Military & Veterans News

Vet News: D-Day Veteran Recalls Historic Day More Than 61 Years Later

Lambert

NORMANDY, France, Nov. 8, 2005 – The terrain at Omaha Beach remains as imposing today as it was on June 6, 1944, when the D-Day invasion gave the Allies the momentum necessary to march to victory.

More than 61 years later, under dark gray skies and into a sweeping wind that mimicked D-Day conditions, a veteran of the battle tackles the beach and wins once again.

At 85, Ray Lambert trots quickly up the steep, rocky hills as if he were still a 24-year-old staff sergeant medic serving with the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment. Neither the Nazis nor time have been able to vanquish him. Lambert credits his remarkable health to an active lifestyle that includes golf, wood chopping and building fences.

"Every day 1,100 World War II Veterans die," he said. "Every time I look in the mirror, I say, ‘You made it to another day.’"

With his excellent physical and mental health, Lambert was able to lucidly recall the day he was part of the largest military offensive in history. For most on the 1st Infantry Division’s staff ride to Normandy Oct. 3-6, Lambert’s firsthand account was the trip’s highlight. Proudly wearing a "D-Day Survivor" hat, Lambert gave a living history lesson to an attentive audience of Big Red One leaders.

He recalled training for the invasion, but said he and his men were unaware when or where it would take place. When the time finally came, his ship pulled up about 10 miles from the coast, under cover of darkness at 3 a.m. They next dropped into their Higgins boats to carry them the rest of the way. This would seem a mundane task, but nothing came easy on D-Day.

"We dropped anchor into very, very rough seas," Lambert said. "You had to go into the boats just so or your leg would break. The waves were that rough. You had to time it just right. The men already in the boat would tell you when to jump, and you had to be very careful."

The boats reeked of diesel fuel and if the waves didn’t make you nauseous, your fellow soldiers would. "If you were not sick, some guy would throw up on you, and you would become sick," Lambert recalled.

The enormity of the invasion meant that Lambert went into the battle with more men than he normally had around him. "We had beefed up so when we got to the beach we would be able to have as many men as possible," he recalled. "But plans don’t always go the way you think they will."

In fact, only seven of the 31 soldiers in his boat survived the day. The others were killed even before reaching shore.

"We hit the land about 6:30. I can’t tell you the exact place or time. Water was over your head, and there was barbed wire and mines," Lambert said.

His voice occasionally faltered from emotion. But after a few breaths and some sips of water provided by 1st Infantry Division Commander Maj. Gen. Kenneth W. Hunzeker, Lambert was ready to continue.

"We learned to have the best chance to live and reach the shore was to go as far under water as you could," he said. Lambert was the first of seven men from his boat to reach shore, where he was quickly wounded in the right elbow. But he kept going, helping bring fellow soldiers in from the waves. He saw horrors such as men in flames jumping overboard and stationary rocks being turned into lethal projectiles by exploding mortars.

SOURCE: VNIS - American Forces Press Service

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