Thousands gather at Bedford D-Day Memorial

Thousands gather at Bedford D-Day Memorial

JILL NANCE/THE NEWS & ADVANCE

Hubert Hobbs (right) and Bob Slaughter, both D-Day veterans of the 29th Infantry Division, stand at attention Saturday during ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ during ceremonies at the National D-Day Memorial in Bedford.

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BEDFORD — Casey Jones Jr. saw her father cry for the first time in her life Saturday as he participated in the 65th anniversary of the Normandy invasion at the National D-Day Memorial.

Casey Jones Sr., a Navy veteran, landed in Normandy in the days following the initial assault. For him, his daughter said, the observance brought back memories of the burial of thousands of soldiers.

He had just started talking about his World War II experiences in recent years, she said, and Saturday was the first time to her knowledge that he ever has attended a veteran’s event.

“He never really put in any emotion to it until we got here,” said Casey Jones Jr., who drove to Bedford with her father from Texas. “This is one of the finest war memorials I’ve ever seen.”

Memorial staff estimated that more than six thousand visitors flocked to the site Saturday for the largest gathering in several years. Many of them were veterans. During the late-morning commemoration ceremony in the site’s central plaza, D-Day veterans stood and received applause from the patriotic audience.

The artificial bullet sounds that typically ring out in the plaza’s pool were silenced as speakers talked of the “deafening sound” of German gunshots raining down on soldiers as they struggled to advance on the beaches.

Alex Kershaw, the author who wrote “The Bedford Boys” and detailed the sacrifice of the city of Bedford on June 6, 1944, was one of the speakers. So were Reps. Tom Perriello, D-5th District, and Bob Goodlatte, R-6th District.

Throughout the ceremony and the day, the ever-growing loss of D-Day veterans was palpable.

William McIntosh, the memorial foundation’s president, noted that there were thousands of D-Day veterans in attendance at the site’s dedication in 2001, and hundreds at the 60th anniversary in 2004. There were even fewer in attendance Saturday, he said.

Among the missing was Ray Nance, the last of Bedford’s soldiers who stormed Omaha Beach. The town lost 19 men in the first wave of the assault, the highest per capita of anywhere in the U.S. Nance died in April at age 94, and his hearse was driven around the memorial grounds before his burial in a nearby cemetery.

The memorial foundation organized this year’s anniversary as an opportunity to honor the D-Day veterans while they are still living.

“Your character remains at the heart of this place,” McIntosh said to the veterans. “We do remember and we will remember long after you are gone, for generations yet unborn.”

The anniversary event comes as the financially struggling memorial is at risk of closure.

McIntosh said last week that the site needs either a major increase in cash or a new form of ownership to continue operating. The nonprofit has an annual budget of $2.2 million, he said, and brings in about $600,000 from ticket sales and tours. Donations have taken a hit from the economy and the rise in gas prices over the past few years, he said.

Perriello was involved in introducing legislation to Congress last week that could lead to the National Park Service assuming operations of the memorial.

“Not only could that help with the financial trouble but it also gives it the national recognition it deserves because this is something that should belong to all Americans,” Perriello said in an interview on Saturday.

“The end goal is obviously to make sure this monument is in good hands forever. This will help with the promotion through the national park system for more and more people to know about it.”

Several visitors to the memorials also supported the federal government’s involvement.

“It’s the least they could do,” said Donna Ward of Raleigh, N.C.

M.H. Green, Ward’s father, is an 84-year-old veteran who was aboard the USS Rich that sank on June 8, 1944. He attended Saturday with his granddaughter, Mollie, and great-granddaughter. Mollie said it’s a place where she wants to see her young daughter one day bring children of her own. “I think she’ll want to keep coming back,” Mollie said. “I know I will.”

H.B. Sims, who also was on the USS Rich, traveled from outside Atlanta to pay tribute to his fallen comrades.

“These guys did what no other generation did before,” said Greg Logwood, a Blacksburg resident who sought autographs from D-Day vets. “After they’re gone, we can only read about it.”

Barbara Satterwhite of Richmond visited Saturday for the first time since 2001. A native of Canada, she said her late father had arrived at Normandy a week after the invasion. She described the memorial as “phenomenal” and videotaped it for her father, who was never able to visit.

“He was impressed,” she said. “It’s a beautiful memorial. It’s a piece of history that shouldn’t be lost.”

Grant “Gully” Gullickson, 88, of Virginia Beach, was pulled from the waters after two hours on June 6, 1944. He said Saturday he could remember boarding his ship on April 20 with a friend who called his wife from a pay phone. The friend, who died during the invasion, asked his wife to put his infant daughter up to the phone and pinch her so he could hear her cry.

“I can see their faces as if it were yesterday,” he said of fallen comrades whose names are on plaques at the memorial.

For years he said he didn’t like to talk about the experience, but realized as he got older that sharing his memories helps to educate younger generations.

