i have a grandpa story and a story from one of his friends
anyway, my grandpa was a mechanic and gunner on a b-29 superfortress. he was a staff sergeant with marksman awards with his colt 1911 and m1 garand, which i think is pretty common but still cool. he was in the air with the groups that dropped both atomic bombs, and he took pictures of both. one picture still survives but it was ripped where it told the city. he had some spectacular stories about bombing in the pacific. during one of his missions his plane was the only one in his group to return, out of 4 or 5 b-29s i think. they were based out of davis monthan field in tucson, arizona. he passed away in 1996 of cancer.
also, the former reverend at my church was in the army too. i don't know anything about his rank or anything like that, but he did land at normandy during the initial landings. when they got the soldiers together to move out they didn't have any idea where they were going and what they were doing until they were in the LCI. he said that when they were told that they were landing on normandy that one soldier turned to him and asked, "which part of norway is that?" he was on the second run that their LCI driver was making, during the beginning of the invasion (after the paratroopers were sent in). in case you didn't know, a lot of paratroopers and gliders were killed because of wires and other things set up by the germans t destroy gliders. anyway, when the guy driving opened up the front of the LCI and told them to go overboard they were in water about up to their necks... keep in mind that they were being shot at and had to run through this water at the same time. everything they had on them was wet and that was a lot of water to run through while you're being shot at. they were trying to clear the beaches so that they could establish land-based artillery. during that time they were still utilizing the battleships to bombard stuff. he said it was the most terrifying thing he had ever encountered, but he didn't have any choice but to push forward. the germans were trying to push them back into the water and their only choice was to push. i believe he also said that this was probably one of the only, if not THE only battle where the wounded were carried forward and not backward on the battlefield.
i have tremendous respect for anybody that fought in WWII, especially under circumstances like this. i didn't learn until recently that he participated in that invasion. i guess it's fitting to post this story since the thread was sparked by the d-day anniversary BIGGEST NAVAL MANEUVER EVER.