Slapton Sands

Laurie

Senior Member
Location
Kingdom of Fife
Today has seen the memorial service at Slapton Sands, Devon.

Hushed up for many years, more than 700 US troops were lost, most of them never found, in a rehearsal for Utah Beach on D Day, more than actually died on Utah Beach itself.

Thanks guys

RIP
 

Today has seen the memorial service at Slapton Sands, Devon.

Hushed up for many years, more than 700 US troops were lost, most of them never found, in a rehearsal for Utah Beach on D Day, more than actually died on Utah Beach itself.

Thanks guys

RIP

I never knew of this Laurie, thank you. This is one of the saddest mistakes I've heard about.

RIP, Men!
 
Having lived in Naval Married Quarters in Devon way back in the 70's, I know the history of this...

Terrible loss of lives which went largely unrecognised..

R.I.P,
 

I lived in RAF married quarters in Devon too, and was aware of it, as were local villagers, who held low key local memorials nut it was never openly discussed until recently.
 
Firstly it was war time so the secret needed to be kept secret. Then it was after the war and everyone wanted to put the war behind them.
And I don't mean to excuse the fact that that it took so long for it to be recognized.
 
This is a 31 minute video of yesterday's Memorial, Some of it too far away, but some of it was watchable. I watched certain parts. I wanted to post it for anyone who is interested and can watch later.





This is a clip from a 2013 program



Finding out about this and seeing the dear people of Devon stand out in the rain to honor our dead even now, 75 years later, touches me greatly.
 
I remember reading about the practice that took place prior to D Day, but must have forgotten where it took place. I have read a lot of WWII books because my Dad fought in France. He did not storm the beaches at Normandy, although I had an uncle that did. From the stories that I was told, I was really impressed with the bravery of the Allied Troops.

I remember the story my uncle told us that when he was being shuttled to the beach at Omaha, there was no time to be afraid or scared. He said no one was scared. “We just wanted to make it to the beach alive. We knew once we got to the beach, we would be OK.” But, the way he tells it, getting to the beach was a real problem. The Germans had lined machine gun bunkers off the beach and were firing at the men in the landing craft (LCVP) as they came ashore. It doesn’t get much braver than that.
 
Firstly it was war time so the secret needed to be kept secret. Then it was after the war and everyone wanted to put the war behind them.
And I don't mean to excuse the fact that that it took so long for it to be recognized.


Only the first part of your comment holds water, it was wartime. Nothing else stands up.

No-one,least of all from what I know of them, the Americans, certainly not for fifty years or more.

I attended Battle of Britain memorials in the 1940s, books were being written, and films made, about Dieppe and St Nazaire if not in the 40s certainly in the 50s, and it is less than a month since Anzac day,which commemorates Gallipol, more than 100 years ago.

This was covered up because of gross incompetence, perhaps even negligence, in high places, at least as high as SHAEF, and maybe as high as Naval HQ Washington or the Admiralty.

At this stage of the war, just a few weeks before D Day, we had total mastery of the skied, and Allied aircraft roamed at will, and we had control of the Channel, we had to or D Day could not even be contemplated, as Hitler found in 1940.

How were these enemy vessels, not submarines or capital ships but lightly armed fast patrol' boats, which a single six inch shell would have sent to the bottom, allowed to get inshore on what should have been a totally secure coast?

Where was the air cover, where were the screening vessels? These ships did not blow up like the Hood, but sunk and there would have been people in the water. Where were the rescue craft which should have been available against just such an eventuality?

While Eisenhower is unlikely to have had any direct responsibility, he is unlikely to have kept his post if such a loss became known, and infighting was such that an acceptable alternative Supreme Allied Commander would have been argued over for weeks and D Day would have had to be postponed.

This was a high level and sustained cover up, maintained until the main protagonists were dead.
 


Back
Top