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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

Press editor visits Normandy

T

here’s not a lot to see - a wide, sandy beach; waves lashing the shore; winds blowing across the English Channel causing rigging cables at a nearby boat rental to clang against their masts.

It could be almost any beach anywhere with the exception of a concrete bunker that sits up a little further along the beach. But this is Omaha Beach, one of the five sites along the shores of Normandy, France, where Allied forces landed June 6, 1944. Omaha is where American forces landed during Operation Overlord (what we commonly call D-Day), and that makes the beach hallowed ground.

It was enough just standing there, envisioning what had taken place 79 years ago: eyes closed, listening. Words sometimes really do fail.

When our oldest son, Brandon, suggested a family European vacation with Paris as the starting point, I immediately thought about visiting Normandy.

Fortunately, so did Brandon. He’s a “Band of Brothers” fan. Together, we had watched that HBO series years ago.

The European trip would be a real family adventure. Mary Ruth and I would come in from the States. Brandon and his wife, Neha, would fly in from Hong Kong. Neha’s father, Francis, would come from India. Our youngest, Michael, would join us later in Venice and stay with the group in Rome before returning to Saudi Arabia where he works.

I suppose you could say visiting Normandy was an item on my bucket list, but I never really expected it to happen. But after a family morning tour of the Louve and a visit with Mona Lisa, Brandon and I boarded a late afternoon train for the two-hour trip to Bayeux in Normandy.

The others decided to stay in Paris and made other plans for that evening and the next day.

Brandon had done all the side trip planning. He got the train tickets and a place to stay and booked the daylong tour.

I was impressed.

We checked in at the cozy inn and set out to investigate the surroundings. Bayeux is exactly what I had expected of a small French town: narrow streets, a lot of shops, great-looking bakeries and interesting sidewalk cafes.

After dinner that evening, we scouted out the departure site for Overlord Tours and visited the Cathedral of Our Lady of Bayeux before returning to the inn. After a quick breakfast the next morning, we were on the tour van 8:30 a.m.

Our first stop was a row of bunkers built by the Germans high above the Normandy beaches. Our tour guide, Thierry Bidault, said the Longues-sur-Mer artillery battery, which includes a command post and four casemates each housing artillery, played a strategic role during the Allied landings. Brandon and I climbed inside the bunkers around the rusting guns and imagined what is was like in June 1944. Atop the bunkers, we could look far out onto the choppy English Channel.

Omaha Beach was our next stop. It wasn’t crowded at all. Our guide talked briefly about the area and the assault, answered a few questions and suggested we just roam along the beach. Someone later asked me if I had gathered any sand as a memento. I wish I had thought of that.

Visiting the American Cemetery and Memorial at Colleville-sur-Mer is much like visiting Arlington National Cemetery. It’s solemn, stunning and moving. The cemetery is located on a bluff overlooking Omaha Beach.

The graves and markers are in neat rows, with the landscape meticulously kept. Because we were visiting in late May, workers were setting up chairs and getting the grounds ready for Memorial Day weekend.

Certain areas are set aside for visitors to wander among the graves. Nearly 10,000 soldiers are buried there. A wall behind the memorial structure contains the names of hundreds missing in action. My father served in World War II in the Navy. Walking along the pathway, I thought about my dad and the hundreds resting there.

“Dad, we’d better get back to the van,” Brandon urged.

But I needed to complete my walk from one end of the cemetery to the other. Then I was ready to leave.

On our way out, I stopped to read one of the plaques. Good thing I did because a story about Bethlehem resident Sgt. Walter Geldon, Company C, 2nd Ranger Battalion, caught my eye: “June 6, 1944, was Sgt. Geldon’s third wedding anniversary. He and his fellow Rangers sang songs to celebrate the occasion shortly before landing on Omaha Beach. The 23-year-old steelworker from Bethlehem, Pa., was cut down by enemy fire within minutes of coming ashore.”

Walter was first buried in France, one of thousands beneath endless rows of white crosses. Later, the family brought his body home, and when his wife, Anna, died in 2002 at age 78, she was buried next to him.

After the cemetery, we visited Point du Hoc, another heavily fortified German position overlooking the Normandy beaches. The Allies had bombed the heck out of the area and huge craters still mark the landscape. Following lunch and a museum tour at Saint Mere Eglese, Bidault took the group to various sites familiar to “Band of Brothers” enthusiasts. I could tell Brandon was riveted and pleased.

Going from site to site, we traveled narrow, hedgerow-lined roads through villages that did not appear to have changed much in 79 years.

At several points, I wondered how two vehicles could possible get by each other, and I envisioned soldiers walking those roads years ago.

Near the end of the tour, we stopped in Angoville-au-Plain, a small village. After hours of riding, walking and listening, I could have decided just to stay in the van, but I’m glad I didn’t.

Bidault took us into an 11th-century church to tell us its moving story. Two American medics, Robert E. Write and Kenneth J. Moore with the 101st Airborne Division, had set up a hospital in the church soon after the initial invasion. Battle raged around the building, and we were told a bomb actually came through the roof but failed to explode when it hit the stone floor. Divine intervention, I surmised.

During the ongoing fighting, possession of the village changed hands several times. We were told when the Germans controlled the area and forced their way into the church, they found the medics were impartially caring for German soldiers as well as Americans and a child from the village. They retreated and tacked the international symbol of medical aid on the church door: a flag bearing a red cross.

That was a fitting end to the day’s adventure. On our way back to Bayeux, I thought about that centuries-old church and its bloodstained pews and the fact that a village with a population of fewer than 100 is working to restore the church that is historical in so many ways.

We returned to Bayeux a little after 6 p.m. We thanked Bidault for a wonderful day and walked back to the rail station to wait for the return train to Paris. Later, I would ask Brandon how much I owed him for this side trip because he had made all the arrangements.

He laughed and said it was my birthday and Christmas present - for the next couple of years.

***

Editor’s note: George Taylor is the editor of Bethlehem Press.

PRESS PHOTOS BY GEORGE and BRANDON TAYLOR Omaha Beach is one of five landing sites of Allied forces along a 50-mile stretch of Normandy Coast. Operation Overlord involved 160,000 soldiers from Great Britain, Canada and the United States. It's easy to close your eyes and envision the unending amphibious assault on the beach.
In May, Brandon and George Taylor visit Omaha Beach, the second stop on their Overlord tour. The father and son had watched the HBO series “Band of Brothers” when Brandon was still in high school.
Tour guide Thierry Ridault provides background on the Longues-sur-Mer artillery battery overlooking the beaches, not far from the town of Bayeux.
The American Cemetery and Memorial at Colleville-sur-Mer, located on a bluff overlooking Omaha Beach, is much like visiting Arlington National Cemetery.
Walking along the pathways of the American Cemetery and Memorial at Colleville-sur-Mer causes one to reflect on the hundreds who lost their lives in the assault on Normandy beaches.
PRESS PHOTOS BY GEORGE AND BRANDON TAYLOR Behind the memorial structure at the American Cemetery and Memorial is a wall with the names of 1,557 American soldiers who lost their lives in the invasion of Normandy and associated operations but whose remains could not be located or identified.
The view from the inside of a bunker at Point du Hoc, a heavily fortified German position overlooking the Normandy beaches.
The centuries-old church at Angoville-au-Plain served as a battlefield hospital where American medics cared for both American and German soldiers as well as an injured child from the village. Bloodstained pews served as hospital beds.