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Sherman A1

(38,958 posts)
Mon Jun 3, 2019, 08:48 PM Jun 2019

The Invention That Won World War II

Thousands of flat-bottomed boats plowed through rough seas under cold gray skies. The smell of diesel fumes and vomit was overwhelming as the small vessels lurched toward the beaches. Waves slapped hard against the plywood hulls while bullets pinged off the flat steel bows.

Frightened men in uniform hunkered down beneath the gunwales to avoid the continuous enemy fire. Suddenly, they heard the sound of the keels grinding against sand and stone. Heavy iron ramps dropped into the surf and the men surged forward into the cold water toward an uncertain fate.

It was 6:28 a.m. on June 6, 1944, and the first LCVPs – Landing Craft, Vehicle and Personnel – had just come ashore on Utah Beach at Normandy. D-Day and the Allied invasion of Europe had commenced.

Less than four months earlier, the patent was issued for those very boats. Andrew Jackson Higgins had filed his idea with the U.S. Patent Office on December 8, 1941 – the day after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Now these 36-foot LCVPs – also known as Higgins boats – were being manufactured in the thousands to help American soldiers, marines and seamen attack the enemy through amphibious assaults.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/invention-won-world-war-ii-180972327/?

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The Invention That Won World War II (Original Post) Sherman A1 Jun 2019 OP
I visited the WW-II Museum in New Orleans years ago. TomSlick Jun 2019 #1
My dad said he was talked into joining the Coast Guard right after Pearl Harbor because Hoyt Jun 2019 #2
The most influential weapons of WWII were pretty unglamorous, like the Jeep and the C-47 (DC-3). Girard442 Jun 2019 #3
Yeah, radar gets way too much credit. nt eppur_se_muova Jun 2019 #4
Adding to the list; Doc_Technical Nov 2020 #5
T-34 Sam1 Dec 2020 #6
My father was an ensign Mendocino Feb 2021 #7

TomSlick

(11,088 posts)
1. I visited the WW-II Museum in New Orleans years ago.
Mon Jun 3, 2019, 08:58 PM
Jun 2019

There was a Higgins boat on display. The docent standing by the boat and answering questions rode one to Normandy on D-Day.

It was mind blowing.

 

Hoyt

(54,770 posts)
2. My dad said he was talked into joining the Coast Guard right after Pearl Harbor because
Mon Jun 3, 2019, 08:59 PM
Jun 2019

the recruiters told him the CG would be one of the first to invade because they piloted many of the landing craft. He didn't end up doing that, which was probably good because he was pretty blind.

I remember one of the first models I got as a kid was one of those land craft, an important part of the war effort.

Interesting article. Thanks.

Doc_Technical

(3,521 posts)
5. Adding to the list;
Wed Nov 11, 2020, 12:18 AM
Nov 2020

The M-1 Garand rifle
The M-4 Sherman tank
The LST ship (Landing Ship Tank)
The anti-aircraft proximity fuse
walkie talkie hand held radio

Sam1

(498 posts)
6. T-34
Thu Dec 10, 2020, 10:17 AM
Dec 2020

You forgot the Soviet T-34 tank.

Here is a clip from the movie "Cross of Iron":


Showing it in action.

The vast majority of the German Army was committed to the eastern front. So the Red Army should also be added to the list.



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