Invasion of Normandy 47
RM commando embarked on transport ships for the invasion on 3 June 1944 and left the Solent in two ships on 5 June. At on 6 June, off the Normandy coast, they were loaded into 14
Landing Craft Assault (LCA), each carrying 30 marines and headed for
Gold Beach. Soon the big guns at
Le Hamel and at Longues were able to target the approaching LCAs. As a result of this one LCA was hit and sank, twelve marines were killed or drowned, eleven were seriously injured but they were still able to reach the shore. As the other LCAs moved in, they had to cross a wide band of
Belgian Gates constructed from steel girders, many of which were tipped with mines. The tide covered many of the obstacles as 47 (RM) Commando LCAs passed over them, preventing the obstacles from being removed by the marines and four of the LCAs were impaled and sunk by attached explosives. Some Marines swam ashore but 43 men and much of the unit wireless equipment were lost.
Landing Mustering on the beach, 47 (RM) Commando had about left, having lost 28 killed or drowned, 21 wounded and 27 missing. The Commandos borrowed a radio from the headquarters of the
231st Infantry Brigade and set off across the countryside in the direction of Port-en-Bessin. The Marines had been ordered to avoid troops of the 726th Regiment of the
716th Static Infantry Division at
Longues-sur-Mer on the road from
Arromanches to
Port-en-Bessin, by moving inland, before heading for the port west and linking with the First US Army as it advanced from Omaha beach. In the early evening the 47 Commando met German troops at
La Rosière, where one commando was killed and eleven others were wounded. German weapons and equipment were taken by the men of 47 Commando to replace the equipment that they had lost during the landing. By the time the sun had set 47 Commando had reached Point 72 at
Escures, about from the port, where they dug in, in order for the Commandos to prepare to attack the German positions in and around Port-en-Bessin early next morning. == Battle ==