American troops surround a farm house as they prepare to eliminate a German sniper holding up an advance, on Omaha Beachhead, near Vierville Sur-Mer-France. American units in World War II were still segregated. Courtesy of National Archives.
American troops surround a farm house as they prepare to eliminate a German sniper holding up an advance, on Omaha Beachhead, near Vierville Sur-Mer-France. American units in World War II were still segregated. Courtesy of National Archives.

This is the after-action report from F Company for the 1st Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division. F Company was from South Boston. It landed in the first wave on D-Day, one part in the section of Omaha Beach code-named Fox Green,” another in the sections code-named “Dog Red” and “Easy Green.” See all the reports from Virginia units in the 116th.

The enemy strongpoint was the same as mentioned in the account of the 5th Section of Company “F,” 16th Infantry. The men of the 5th section, Company “F,” 116th Infantry, were those who operated with the 5th Section, Company “F,” 16th Infantry. Neither group knew the exact identity of the there, but the stories of the 2 groups, plus descriptions of each other, are identical.

Statement of the detachment of Company “H,” 116th Infantry, which was to support Company “F,” 116th Infantry, is as follows:

This detachment came onto the beach at “H-Hour” plus 30 minutes but failed to find the unit it was supposed to support. The detachment consisted of 38 men in 2 boats with one machine-gun section and one squad of mortars. The men reached the high water line without difficulty, but here the Machine-Gun Sergeant was killed, and the officer in charge of the detachment, Lieutenant Saracin was wounded. The detachment remained on the beach for 3 or 4 hours. One gun opened fire on an emplacement on the hill, but the results were not determined. Later this group moved down on the beach to the left, past the hospital set up by the 16th Infantry. They climbed through an exit opened by the 16th at the top of the hill and joined with scattered riflemen of the 16th Infantry. They joined in firing on enemy machine-gun positions. As Company “C,” of the 16th Infantry went forward to St. Laurent-sur-Mer, the detachment from Company “F,” 116th returned to the Second Battalion, 116th Infantry, that evening at about 1600 hours.