He spent more than 900 days at sea and those five years were the most exciting of his life, he said. He said he often thinks about what could have happened if Hitler had not been stopped.

Jim Swanson, an 84-year-old veteran from Winston-Salem, N.C., was part of the 90th Infantry Division and stormed Utah Beach. The memories of the battle remain fresh, the Purple Heart recipient said.

A gunner in front of him disappeared in the water and Swanson never knew what happened to him. “That stands out in my mind because I was right behind him.”

He remembers running across the beach and taking cover in a sand dune to avoid the gunfire. The extensive training he received was the only reason he survived, he said.

“I was in good shape — I could run from here almost back to Winston,” he laughed.

The he added: “I wouldn’t wish it on anybody else, but if I had to do it again under those circumstances, I would.”

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Flag Comment Posted by Depot Fan 65 on June 09, 2009 at 12:32 pm

Everyone on this comment page should be ashamed of themselves.None of the veterans who risked their lives asked for a memorial nor did they ask for any senators to make over the anniversary of D-Day.

The D-Day Memorial idea started out as an idea for the Bedford Boys and was expanded to give thanks to all of the soldiers who participated that day.I am not from Bedford but I thjink there is not a better place to put it with the beautiful scenic moutains and green valleys. This is a snapshot of what all Americans were fighting for during the war.
Cancerous politics and petty comments on the cost, who came or where the memorial is located has no business disgracing the service of our veterans.

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on June 07, 2009 at 11:28 am

Martha.  I’m sure that it took great effort on Warner’s part to have his staff set up a movie viewing.  If Warner or Webb were traveling w/Obama, that would certainly follow in the Tim Kaine tradition of putting Obama over Va.  It’s sad that Warner has no problem finding the Memorial every election but is mia for this.  Of course the News & Democrat Advance doesn’t explain this.  Also other papers took the time to research the story and estimated attendance at 4,000.  That still may have been high.  The decision to use the 65th Anniversary as an opportunity to get federal money certainly had a negative effect on attendance.

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on June 07, 2009 at 11:01 am

I have no idea.  It just seems odd to list them in the program as invited if they didn’t confirm and not to mention why they weren’t there if there was something more important.  I think that this is an excellent example of why new leadership is needed at the Memorial.  Why do Warner and Webb have to be the only Senators present?  This is a national memorial.  There are many Senators who are veterans and staunch advocates of veteran affairs that should have been in attendance.  Representatives from the various nation’s embassies could have been there.  Great military leaders of our day could have been in attendance.  This all could have attracted more visitors on a day when visitors were needed.  Maybe these people were invited.  Maybe this is not feasible.  What worries me is on a day when not just the nation but the world stops to remember the sacrifice of these millions of men who contributed to the Allied landings, why there is not a larger presence there.  People usually bend over backwards to help veterans and their projects.  It strikes me odd that here at the D-Day Memorial that seems lacking.  A fresh team and a new attitude would help bring enthusiasm and involvement along with new donations and attractions for people to learn from.

Flag Comment Posted by Martha on June 07, 2009 at 9:39 am

Senator Warner hosted a screening of the movie about the Bedford Boys in DC last week. I agree they should have been there but as far as we know they were in Normandy.Do you KNOW where they were? I don’t.

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on June 07, 2009 at 9:33 am

Two people who couldn’t make it to this amazing day and had been listed in the program to speak were both of Virginia’s Democrat Senators.  I can’t imagine what would have been more important than to have been in Bedford yesterday. 

The obvious answer to some of the D-Day’s pressing problems is for the director to step down. Possibly for some of the other paid members to step down too.  I believe that there is a consensus in the public that there are too many salaries and unneeded expenses for the Memorial along with a general lack of direction for it.  Some fresh new ideas from people on how to manage, market and grow the Memorial are much needed right now.  That obviously is not coming from the management team in Bedford.  I encourage the Board to make these changes immediately and save this treasure from the federal govt.

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on June 07, 2009 at 9:25 am

Dear Hello.  Sorry that a lot of us D-Day veterans couldn’t make it to the rememberance.  Unfortunately, we died on June 6th 1944 for your freedom so that you could post your thoughts, even as empty of common sense as yours is on this beautiful day.

Flag Comment Posted by hello on June 07, 2009 at 8:11 am

Anyone who enjoys freedom today appreciates every soldier and non-soldier’s sacrifice and it is shown daily by the enjoyment, and often abuse, of that freedom.  Everyone appreciates the efforts of the Bedford Boys.  Everyone!

But, one must count the cost of everything one does.  Bigger is not always better.  And, I would venture to say, there were more than just the Bedford Boys lost on D-day.  That said, why should others be saddled with what appears to be the results of poor decisions on the part of a few?

How one small out-of-the-way area ever expected to bring in over $2M a year for this war memorial is mind-boggling.  It does say not to think more highly of oneself than one ought!

It says a lot when folks don’t show up for the party folks throw for themselves and their own!

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