National Museum of the USAF   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

Home > Fact Sheets > D-Day

D-DAY

Posted 2/7/2011 Printable Fact Sheet
 
Photos 
D-Day
Part of the invasion coast at Normandy. (U.S. Air Force photo)
Download HiRes

The first Allied amphibious troops hit the beaches of Normandy at 6:30 a.m. on June 6, 1944. Constant air cover was flown over the vast sea armada and the assault beaches, and only three Luftwaffe airplanes were sighted the first day. For the next several weeks while the Allies strengthened and consolidated their positions on the ground, the U.S. Army Air Forces and the Royal Air Force flew close support for the beachheads, carried in supplies, and bombed and strafed German supply routes to the Normandy area. Even the heavy bombers were used for tactical, rather than their normal strategic, operations to carpet-bomb German frontline areas. The full impact of Allied air power was summed up by the German commander in Normandy in a personal letter to Hitler:

"... there is no way in which we could battle with the all-powerful enemy air forces ... without being forced to surrender territory."

Click on the following links to learn more about D-Day.

Gliders and Paratroops
D-Day Invasion Dummy
D-Day Paratrooper Uniform

Click here to return to the World War II Gallery.







 Inside the Museum

ima cornerSearch

 


tabCategories
tabMuseum Foundation
tabRelated Links
tabConnect

Museum Virtual TourMuseum Tour PodcastMuseum Facebook PageMuseum Twitter Page
Museum Flickr PageMuseum YouTube ChannelMuseum E-newsletter Sign-upMuseum RSS Feeds



Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing