Read below for....


  • Bleuet de France


  • Calling All Buglers


  • Trading Post Featured Item


  • Planning Your Weekend


  • The Story of John Steele


The 11th edition of the

Normandy Camporee

will be held

April 19-21, 2024 in

Normandy, France.


Registration Closes

March 31st 2024!

 

Registration


Facebook:

Normandy Camporee

 

Event Guide (v.1.2)

 

TAC Program Supply Center

 

TAC Normandy Passport App


Changing Lives Reception

History Corner

Then and Now: Sainte Mère Église

The Liberation of Sainte Mère Église

Bleuet De France

 

In France, the cornflower, or “bleuet”, is a symbol of memory for soldiers, veterans, victims of war and their families. The origin of the badge dates to 1916. Cornflowers, like poppies, continued to grow in land devastated by the armies of the Western Front during World War I. These delicate little blue flowers were often the only visible remains of life, and the only sign of color in the mud of the trenches.

Bleuet badges were created by a nurse at Les Invalides who wanted to find a new purpose for injured soldiers undergoing rehabilitation. They began to be produced by war veterans in specially organized workshops, then being sold to the public, with the money collected providing a small income. In 1928, after French President Gaston Doumergue gave his patronage to the Bleuet, sales gradually spread countrywide. By 11 November 1934, 128,000 flowers were sold.

The organization “Bleuet de France” is now part of the l’Office national des anciens combattants et victimes de guerre (ONACVG). The sale of Bleuet badges, particularly around Remembrance Day, is now used to finance charitable works for veterans and war victims.

Attention All Buglers!!



The Normandy Camporee is looking for two youth buglers to perform at the Sunday Memorial Service at the Normandy American Cemetery.

If you are planning to attend the Normandy Camporee and are an accomplished bugler, please reach out to

Nick Airey @ nick.airey@gmail.com for additional information.

Trading Post Hours at Normandy


Thursday, April 18, 1300-2145

Friday, April 19, 0800-2145

Saturday, April 20, 0800-1530 or 1700-2145

Sunday, April 21, 1100-1300

Location: Salle des Fêtes, 12 Bd de Cauvigny, 14710 Vierville-sur-Mer


Our featured item today - limited stock available!

Collector's Coin - $17


This challenge coin brings forth the iconic Les Braves sculpture on the back, while the Normandy Camporee 2024 logo is emblazed in a colorized version on the front.

Frequently Visited Locations

Arromanches

Bayeux British War Cemetery

Caen Memorial Museum

French Commando Kieffer Memorial

La Cambe German Cemetery

Longues Battery

Normandy American Cemetery

Omaha Beach Historic Trail

Sainte-Mère-Église

Utah Beach Museum

Airborne Museum

America and Gold Beach Museums

Caen Memorial

Castle of Falaise (William the Conquerer)

D-Day Omaha Museum

Maisy Battery

Omaha Beach Memorial Museum Overlord Museum

Pegasus Bridge and Memorial Museum

Pointe du Hoc

Longues Battery

The Batterie allemande near Bayeux in Normandy is a well-preserved German coastal defense battery with four guns used on D-Day still in place. The German battery at Longues-sur-Mer was part of the Atlantic Wall constructed by the Germans to prevent, or at least hinder, the expected invasion of France by the allied forces in the mid-1940s. The battery was perfectly located to protect the Gold and Omaha landing beaches.

Normandy American Cemetery & Memorial

The Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial is located in Colleville-sur-Mer, on the site of the temporary American St. Laurent Cemetery, established by the U.S. First Army on June 8, 1944 as the first American cemetery on European soil in World War II. The cemetery site, at the north end of its half mile access road, contains the graves of 9,387 of our military dead, most of whom lost their lives in the D-Day landings and ensuing operations. On the Walls of the Missing, in a semicircular garden on the east side of the memorial, are inscribed 1,557 names. Rosettes mark the names of those since recovered and identified. 

A Paratrooper Started D-Day by Hanging From His Chute on a Church


Dangling from a church steeple probably wasn't the way Pvt. John Steele ever imagined himself in the fight to liberate France from the grip of Nazi domination, but that's what happened. He, like hundreds of other paratroopers from the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division, made the jump into occupied France on D-Day, June 6, 1944.


Steele had already jumped into combat in places like Sicily and the Italian Peninsula by the time he jumped into Operation Overlord. None of those jumps ever ended like that one. His trajectory took him over the town square of Sainte-Mère-Église that morning. His parachute took him by surprise when it became caught on the church steeple in the middle of the French commune.

There he hung, pretending to be dead, trying to figure out what to do next.

Steele was one of 12,000 men from the 82nd Airborne to land in France as part of the D-Day invasion. Some 6,000 paratroopers and 6,000 glider men boarded hundreds of planes with the mission of capturing Sainte-Mère-Église and securing the bridges over the rivers behind Utah Beach.


Paratroopers from the 82nd began floating in at 1:30 in the morning, unfortunately lit from below, after an Allied air raid started fires in the town square. Townsfolk mobilized to fight the fires by ringing the church bells. As they fought, they were supervised by the Germans, who began to notice it was raining men.


The paratroopers from the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiments weren't supposed to fall into the town square, but those who did landing it what became a shooting gallery for the defending Germans. Steele was hit in the foot by flak as he fell and noticed he was headed right for a burning building.


Rather than land in a raging fire, he altered his trajectory as much as possible. He narrowly avoided the fire, but he became attached to the town church's steeple. To make matters worse, he'd lost his knife on the way down and could not cut himself free.


For two hours, Steele pretended to be dead. At first, the ruse worked. No one on either side of the fighting stopped to help him, because both the Americans and the German defenders were convinced he had died. Unlike the Americans, however, the Germans wanted to get intelligence from the body of the "dead" paratrooper and went to cut him down. That's when they discovered he was very much alive. He was then taken prisoner.


Not too long after he was finally brought down from the steeple, the 3rd Battalion attacked Sainte-Mère-Église at 4:30 in the morning. They captured 30 of the 41 German defenders and took them prisoner. The other 11 were killed. Sainte-Mère-Église became the first town in Europe to be liberated by the Allies and was secured when tanks and other forces moved in from the Normandy beachhead on June 7. Steele was wounded in the battle for Sainte-Mère-Église but survived the war.


Though Steele died in 1969 from throat cancer, he returned to the town in 1964 for a regimental reunion, where he was made an honorary citizen. He told onlookers he was excited to see the church and the town, this time "from the ground up."