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Infographic showing facts and figures about the landings on Gold, Juno, and Sword beaches on June 6, 1944.
Gold Beach facts and figures:
- The landings on Gold Beach started at 0725 hours.
- The width of Gold Beach is 8 km (5 miles).
- The Allied forces involved in the landings on Gold Beach were the British 50th Infantry Division.
- The German forces involved in the defense of Gold Beach were the 716th Division with parts of the 352nd Division.
- The number of Allied troops landed was 25,000. They suffered 400 casualties.
- Allied troops penetrated 10 km (6 miles) inland.
Juno Beach facts and figures:
- The landings at Juno Beach started at 0755 hours.
- The width of Juno Beach is 10 km (6 miles).
- The Allied forces involved in the assault on Juno Beach were from the Canadian 3rd Infantry Division.
- The German forces involved in the defense of Juno Beach were from the 716th Division.
- The number of Allied troops landed was 21,400. They suffered 1,200 casualties.
- Thirty percent of the landing craft were damaged or destroyed.
Sword Beach facts and figures:
- The landings at Sword Beach started at 0725 hours.
- The width of Sword Beach is 8 km (5 miles).
- The Allied forces involved in the assault on Sword Beach were from the British 3rd Division.
- The German forces involved in the defense of Sword Beach were from the 716th Division and 21st Panzer Division.
- The number of Allied troops landed was 29,000. They suffered 630 casualties.
- Airborne troops from the British 6th Airborne Division numbered 6,000. They suffered 1,500 casualties.
Four maps shown: The Plan, Initial Assault, Final Positions at Midnight on D-Day, and a locator map.
The locator map of the northern coast of France from Cherbourg to Caen shows the layout of the various beaches labeled from west to east: Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno, Sword.
Map of the Plan:
- Gold, Juno, and Sword beaches on the northern coast of France with the different sections labeled. Gold: How, Item, Jig, King. Juno: Love, Mike, Nan. Sword: Oboe, Peter, Queen, Roger.
- Arrows point to the planned Allied assault beaches (Item, Jig, King, Mike, Nan, Peter, Queen, Roger).
- The planned Allied assault objective area is shown as a large area from the west end of the Gold Beach coast to Bayeux and Caen and on to the east end of Sword Beach.
- The planned Allied paratroop drop zones are inland of the eastern edge of Sword Beach and are labeled: K, N, V, X, Y.
- Spots of German resistance are shown along the coast of each of the beaches with larger areas inland.
- The planned assault at Gold Beach was to be carried out by the British 50th infantry division, and they had, relatively speaking, an easy go of their landing. The German defenses along the coast were, in many cases, simply houses that were built on the beach, and these were especially vulnerable to aerial bombardment and naval gunfire.
- There was very little effective German resistance to the British landing, and the British troops that landed on the morning of D-Day were able to penetrate at least five to six miles inland from their initial landings. This was the longest and deepest penetration of any of the troops that landed on D-Day, and much of it had to do with the fact that there was no armor in the German defense and that the naval bombardment had been especially effective for Gold Beach.
Map of the Initial Assault:
- Gold, Juno, and Sword beaches on the northern coast of France with the different sections labeled. Gold: How, Item, Jig, King. Juno: Love, Mike, Nan. Sword: Oboe, Peter, Queen, Roger.
- Arrows show the initial Allied assault pointing inland from the beaches. Allied paratroop drop zones appear to line up with the planned drop zones.
- An arrow shows the German 21st Panzer Division counterattack from Caen to the western edge of Sword Beach.
- The German resistance is now smaller and more inland.
- The initial assault at Gold Beach carried many of the objectives that Allied planners had pointed out in their planning, and much of this had to do with the relatively ineffective German defense of that sector of the Normandy invasion beaches. Gold Beach was massive. Much of that was covered by weak strong points, simply beach houses. And there was no German armor to stop what was a heavy Allied infantry attack that carried deep, deep into the German defenses by the end of the day.
Map of the Final Positions at Midnight on D-Day:
- Gold, Juno, and Sword beaches on the northern coast of France with the different sections labeled. Gold: How, Item, Jig, King. Juno: Love, Mike, Nan. Sword: Oboe, Peter, Queen, Roger.
- The final Allied positions as of midnight on D-Day are shown inland from the three beaches with German resistance.
- For the final positions at Gold, Juno, and Sword Beaches, the Allied landings had established very strong beachheads. Only at Juno and Sword were the two landing forces unable to connect, but the forces at Gold and Juno were able to establish a single beachhead by the end of D-Day, and they had created a serious breach in Hitler’s Fortress Europe.
- Juno Beach was the beach assaulted by Canadian infantry on June 6, 1944, and the Canadians took relatively heavy casualties compared to the neighboring beaches of Gold and Sword. The beaches that they assaulted were relatively heavily defended compared to the neighboring beaches, and the initial wave suffered significant casualties. However, this was a departure from the Canadian troops’ previous attempt to invade Europe, which was at Dieppe, a fortified port that was a disaster for Allies and served as a harsh lesson in why one should not try to take a heavily fortified port through a forced amphibious invasion. This caused Allied planners to look elsewhere when they were considering invasion routes and landing beaches for the Normandy invasion, and this is one of the reasons why they chose not to assault any specific city that had port facilities intact.