Raymond B. Dierkes |
Raymond Dierkes [detail] | World War II, 1939-1946
Navy
97th Naval Construction Battalion (Seabees); 108th Naval Construction Battalion (Seabees)
Roseneath, Scotland; Tilbury, Plymouth and Nettley, England; Normandy, France; Okinawa Island (Ryukyu Islands)
Shipfitter Second Class
St. Louis, MO
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One of the most importantand least knownaspects of the Normandy Invasion was the advance construction of giant artificial harbors through which men and materiel could be landed. The Germans never suspected that the Allies would be able to pull off a massive invasion by using the one existing port of Cherbourg, but thanks to men like Ray Dierkes and his unit of Navy Seabees, D-Day was only the beginning of a massive movement of troops and equipment that would spell defeat for the Nazis. In a handwritten note on one of his newspaper clippings, Dierkes proudly notes that he personally drove his unit to an April 1944 meeting in London with Winston Churchill to discuss final plans for the invasion.
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