Juno Beach by John Barratt |
Of all the troops involved in the D-Day landings, the men of the Canadian Army, with raw memories
of the disaster suffered by Canadian forces in 1942 at Dieppe, might have had greatest cause for apprehension. The Canadian 3
rd Infantry Division, (Maj-Gen R.F.L. Keller) supported by the 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade, formed part of I Corps
(Lieutenant-General J.T. Crocker), whose D-Day objective was to secure Caen and push 11 miles inland to seize Carpiquet Airfield.
These were ambitious aims, particularly as the presence of rocks offshore meant that the tide would not be high enough for the landings to
begin until half an hour later than those elsewhere, and so probably facing an alerted enemy. The main immediate opposition would
come from three, fairly low grade, battalions of the 716th Division, but of more concern was the possibility that 21st
Panzer Division, believed to be south-east of Caen, might intervene quickly, possibly reinforced during the afternoon by 12th SS
Panzer.
The Canadian landing would take place on JUNO beach, on either side of the mouth of the River Seulles. The problems
presented by offshore rocks meant that the landings would have to take place at a time when the tide was so high that it carried the first
wave of landing craft into the midst of the belt of beach obstacles. In the event, rough sea conditions delayed the landings further
for between ten minutes and half an hour, so that the landing craft had to run the gauntlet of several hundred yards of heavily mined beach
obstacles. Fortunately few craft were hit during the approach, but heavy losses were suffered as they withdrew. Confusion
was worsened when most of the Canadian infantry hit the beach ahead of the amphibious armour which had been intended to land ahead of them.
Equally concerning, the bad visibility had caused the main weight of the preliminary bombardment to overshoot, leaving the defences
both intact and manned by an alerted enemy.
The 7th Canadian Brigade hit the defences at the mouth of the Seuiles, near the
town of Courseulles. They were supported by DD tanks which had been launched from 800 yards from offshore, but engineer units did
not arrive until half an hour later. In the meantime the infantry and DD tanks succeeded in dealing with enemy coastal strong points,
but the late arrival of the engineers led to considerable delay in clearing exits from the beach. As a result, although forward units
from the Royal Winnipeg Rifles and Regina Rifles were able to push fairly quickly about two miles inland, support troops became caught up in
considerable congestion at the beach exits, slowing down the impetus of the advance.
Further east the 8th Canadian Brigade
had been forced by rough sea conditions to land without the support of DD tanks. As a result they encountered some sharp resistance
around Bernieres. The leading elements of the first wave of assault troops, from the Queen's Own Rifles, encountered heavy fire from
German strong points as they crossed 100 yards of open beach from their landing craft, and suffered quite heavy casualties. However
by the time supporting troops from the French-Canadian Regiment de la Chaudiere began to land 15 minutes later, immediate resistance, apart
from scattered sniper fire, had been overcome, and by 9:30 am, the town of Bernieres was firmly in Canadian hands.
On the outskirts of
the town, however, the Canadians were held up in the hedgerows and orchards by the kind of resistance, primarily from machine gunners and the
ubiquitous 88mm guns, which was soon to become only too familiar. It took two hours to break through, during which time, owing to
a breakdown in communications, follow-up units continued to land on the beaches, creating a major log-jam which was not cleared until 3pm.
Although by then Canadian troops were about three miles inland, valuable time had been lost, and although by evening some troops
had advanced about seven miles as far as the Caen-Bayeux road, the delay in reinforcements coming up meant that the leading units lacked the
strength to push on into Caen itself.
D-Day had not proved to be the ordeal for the Canadians which many had feared. Problems
had resulted more from the effects of adverse weather conditions than from the level of enemy resistance. At a cost of about 1,000
casualties, the Canadians were safely ashore, and linked up with the British units which had landed on their right at "Gold"beach.
On the Canadian left, however, a potentially highly dangerous gap remained between them and the British landings on "Sword
" beach.
D-Day Juno - written by John Barratt Copyright © 2001 John Barratt |