Neptune: The Allied Invasion of Europe and the D-Day Landings (74 page)

for Neptune,
191

92

and the North African campaign,
93

94

Shubrick
(USN destroyer),
349

Sicily, Allied invasion of

landings,
115

17
map,
116

planning,
99

104

Sims, William S.,
10

11

Singapore, fall of,
41
,
51
,
66

Sinnett, Clifford,
326

Skahill, Bernard,
212

13
,
215

17

Slapton Sands

site of E-boat attack,
210

18

as training area,
140
,
197

218
,
205

Sledgehammer,
52

55
,
71

72

Smith, Joel,
278

Smith, Walter Bedell “Beetle,”
172
,
178
,
218

Solomon Islands,
82

Southwick House (Ramsay’s HQ),
186
,
237
,
241

42

Soviet Union

and eastern front,
51
,
60
,
169

and Lend Lease,
18

and United Nations declaration,
44

Spaatz, Andrew “Tooey,”
173

Special Engineer Brigades,
198
,
224

SS troops,
332

Stagg, James M.,
236

37
,
241

42
,
245

Stalin, Josef,
52
,
103
,
170
,
179
,
353

Stalingrad, battle of,
70
,
94

95
,
103

Stark, Harold “Betty,”
23

24
,
134

at Arcadia conference,
37

38

characterized,
9

10
,
10n

as ComUSNavEu,
191
,
207
,
219
,
243

and Plan Dog memo,
11

12

and shipping needs,
165

66

St.-Saveur-le-Vicomte,
336

Steel, William,
293

steel plate (as shipbuilding bottleneck),
159

Stimson, Henry,
23
,
37
,
51

52
,
67

68
,
144
,
157
,
167

Straussler, Nicolas,
209

Struble, Arthur,
211
,
219

20
,
246
,
326

27

Sullivan, Henry,
255

56

Sullivan, William,
327

Sumatra,
120

21
,
355

Susan B. Anthony
(USN transport),
318

Suwanee
(USN carrier),
77n

Svenner
(Norwegian destroyer),
305

Swenson, Edwin T.,
8

Sword Beach,
188
,
202
,
227
,
252

DD tanks at,
257
,
281

landings on,
281

naval bombardment of,
264

Talbot, George,
264

Talley, Benjamin,
286

Talybont
(RN destroyer),
291

tanks,
80

81
,
81n
.
See also
duplex drive

tanks Tarawa,
163

64

Taylor, George A.,
300

Tedder, Arthur,
172
,
211
,
241

Tehran conference,
169

70
,
178

Texas
(USN battleship),
82
,
235

in attack on Cherbourg,
340
,
342
,
344

46
,
346n
,
347

off Normandy beaches,
263

64
,
294
,
299
,
302
,
313

Thomas Jefferson
(USN transport),
252

Thompson
(USN destroyer),
291
,
294
,
296

Thornton, James G.,
255

56

Thurston
(USN transport),
275

76

Tibbets, Paul,
82n

Tiger, Exercise.
See
Exercise Tiger

Tobruk, fall of,
65

66

Torch (invasion of North Africa),
69

70

convoys to,
83

85

landings,
88

92
map,
85

training for landing operations

in America,
155
,
196

97

in Britain,
139

42
,
205

6

Trident conference,
109

14
,
149

Tripartite Pact,
6
,
11

troop transports,
84
,
90
,
124

28
,
252
,
275

76
,
318

Truscott, Lucien,
91
,
356

Tully, Grace,
24

Tuscaloosa
(USN cruiser),
259n

in attack on Cherbourg,
340
,
347

off Normandy beaches,
259
,
265

U-boats,
16

19
,
36
,
50
,
55
,
76
,
82
,
114
,
146

in Neptune,
311

in Torch,
92

Ultra,
87
,
126

unconditional surrender doctrine,
103

4

Underwood, Clifford,
196
,
234

United Nations, declaration of,
44

45

Utah Beach,
188
,
197
,
202

3
,
322

aerial bombing of,
266

67

landings on,
271

72
,
305

U.S. Coast Guard ships,
195
,
270
,
279

81

U.S. Maritime Commission,
159

60

U.S. Navy ships

bombardment of Cherbourg,
339

48

bombardment of Neptune beaches,
258

66
,
267

68
,
266

67
,
335

36

undeclared war with German U-boats,
16

19

warships for Neptune,
191

94

See also
individual ships

Van Fleet, James,
271

Vernon, Paul,
331

Vian, Philip,
220
,
355

background of,
187

89

and the Normandy invasion,
237
,
241
,
245

Vichy France,
35
,
49
,
86

Vickery, Howard,
160

Vyn, Armend,
279

80
,
284

Wakefield, Orval,
274

whales (floating roadways),
320
,
323

Walney
(RN corvette),
88

Walsh, Quentin,
350

War Production Board (WPB),
148
,
158
,
159

60

War Shipping Administration,
147

Warspite
(RN battleship),
235
,
264
,
305

Wavell, Archibald,
41

42

Wedemeyer, Albert C.,
102

3
,
110

Weigley, Russell,
310

11

Welles, Sumner,
13

Western Task Force,
189
.
See also
Kirk, Alan G.

