Try GOLD - Free
JIMMIE MONTEITH
History of War
|Issue 133
In the crucible of battle at Omaha Beach on D-Day, this officer of the famed 1st Infantry Division earned his nation’s highest honour at the cost of his life
Machine guns chattered, mortar shells exploded and shrapnel whirled across Omaha Beach on the morning of June 6 1944. D-Day, the most ambitious Allied military operation of the Second World War, was underway as American infantrymen assaulted the 4.5-mile (7km) ribbon of otherwise nondescript sands that the German defenders had turned into a killing ground.
Intended to pierce Hitler’s vaunted Atlantic Wall defences and open a second Allied front in Western Europe, the operation was a tremendous undertaking as 150,000 troops hit the five invasion beaches of Normandy. The combat was fierce in several areas, but nowhere more so than windswept Omaha Beach, where the issue was in doubt for hours. The heroism of officers like 1st Lieutenant Jimmie Monteith tipped the scales that terrible day – from possible defeat to hard-won victory.
Company L, 3rd Battalion, 116th Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, was fully immersed in the maelstrom on Omaha as its soldiers slogged through the surf under fire, sought temporary cover, then made the move against their assigned objective: the opening of the Cabourg Draw.
Five of the six landing craft intended to bring Company L ashore reached the beach, but heavy currents had dragged some of them off course. Nevertheless, Monteith managed to bring his platoon ashore amid the chaos. Omaha is remembered today as the most fiercely contested of the landing sectors, where approximately 2,500 American soldiers of the 1st and 29th Infantry Divisions were killed or wounded.
This story is from the Issue 133 edition of History of War.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM History of War
History of War
BATTLE FOR THE CHANNEL ISLANDS
In 1945, the Allies were ready with a daring amphibious operation to liberate Jersey and Guernsey by force
8 mins
Issue 152
History of War
THE BOYNE
Three crowns were on the line when two kings met in Ireland on a sweltering summer's day
11 mins
Issue 152
History of War
PARIS DAVIS
This pioneering member of the United States Army Special Forces received long-overdue recognition for his heroism rescuing comrades during the Vietnam War
6 mins
Issue 152
History of War
FALL OF THE SPARTANS
The powerful Greek city-state overreached itself and saw its influence decline as it failed to integrate conquered territories
4 mins
Issue 152
History of War
MASTERS OF THE SKIES
From rapidly evolving roles to new technologies, historian and airpower expert John Curatola discusses how fighter planes shaped the Second World War
9 mins
Issue 152
History of War
TEA WITH TRAITORS
A progressive educator celebrated her birthday with a tea party for dissident friends – unaware that a Gestapo informant was among them
9 mins
Issue 152
History of War
CHURCHILL IN THE TRENCHES
How Britain's future war leader earned respect and redemption on the Western Front
13 mins
Issue 152
History of War
"MORE DANGEROUS THAN THE 1950S"
Do we need to relearn the Cold War's fear of mutually assured destruction in our unregulated nuclear landscape?
3 mins
Issue 152
History of War
CRIMEA IN THE CROSSHAIRS
The Black Sea peninsular has been coveted by rival interests for centuries, with the current Russian occupation motivated by several factors
5 mins
Issue 152
History of War
ON THE BRINK
Any conflict between the US and China would almost certainly see the American mainland come under direct attack
3 mins
Issue 152
Listen
Translate
Change font size

