How reporters covered the D-Day landings and lost a photographer in the battle for Normandy

Carrying full equipment, American assault troops move onto a beachhead code-named Omaha Beach, on the northern coast of France on June 6, 1944, during the Allied invasion of the Normandy coast.

Carrying full equipment, American assault troops move onto a beachhead code-named Omaha Beach, on the northern coast of France on June 6, 1944, during the Allied invasion of the Normandy coast. (U.S. Army via AP)


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NEW YORK — When Associated Press correspondent Don Whitehead arrived with other journalists in southern England to cover the Allies' imminent D-Day invasion of Normandy, a U.S. commander offered them a no-nonsense welcome.

"We'll do everything we can to help you get your stories and to take care of you. If you're wounded, we'll put you in a hospital. If you're killed, we'll bury you. So don't worry about anything," said Maj. Gen. Clarence R. Heubner of the U.S. Army 1st Infantry Division.

It was early June 1944 — just before the long-anticipated Normandy landings that ultimately liberated France from Nazi occupation and helped precipitate Nazi Germany's surrender 11 months later.

On D-Day morning, June 6, 1944, the Associated Press had reporters, artists and photographers in the air, on the choppy waters of the English Channel, in London, and at English departure ports and airfields. Veteran war correspondent Wes Gallagher — who would later run the entire Associated Press — directed his team from the headquarters in Portsmouth, England, of Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.

The greatest armada ever assembled — nearly 7,000 ships and boats, supported by more than 11,000 planes — carried almost 133,000 troops across the Channel to establish toeholds on five heavily defended beaches; they were code-named Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword and stretched across 50 miles of Normandy coast. More than 9,000 Allied soldiers were killed or wounded in the first 24 hours.

Having heard on German radio that the landings had begun, Gallagher hurried to the British Ministry of Information to await the official communique. It came just before 9 a.m. with this brief instruction: "Gentlemen, you have exactly 33 minutes to prepare your dispatches."

At precisely 9:32 a.m., the doors opened and the journalists poured out to release their reports. Gallagher's FLASH appeared via teletype in the New York headquarters of the Associated Press just one minute later.

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Allied commander in chief, speaks with American paratroopers at an undisclosed location in England, June 6, 1944, prior to plans to participate in the first assault on the coast of France during D-Day.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Allied commander in chief, speaks with American paratroopers at an undisclosed location in England, June 6, 1944, prior to plans to participate in the first assault on the coast of France during D-Day. (Photo: U.S. Army Signal Corps)

Allied landing in France

The 1,300-word story that followed began: "Allied troops landed on the Normandy coast of France in tremendous strength by cloudy daylight today and stormed several miles inland with tanks and infantry in the grand assault which Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower called a crusade in which 'we will accept nothing less than full victory.'"

As men on either side of him were killed, correspondent Roger Greene waded ashore on the eastern end of the landing front. Sheltering in a bomb crater, Greene pounded out the first Associated Press report from the beachhead, with wind flicking sand into his typewriter keys and rattling the paper.

"Hitler's Atlantic Wall cracked in the first hour under tempestuous Allied assault," he wrote.

On Omaha, the deadliest invasion beach, Whitehead lost his bedroll and equipment and nearly his life as he landed with the 16th Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division.

This photograph is believed to show E Company, 16th Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, participating in the first wave of assaults during D-Day in Normandy, France, June 6, 1944.
This photograph is believed to show E Company, 16th Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, participating in the first wave of assaults during D-Day in Normandy, France, June 6, 1944. (Photo: Chief Photographer's Mate Robert M. Sargent, U.S. Coast Guard)

"So many guys were getting killed that I stopped being afraid. I was resigned to being killed, too," he later recalled.

He witnessed German heavy machine-gun fire, mortar and artillery rounds raking landing craft and pinning down U.S. soldiers, vehicles and supplies that "began to pile up on the beach at an alarming rate."

Whitehead never forgot the calmness of Col. George A. Taylor urging troops onward by yelling: "Gentleman, we're being killed on the beach. Let's go inland and be killed."

The Battle of Normandy was underway, with Allied forces pushing off the beaches and fighting their way inland in the following days and weeks. By June 30, the Allies had landed 850,000 soldiers, nearly 150,000 vehicles and more than half a million tons of supplies.

Casualties mounted on all sides and among French civilians. By the second half of August, with Paris being liberated, more than 225,000 Allied troops had been killed, wounded or were missing. On the German side, more than 240,000 had been killed or wounded and 200,000 captured.

The headstone of Associated Press photographer Bede Irvin at the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, France on Monday. Bede Irvin was killed July 25, 1944 near the Normandy town of Saint-Lo as he was photographing an Allied bombardment.
The headstone of Associated Press photographer Bede Irvin at the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, France on Monday. Bede Irvin was killed July 25, 1944 near the Normandy town of Saint-Lo as he was photographing an Allied bombardment. (Photo: Jeremias Gonzalez, Associated Press)

The dead included 33-year-old photographer Bede Irvin, killed July 25 near the Normandy town of Saint Lo as he was photographing an Allied bombardment that went horribly wrong, with some of the bombers mistakenly dropping their payloads on their own forces.

As well as Irvin — hit by shrapnel as he was diving for the shelter of a roadside ditch — more than 100 American soldiers were killed and almost 500 others wounded, said Ben Brands, a historian with the American Battle Monuments Commission. It manages the Normandy American Cemetery where Irvin is buried, overlooking Omaha Beach.


We'll do everything we can to help you get your stories and to take care of you. If you're wounded, we'll put you in a hospital. If you're killed, we'll bury you. So don't worry about anything.

– Maj. Gen. Clarence R. Heubner


On Monday, colleagues from the Associated Press' Paris bureau, covering the 80th anniversary of the landings, laid flowers at the foot of the white stone cross on his grave. Irvin's is one of 9,387 graves in what was the first American cemetery in Europe of World War II, set up two days after D-Day.

In its September 1944 edition, the Associated Press' in-house magazine said the native of Des Moines, Iowa, had until then survived some of the worst fighting in Normandy and "had only one complaint — that he was not seeing enough action."

In a letter after his death to one of Irvin's colleagues, his widow, Kathryne Irvin, poured out her sorrow. Muriel Rambert, an ABMC guide at the cemetery, read out an extract Monday at his grave, after she'd used sand from Omaha Beach to highlight Irvin's name on his headstone and planted American and French flags in front of it.

"There are so many hopes and plans between a husband and wife," she said, reading from the letter. "Plans that won't for Bede and me ever come true."

Contributing: John Leicester

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