White, F.S.,
248

Wilkes, John,
201
,
203

William P. Biddle
(U.S. transport),
90

Williams, Clendel,
162

Winant, John G. “Gil,”
25

26
,
25n

Winettes (early landing craft),
81
,
152

Winooski
(USN tanker),
92

Winstons (early tank landing ships),
81
,
152

women

in Britain,
136

37
,
138

as U.S. shipyard workers,
162

Wurzburgs (German radar),
262

63

X-20 and X-23 (midget submarines),
233

*
The gross domestic product of the United States in 1941 was $1,094 billion, which was more than the GDP of Germany and Japan combined.

*
One irony of this tale is that John Stark’s wife was actually named Molly, and what he is supposed to have said at the Battle of Bennington is “We’ll beat them before night or Molly Stark’s a widow.” If the upperclassman had known his historical mythology a little better, the future chief of naval operations might have gone through life as “Molly” Stark.

*
Though it is not clear that Churchill was aware of it, both Winant and Harriman were taking rather severe advantage of his hospitality. The married Winant was embarking on an amorous affair with Churchill’s twenty-seven-year-old daughter Sarah, while the equally married fifty-year-old Harriman was sleeping with the prime minister’s twenty-one-year-old daughter-in-law, Pamela, who was married to Churchill’s only son, Randolph, serving in Egypt. Thirty years later, with much water having passed under the bridge, Averell, by then nearly eighty, and the fifty-one-year-old Pamela were married.

*
Beaverbrook resigned as minister of supply in February, shortly after returning to England from the Arcadia conference. Ostensibly it was because of his poor health, but Beaverbrook also objected to Churchill’s decision to allow the Admiralty to control shipbuilding priorities, and he feuded openly with Clement Attlee, Churchill’s deputy prime minister.

*
Churchill headed first to Canada, where he made a memorable address to the Canadian parliament, mocking Hitler’s claim that he would wring England’s neck like a chicken. In his growling baritone, Churchill remarked: “Some chicken … some neck.” Then on January 6 he flew to Florida, where he stayed for several days in the winter home of the American Lend-Lease administrator (and later secretary of state) Edward Stettinius. There he enjoyed a genuine vacation, one of only a very few during the war.

*
An exception to the principle of unified command was the agreement reached at Arcadia that the United States Navy “will remain responsible for the whole Pacific Ocean east of [the] Philippine Islands.” Of course, the U.S. Navy then had to negotiate its command responsibility with an equally assertive authority in the person of General Douglas MacArthur, who was subsequently endowed with command of what was called the Southwest Pacific Area (SoWesPac), including Australia and the Philippines, while the U.S. Navy presided over the Pacific Ocean Areas (POA) under the overall command of Admiral Chester Nimitz.

*
The War Plans Division was renamed the Operations Division in March 1942, though Eisenhower remained its director.

*
It is instructive to compare British losses in World War I (886,939 deaths out of a population of 45.4 million, or about 2 percent) to American losses in the Civil War (about 700,000 deaths—on both sides—out of a population of 31.5 million, or about 2.2 percent).

*
Brooke’s name occasionally creates confusion for American readers. He was elevated to the peerage at the end of the war, and in selecting his title he conflated his two names to become Viscount Alanbrooke, which is how his name appears in the notes and bibliography of this book. During the war, however, he was Alan Brooke, and his friends called him “Brooksie.”

*
These were the
Sangemon
(CVE-26), which gave her name to the class; the
Suwanee
(CVE-27); the
Chenango
(CVE-28); and the
Santee
(CVE-29).

*
It is noteworthy that the Winston was designed to carry the Churchill tank, a circumstance that underscores both the impact that the prime minister had on virtually every aspect of British weaponry as well as on planning and strategy, and his unembarrassed willingness to accept these tributes as appropriate. Though the official designation for the Winettes was “LST(1),” they were substantially different from the American-built LSTs that were used at Normandy a year and a half later.


There were two versions of the thirty-ton M3 tank. Those sent to Britain under Lend-Lease were dubbed the “General Grant”; those retained and used by the Americans were dubbed the “General Lee.” Thus it could be said that the British deployed a “Yankee” tank while the Americans used a “rebel” tank. Both versions suffered from the fact that they carried a relatively small gun (37 mm) and were therefore no match for the German Mark IV tank, which had a 75 mm gun.

*
The pilot of Eisenhower’s plane was Major Paul Tibbets, who three years later, as Colonel Tibbets, would fly the B-29
Enola Gay
to Hiroshima carrying an atomic bomb.

*
This story soon made the rounds of those few who were aware of the mission. When Clark later met King George VI in Buckingham Palace, the king tweaked him by saying: “You’re the one who took that fabulous trip. Didn’t you, by the way, get stranded on the beach without your pants?”

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