This operation was intended to mislead German forces as to the exact day and location of the suspected invasion. In comparison with its wartime population, Bedford suffered the Nation’s highest known per capita D-Day loss, a somber distinction for the rural Virginia community.The D-Day invasion took years of planning,and, in months leading up to it, the Allies began a military deception strategy known as Operation Bodyguard. Another Bedford soldier was killed in action elsewhere on Omaha Beach with Company F, bringing Bedford’s D-Day fatalities to a total of 20. Three others were unaccounted for and later presumed killed in action. The remaining 26 successfully reached Omaha Beach, where 16 were killed and four wounded within a matter of minutes. En route, a landing craft struck an obstacle and sank, stranding dozens far from shore, including five of Bedford’s own. Of the 37 assigned to Company A, 31 loaded into landing craft and headed for Omaha Beach in the first wave the remainder belonged to supply details and would arrive later. For almost all of them, this would be their baptism of fire.
Thirty-seven of these young men belonged to Company A of the 116th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division. The Memorial commemorated its 20th anniversary in 2021, with a renewed resolve to teach the lessons and legacy of D-Day for generations to come.Īmong the hundreds of thousands massed off the shores of Normandy on the morning of 6 June 1944 were 44 soldiers, sailors, and airmen from the town and county of Bedford, Virginia. On June 6, 2019, the Memorial marked the 75th anniversary of D-Day with more than 10,000 in attendance, including more than 100 World War II veterans, who witnessed a stunning aerial tribute and keynote address by Vice President Mike Pence. Since its dedication, the Memorial has welcomed tens of thousands of visitors each year. Bush dedicated the National D-Day Memorial on the invasion’s 57 th anniversary. On June 6, 2001, Bob Slaughter stood beside a second American president as George W. The Overlord Arch, the signature monument, was under construction by spring 2000, in time for the dedication of the Memorial’s first phase that Memorial Day. The Foundation unveiled the Memorial’s first sculpture on Memorial Day 1999. The Memorial would be built upon consecrated earth, a mixture of sand from the coast of Normandy and Bedford soil. Hundreds, including D-Day and World War II veterans, gathered for a groundbreaking ceremony on Veterans Day 1997. Their combined star power helped take fundraising efforts nationwide. Saving Private Ryan director Steven Spielberg was among the Memorial’s early donors. Peanuts cartoonist and World War II veteran Charles Schulz, whose depictions of America’s favorite beagle Snoopy in scenes from the Normandy invasion appeared in newspapers across the country, signed on as national campaign chair. Though declared a national monument, the project would receive no federal funding. In 1996, Congress warranted the establishment of such a monument in Bedford, Virginia, and President Bill Clinton, who just two years prior walked Omaha Beach with Slaughter, signed legislation officially designating the National D-Day Memorial the nation’s monument to D-Day. Concerned there was little public awareness of what took place on June 6, 1944, and worried that his brothers-in-arms who gave their lives that day would be forgotten, Slaughter and some like-minded veterans and supporters formed a committee in 1989 that would later become the National D-Day Memorial Foundation, with the goal of creating a lasting monument to D-Day somewhere in the United States. In retirement, D-Day veteran Bob Slaughter, of Roanoke, Virginia, started attending reunions with fellow veterans and speaking to community groups about the war. This Great and Noble Undertaking The Story of the National D-Day Memorial D-Day Participant Identification Program.