Destination D-Day(English, Paperback, unknown)
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The Normandy landings were arguably the most complex operation in the history of modern warfare. Spread over five beaches assigned to the US and to British/Canadian Forces, the need for detailed planning was paramount. There were obviously troops to assemble and the armada of ships, boats and tugs to transport the men and equipment to their destinations, but these preparations were made only in the very final stages of planning. The real blueprints for D-Day had been laid years earlier: for example, the Duplex Drive tanks used from D-Day onwards were the subject of a US patent which was filed on 13 March 1942. Additionally, the Beach Groups, a combined British Force comprising all three services, assembled in Scotland in the summer/autumn of 1943, and spent many months on manoeuvres. Operation PLUTO ('PipeLine Under The Ocean') started on 14 August 1942, involving engineers, scientists and members of the armed forces working together to design and develop a pipeline capable of being deployed from the Isle of Wight to the Normandy Beaches, pumping fuel to Normandy.Work on the Mulberry Harbour, the floating temporary harbour erected on two sites supplying British/Canadian soldiers from one beach and the American troops from another, commenced in 1941 at Garlieston, Scotland. Fabrication of the Phoenix caissons took place along the English South Coast. Some of the Phoenix caissons were abandoned where they were made and are still visible today.Further activities were planned to support the French and create an infrastructure. In one case the Royal Engineers landed a train in case the retreating Germans either destroyed the railway network or immobilised the trains. Additionally an organisation, known as Civil Affairs, moved in behind the tanks to set up civil administration. This unit moved slowly through France to Holland.The author provides rich and fascinating detail on these and other aspects of the thorough and surprisingly early preparations in the UK for D-Day and the battle for Normandy.