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10 American inventions that helped win D-Day

While June 6 marks the 81st anniversary of D-Day, the preparations and planning that went into the Normandy landings — a pivotal World War II turning point, and one of the largest amphibious assaults in history — were years in the making.

The D-Day landings that began on June 6, 1944 put new American technologies like the amphibious truck to the test.AP Photo
  • American inventions proved their worth in the Normandy campaign that began on June 6, 1944.
  • They allowed Allied forces to shoot, move and communicate in the arduous D-Day landings.
  • From floating trucks to walkie-talkies, evolved versions of these inventions remain in use today.
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Getting nearly 160,000 Allied troops to storm a 50-mile stretch of heavily fortified French coastline called for an unprecedented level of coordination among American, British, and Canadian soldiers and equipment. It also put new technologies to the test.

"You have to control the air, the water, and the land all at once and come ashore with an inherent disadvantage," says National WWII Museum curator Cory Graff about Operation Overlord." To do so successfully meant deploying not only manpower, but also a host of pioneering technologies and inventions — many of them American-made — from specialized landing craft to underwater breathing equipment to amphibious trucks.

"This idea of combined arms integration requires military formations to do three things: shoot, move, and communicate," adds John Curatola, senior historian at the National WWII Museum. The Normandy invasion required the US Army, Navy, and Army Air Force to collaborate in a unified manner for a singular objective, while also working with counterparts for the cross-Channel invasion, he says.

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These are some of the inventions that helped Allied troops win D-Day, all of which have evolved into systems still in use today.

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