What follows is a small piece of
history. It began in 1981 as an attempt to discover what had happened to my
uncle, Lieutenant Joseph J. Sullivan, who had been killed on the morning of
D-Day while flying as a navigator in a Douglas C-47, dropping the 101st Airborne
Division in Normandy. After
years of research I was to learn what did happen to my uncle and, in 1998, to actually visit the crash site where he
perished, along with nineteen other American soldiers. What happened after my
visit to France
in 1998 is the second story, which led to the writing of this book.
It is the story of two small
groups of the young men who had been caught up in the world’s largest, most
horrendous war. None of the main characters had reached his thirtieth birthday;
many were teenagers. The young men were members of two units of the United
States Army that had not existed when the war began. Even the concept of what
the units were designed to do was in its infancy when war was declared in
December 1941, thirty-one months before all of the characters came together on June 6, 1944. These two units, the
77th Troop Carrier Squadron (TCS) of the 435th Troop Carrier Group (TCG) and G
Company of the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment (PIR), had been formed to
participate in the liberation of Europe. Despite
stunning losses, they were successful in that mission.
We are going to follow the story
of two small but distinct portions of those units...specifically, the
paratroopers and aircrew who flew on the three airplanes that made up B Flight
of the 77th TCS, and the third platoon of G Company, 501st PIR. Most of the
men on the three planes would not survive to see the dawn.
The men from G Company included
Private First Class Donald Kane, a 24-year-old rifleman from West
Haven, Connecticut; T/4 Raymond
Geddes, Jr., a 19-year-old radio operator from Baltimore,
Maryland; and 20-year-old Staff Sergeant
John (Jack) Urbank, from Peninsula, Ohio.
All of these men jumped into the Normandy
countryside from an aircraft piloted by 21-year-old First Lieutenant Jesse
Harrison, from St. Louis, Missouri.
Of the three planes in B Flight
of the 77th Squadron, Harrison’s was the only one to
return from the D-Day drop of G Company. The other two planes, piloted by the
flight leader, Captain John Schaefers, from Detroit,
Michigan, and First Lieutenant James
Hamblin, of Newark, New Jersey,
were downed by antiaircraft fire near Picauville,
France. Only three of the
forty men on board those two planes survived. You will meet one of those
survivors, and the son of another.
The center of the story that
follows involves a remarkable set of circumstances linking pilot Jesse
Harrison and infantryman Jack Urbank...a story that resulted in the uniting of
the men from the two units fifty-six years after the several hours they had
spent together in 1944, and finally, fifty-seven years later, the placement of
two plaques to honor the men who had paid the supreme sacrifice just as our
story was beginning.
During the course of my research
I met most of the men who are quoted in the story. Some, such
as Colonel Henry Osmer, I have talked with on the telephone, and exchanged
countless letters and e-mails. Others I met in person. Certain
individuals stand out for what they told me, usually in private moments.
Perhaps the most personal event
was related to me by Abe Friedman, the lead navigator of the 77th Squadron. At
the 1998 Squadron reunion, Abe asked me if I was the first child of my uncle
Joe’s younger sister. When I said that I was, he smiled and said, “I remember
when you were born.” Joe was one of Abe’s navigators, and a fellow New Yorker;
the men knew each other well. Abe recounted that he distinctly remembered that
when my uncle received a letter from his mother saying that his “little sister”
had given birth to a baby boy, Joe had entered the Officer’s Club to buy drinks
for all in honor of his new nephew. I must say that it is an unusual feeling
to meet a total stranger who suddenly tells you he celebrated your birth
fifty-four years earlier! Abe reminded me of the event when I met him again in
2000. On both occasions we toasted the memory of my uncle.
Others told stories that were not
so pleasant. George Winard told me how he had been mesmerized by the sight of
my uncle’s plane glowing red from the fire that started in the cockpit and
worked its way through the fuselage as the plane fell toward the earth, with
the apparent loss of all onboard. Several years later a group of French citizens
described to a group of visiting Americans the carnage associated with the
loss of the plane that had been flying next to that of my uncle.
Many of the stories that I heard
told of courage, humor, and passage into manhood of the young flyers and
paratroopers involved. The story of Jesse Harrison and Jack Urbank would create
the bond that led to the heart of this book.
All of the events that took place
from 1942 through 1945, and the final chapters, which took place from 1998
through 2001, are, together, just one small piece of history.