Before a single Allied soldier set foot on Normandy, before the battleships opened fire, before the paratroopers jumped, before any of it, a fleet of small ships sailed alone into the darkness toward the most heavily mined waters in the world.
Nobody talks about the minesweepers.
They should.
By June 1944, the Germans had laid over 6,000 mines across the approaches to the Normandy coast. Contact mines that detonated on impact. Magnetic mines triggered by a ship's hull. Pressure mines activated by the wake of a passing vessel. And some of the most sinister weapons ever devised: mines fitted with ship counters, designed to let several vessels pass safely overhead before exploding under the one that followed. You could sweep a channel, declare it clean, and still die.
The entire D-Day plan rested on one brutal fact: 6,939 ships could not reach the beaches without someone going first to clear the way.
That job fell to 350 minesweepers.
On the night of June 5, hours before the invasion fleet moved, the minesweepers sailed. No escort. No cover. Just small ships pushing into the dark, dragging wire sweeps through the water, cutting the cables of moored mines and listening for the sound of their own death.
They swept 10 separate channels, each 400 yards wide, all the way from England to the coast of France. They were operating within range of German shore batteries. In complete darkness. In rough seas with strong currents constantly pushing them off course, forcing sweeps to be repeated. Keeping formation in those conditions, in the dark, without lights, was nearly impossible.
The Germans never detected them.
Think about what that means. Hundreds of ships, running without lights, dragging equipment through the water, close enough to the French coast to be well within range of shore batteries, and the Germans had no idea they were there.
By 3:30 in the morning, all 10 channels were clear.
The price was paid. USS Osprey struck a mine on June 5 and went down in minutes, killing 6 men. They were the first casualties of the entire D-Day operation, killed before the invasion had officially begun, their names barely known to history. USS Corry struck a mine off Utah Beach and sank so fast her crew barely had time to abandon ship.
These men knew exactly what they were sailing into. Minesweepers do not have the armor of a destroyer or the firepower of a cruiser. They are small. They are slow. They go first because someone has to, and they go knowing that the mine that kills them is one they simply never found.
When the great armada finally moved, when 6,939 ships began crossing the Channel toward France, every single one of them sailed through corridors those men had cut in the dark.
Every landing craft that reached the beach. Every tank that came ashore. Every soldier who stepped onto Normandy and lived. They all passed through water that had been cleared, in silence, in darkness, hours before dawn, by men most people have never heard of.
The liberation of Europe sailed in their wake.
Super proud of WC sophomore Malachi Buffett who punched his ticket to the State Track Meet in the Triple Jump with a leap of 13.61 m. He’s been growing every week! @WC_Football26@WCHS_BearsSC#WTD
Boys LJ at Class 5 District 7 meet at Smith Cotton was crazy. 3-7 places only determined by 1 cm. @shawnbeldin
Congratulations Jervin Riddle III for equaling a school record and bringing it on that last jump.
Senior Priscilla Plaisime is having a great season. She owns the 400 school record and is a conference champ in the 400 and 4 x 400. She is also a key leg WTDon the 4 x 200 which has run a 2nd all-time WCHS time of 1:49.4. #WTD@wcbearssports
William Chrisman girls with a 2nd place finish at the Independence City Championships led by 3 Gold and a Silver from Sr. Priscilla Plaisime.
200 m 🏅27.1
400 m 🏅1:03.1
4 x 400 🏅4:25.74
4 x 200 🥈1:50.71
Titan Nation- Join me in welcoming our new OC/QB coach, @CoachWThompson, to the Titan family. He comes with 19 years of experience, the last 6 as OC at Pleasant Hill.
4 straight district champ appearances
2 district titles
1 state quarterfinal
1 state semi
Excited-Ready to work!