew Higgins 'won the war for us.'
In a 1964 interview, Dwight Eisenhower said a single person “won the war for us.” He was referring to Andrew Higgins, who designed and built the amphibious assault crafts that allowed the Allies to storm the beaches of Normandy. The eccentric boat builder foresaw not only the Navy’s acute need for small military crafts early on, but also the shortage of steel, so he gambled and bought the entire 1939 crop of mahogany from the Philippines. His New Orleans company produced thousands of boats for the war effort.
Andrew Higgins’ wooden boat factory in New Orleans produced thousands of boats for the Allied efforts in World War II.
9. Training exercises gone wrong
While U.S. forces were conducting a training exercise off the southwestern English coast to prepare for the landing on Utah Beach, German torpedo boats ambushed them. More than 700 Americans were killed — a toll far worse than when U.S. forces actually took Utah Beach a few months later.
With a U.S. tank unit in England getting ready for D-Day in 1944, left to right are: Captain Leonard Brusky, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Sergeant Wilfred F. Thomas, Wisconsin, Sergeant Frank L. Niner, Louisville, Kentucky, Pfc Harry H. Smith, Louisville, Kentucky, and Private Louis W. Louisville Kentucky. (AP Photo)
10. Breaking the Enigma code
On June 4, 1944, U.S. forces were able to capture a German submarine off the African coast because they had broken the Enigma code and learned a sub was in the vicinity. On the eve of D-Day, the U.S. couldn’t risk that the Germans would realize the code was cracked. So they hid away the sub and its captured crew until the end of the war, and the Germans assumed the vessel was lost at sea.
In this image provided by the U.S. Navy, the American flag flies from the conning tower of a captured German submarine U-505 near Cape Blanco in French West Africa on June 4, 1944 during World War II. (AP Photo/U.S. Navy)
A closer look at the attack
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is shown in March, 1944 when as Commander of invasion of Europe. Standing beside Ike was British air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur W. Tedder. In left background was british field marshal Montgomery. (AP-Photo)
Operation Overlord begins
June 5, 1944: On the morning of June 5, amid bad weather fears, U.S. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the supreme commander of Allied forces in Europe, gave the approval for Operation Overlord. About 6,000 landing craft, ships and other vessels carrying more than 150,000 troops left England for France.
After landing at the shore, these British troops wait for the signal to move forward June 6, 1944, during the initial Allied landing operations in Normandy, France.
