The Story Behind D-Day's Iconic Images

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The Story Behind D-Day's Iconic Images"


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Location: Weymouth, Dorset, England. Date: June 4, 1944. U.S. troops are ferried to larger ships in preparation for the Allied invasion of Normandy. About 73,000 U.S. troops took part in


D-Day.


Location: Weymouth, Dorset, England. Date: June 1944. U.S. troops on board a Coast Guard transport ship go over details of the D-Day landings, using a model of the section of the Normandy


coast that had been code-named Omaha Beach.


Location: Normandy, France. Date: June 6, 1944. U.S. troops assault Omaha Beach during the D-Day landings. The first wave of American troops landed at dawn.


Location: Normandy, France. Date: June 6, 1944. A U.S. soldier swims through the water at Omaha Beach on D-Day. This image would be one of Robert Capa’s more iconic images from the war.


Location: Normandy, France. Date: June 6, 1944. U.S. troops coming ashore at Omaha Beach during the D-Day invasion. The other beaches that were part of D-Day were code-named Utah, Gold, Juno


and Sword.    


Location: Saint Laurent-sur-Mer, Calvados, France. Date: June 1944. German prisoners of war bury U.S. troops who had been killed during the D-Day landings. At least 2,501 Americans were


killed on D-Day.


Location: Normandy, France. Date: June 1944. A Catholic priest celebrates Mass on Omaha Beach.


Location: Portsmouth, England. Date: June 4, 1944. Robert Capa days before the D-Day invasion.


En español | Some of the most iconic images that have helped define D-Day for generations were taken that morning by legendary war photographer Robert Capa.


Only a handful of shots survived from what Capa photographed that day, but the Magnificent 11, as they were called, became part of the day's lore.


As the story goes, Capa — who was killed in 1954 while covering the French war in Indochina — shot several rolls of film during the intense combat on Omaha Beach early on D-Day morning.


After the film made its way back to a Life magazine lab in London, it was put in the hands of young technicians, who inadvertently destroyed several rolls by overheating them.


John Morris, the picture editor in the Life London bureau that day, wrote in a 1998 essay about the calamity and his horror at finding the film ruined: “I could only think of the pictures


lost. How was I going to face Capa?” By some miracle, 11 — and only 11 — images survived.


It's a great yarn that Capa and Morris retold all their lives — Morris died in 2017 — and that countless others repeated. But this year the photography website PetaPixel published a detailed


examination of Capa's activities that day that could change the narrative.


The piece, written by A.D. Coleman, concludes that Capa got to a relatively less dangerous section of the beach than he claimed and stayed about 15 minutes — probably taking only the 11


surviving images — before returning to a landing craft headed back to the invasion fleet. Capa had admitted to a panic attack, but another motive, according to published accounts, was the


need to make a tight deadline so his photos could reach the U.S. in time for Life's next issue.


And the tragic lab accident? The PetaPixel piece quotes experts saying it couldn't have happened the way it was described.


Whatever the truth, Capa's images speak for themselves and give us a remarkable glimpse at that historic day.


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