Saturday, December 4, 2010

“Awfully sorry, old man, but we simply landed here by accident”

"The General’s intelligence officer disarmed the two men and brought them up to the veranda. The astounded Reichert could only blurt out 'Where have you come from?' to which one of the pathfinders, with all the aplomb of a man who had just crashed a cocktail party, replied, 'Awfully sorry, old man, but we simply landed here by accident'."

-Page 116

Cornelius Ryan’s “The Longest Day” mixes both the official “big-picture” history of the D-Day landings and the personal, often humorous and unbelievable, stories that are often seen in veteran’s memoirs. Although works like this are usually immensely popular (all of Ryan’s books were New York Times bestsellers, and historians who have followed in his footsteps, such as Max Hastings, have enjoyed similar embraces), these types of books are rare; partially because of the time and effort it takes to write them. For instance, the author worked on this one for ten years – 1949 to 1959. This quote above is an example of how Ryan combines both of these.

In the hours leading up to the invasion, thousands of paratroopers were dropped behind the invasion beaches. Before these paratroopers, small teams of soldiers coined “pathfinders” (pictured, top right) were dropped. Representing the vanguard of the invasion force, their mission was to mark the landing zones for the rest of the airborne forces. However, due to high winds and disoriented pilots, these men were often dropped far off course. This quote pertains to one of these teams – who drifted far off course and landed in the front yard of 711th Infantry Division commander Josef Reichert's command post. Swiftly captured by the General’s intelligence officer, one member of the British team nonchalantly delivered the line to the astonished general, who was still completely unaware of what was unfolding before him.

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