Sainte-Mère-Église
            The 82nd Infantry Division mistakenly landed directly in the town of Sainte-Mère-Église 
               at 1:40 a.m., resulting in heavy casualties. Burning buildings illuminated the night sky, making
               the defenseless paratroopers easy targets and the down-draft from the flames sucked several men
               into the fires. Other troopers were caught hanging from trees and utility poles and shot before 
               they could cut themselves loose.
            However, the Germans were confused by conflicting reports of allied landings and attacks and
               retired in the middle of the night. This contributed to the ease by which the 505th PIR took
               the town by 5:00 a.m. The lightly armed troops held the town against heavy German 
               counter-attacks, finally securing it on June 7th with help from tanks sent from nearby
               Utah Beach.
          
         
         
         
            Utah Beach
            Utah Beach was a staging area to secure the important port facilities at Cherbourg. It was added
               later in the D-Day planning and necessitated a month-long delay for the assembly of additional l
               landing crafts. Troops landed in four waves beginning at 6:30 a.m. and were met with minimal
               resistance. The 4th Infantry Division landed 21,000 troops on Utah suffering only 197 casualties.
               By the end of June 6th, Allied forces had captured only about half of their objectives,
               but the beachhead was secure and could be used as an important staging area in subsequent days.
            Cherbourg was captured on June 26, but only after the Germans had destroyed the port facilities.
               The port was not fully operational until September.
          
         
         
         
            Omaha Beach
            Very little went according to plan at Omaha Beach. Most of the landing craft missed
               their targets and came up against unexpectedly-strong opposition. Under heavy fire,
               army engineers worked to clear beach obstacles but the time required to clear the
               beach caused subsequent landing crafts to bunch up and obstruct the clear landing
               channels.
            Eventually small groups of survivors were able to improvise an assault on the
               entrenched German troops. By the end of June 6, two isolated footholds on the beach
               were achieved and were exploited over the next several days as the invasion forces
               moved inland.
          
         
         
         
            Gold Beach
            The British landing at Gold Beach was designed to link up with forces at Omaha Beach and 
               move inland to Bayeux. High winds made it difficult to establish a beachhead and the
               amphibious assault did not begin until 7:30 a.m. However heavy bombardment disabled
               three of the four large German guns covering the beach.
            Due to stiff German resistance, Bayeux was not captured until June 7. British casualties 
               at Gold are estimated at 1,000–1,100. German casualties are unknown.
          
         
         
         
            Juno Beach
            The objective at Juno ws to seize the Carpiquet airport west of Caen and link up 
               with the invasion forces at Gold and Sword. The beach was defended by two German 
               battalions and a panzer division, making it the second most heavily defended beaches
               on D-Day.
            The landings encountered heavy early resistance and early ship bombardment was ineffective at 
               breaking up the German forces. The push inland towards Carpiquet achieved mixed results with
               the sheer number of forces on the beach delaying reinforcements. However by 11 p.m., the
               invasion force had reached its objectives and succeeded in pushing farther 
               inland than any other landing force on D-Day.
          
         
         
         
            Sword Beach
            Sword was the easternmost landing site of the Normandy Invasion. Sword was divided into 
               several sectors with each sector divided into beaches. Sword is located about 9 miles
               from Caen, the goal of the 3rd Infantry Division.
            The Sword landing suffered few casualties but it's route inland suffered from traffic
               congestion that limited the invasion's effectiveness. Troops at Sword experienced the
               only armour counter-attack of D-Day, mounted by the 21st Panzer Division.