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Heinrich Severloh | The German soldier who wiped out 1000 Americans in Normandy on D-Day

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Der Jürgen

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On June 6, 1944, a conglomerate of soldiers from various Allied nations landed along the Norman coast of occupied France in a difficult task aimed at opening a third front in Europe.
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Despite the superiority of men and equipment that initially indicated that the landing operation would be carried out without major setbacks, the truth is that the Allied forces immediately encountered fierce resistance from the German defenders as soon as the ramps of the landing craft were opened.

And a central element why the Normandy landing was by no means a simple task, especially for the Americans, was Heinrich Severloh, stationed in one of the 15 key defensive forts of the German fortifications along the beach.
Severloh's precision with his weapon that day was brutal, and what was intended to be a clean operation in which he hoped to avoid as many casualties as possible, ended up being a bloodbath that stained Omaha Beach red.

By the end of the day, and after the grim events of DDay, Heinrich Severloh, a young man in his early 20s, had become “the Beast of Omaha.”


Music used in this video:
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The Songs We Sing by Anthony Earls
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Camp of No Return by Experia
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The Mole by Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen
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'Ignis' by Scott Buckley | www.scottbuckley.com.au
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The Thick of It by Jon Björk
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Marching On by Jon Björk
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Preparing the Machinery by Jon Björk
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Don't Rely on Your Heroes by Bonnie Grace
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Wicked Games by Philip Ayers
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Unlimited by Megan Wofford
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Together We Rise by Philip Ayers
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Bibliographic references:
• Balkoski, J. (2004). Omaha Beach: DDay, June 6, 1944. Mechanicsburg: Stackpole Books, p. 8386.

• Beevor, A. (2009). El día D: La batalla de Normandía (in Spanish). Barcelona: Crítica, p. 4244.

• Brinkbäumer, K. (2004). Die Bestie von Omaha Beach (in German). Normandie, 6. Juni 1944: Die Landung, N° 23/2004. Available on the website Der Spiegel through the following link: https://www.spiegel.de/politik/diebe...

• Davidge, A. (2020). The Beast of Omaha: A German Soldier Who Defended Omaha Beach. WWII Quarterly, Volume 11 (2), p. 1626. Available on the website Warfare History Network through the following link: https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/art...

• Liberation Route Europe (n.d.). Bernhard Frerking. Retrieved from: https://www.liberationroute.com/it/st...

• Prinz, S. (2014). Niedersachse war die »Bestie vom Omaha Beach« (in German). EMSZeitung. Retrieved from: https://www.noz.de/lokales/papenburg/...

• Editor National WWII Museum (June 6, 2024). DDay: The Allies Invade Europe. The National WWII Museum. Retrieved from: https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war...

• Severloh, H. (2000). WN 62 Erinnerungen an Omaha Beach: Normandie, 6. Juni 1944 (in German). Hannover: HEK Creativ, p. 131.

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