Remembering the soldiers on D-Day

 

(D-Day: June 6, 1944)

At the altar where I first joined the sanctuary of God I ask to seek divine guidance for me in the great struggle that looms ahead,” General Douglas MacArthur would write Dr. W.P. Witsell, rector of Christ Episcopal Church at Little Rock, Arkansas, prior to the Normandy invasion.

An event that would rivet world attention and turn U.S. country bumpkins into national heroes in a matter of weeks. I have a list of 134 young men and a few women serving their country from the town of North East then which pretty much exhausted the young male population.

My father Martin Conklin and my friend Bill Roberts’ dad Harry hit those beaches of Normandy. Sheer terror,  brutality and heroism was experienced by most. Many involved hardly ever uttered a word of their experiences, my dad being one of them although Harry did so toward the end of his life when interviewed by a reporter. Harry was the first Army Ranger to scale the cliffs of Normandy to neutralize enemy positions slaughtering those crossing the beaches. Though seriously wounded Harry fought on later being nominated for The Congressional Medal of Honor, which he refused. His words: “I’m proud I served but I don’t have to be proud of the people who try to glorify it. The heroes are the ones who died. For every medal I received, someone had to die in front of me and behind me.”

My father would not discuss his time in hell, though I believe if he had, it would have been a proud legacy for his family. I can perfectly understand that revisiting past traumatic events could likely rekindle demons of the past and no one wants that. D-Day — a day when the greatest armada of ships, airpower, airborne and infantry of that era was assembled to rescue our allies from infamy and preserve our own freedoms. God bless those brave men and women and you patriotic readers and families. Stay safe and healthy and enjoy this summer together.

 

Town of North East resident Larry Conklin is a Vietnam veteran and a member of both the Millerton American Legion Post 178 and the VFW Post 6851 in North Canaan, Conn.

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