Juno beach was five miles wide and stretched on either side of the small fishing port of Courseulles-sur-Mer, France. Two smaller villages, Bernières-sur-Mer and St. Aubin, lay to the east of Courseulles-sur-Mer. The coastline had been fortified by the occupying Germans and bristled with guns, concrete emplacements, pillboxes, fields of barbed wire and mines.
The 3rd Canadian Infantry Division reinforced by the 2nd Canadian Armoured
Brigade landed in two brigade groups:
- 7th Brigade consisting of the Royal Winnipeg Rifles, Regina Rifles,
and Canadian Scottish regiments
- 8th Brigade consisting of the North Shore Regiment, Queen's Own Rifles,
and Le Régiment de la Chaudière
Landing Craft, Tank (LCT) loaded with Canadian infantry destined for Juno beach..
Each Brigade group was comprised of 3 infantry battalions (regiments), and supported by an armoured regiment, 2 artillery field regiments, combat engineer companies and extra units such as Armoured Vehicles, Royal Engineers (AVRE's). The Fort Garry Horse tanks (10th Armoured Regiment) supported the 7th brigade landing on the left and the1st Hussars tanks (6th Armoured Regiment) supported the landing on the right.
The 9th Brigade consisting of the Highland Light Infantry, Stormont Dundas
and Glengarry Highlanders, and North Nova Scotia Highlanders regiments
landed later in the morning and advanced through the lead brigades. The
Sherbrooke Fusiliers tanks (27th Armoured Regiment) provided tank support.
Although a total of 14,000 Canadians stormed Juno Beach on D-Day, there
were not more than three thousand young Canadians in the first wave -
all ranks. The initial assault was the responsibility of four regiments
with two additional companies supporting the flanks:
•North Shore Regimenton the left at St. Aubin (Nan Red beach)
•Queen's Own Riflesin the centre at Bernières (Nan White beach)
•Regina Riflesat Courseulles (Nan Green beach)
•Winnipeg Rifleson the western edge of Courseulles (Mike Red and Mike Green beaches)
• a company of theCanadian Scottish Regimentsecured the right flank
• a company ofBritish Royal Marine Commandossecured the left flank
Troops of the North Shore Regiment, 3rd Canadian Infantry Division, land at Bernieres-sur-Mer, Juno Beach, on D-Day. From a silent film shot by camerman Sergeant Bill Grant.
The first wave of Canadian infantry was brought into shore by LCA's landing at 7:55. When the ramps lowered the troops disembarked and waded ashore. The soldiers hit the beaches and began the deadliest runof their lives. As they worked their way through the obstacles and minefields they came into the killing zones of the German gun positions. The assault troops raced across the beaches through the curtain of machine gun fire, rushed the pillboxes and eliminated the German strong-points with Sten-guns, small arms fire and grenades. The first wave took heavy casualties on the beaches. DD tanks arrived on the beaches and fired on the pillboxes, decimating the remaining strong-points. In bitter hand-to-hand fighting the Canadians cleared the enemy gun positions and fought their way into the towns.
All morning long the battle raged along the precious strip of coast. The Regina Rifles and Royal Winnipeg Rifles fought their way through Courseulles-sur-Mer and Graye-sur-Mer. The North Shore Regiment captured St.Aubin while the Queen's Own Rifles took the town of Bernières-sur-Mer. Tanks and infantry struck inland all that day and pressed on through villages, fields and groves of trees defended by determined Germans.
Facing formidable gun emplacements, machine gun nests and snipers, the brave Canadian soldiers did not hesitate in their advance. Determined officers led their well trained platoons to take out the enemy strongholds. Countless times the soldiers showed acts of valour by engaging the enemy in vicious close quarter fighting. Soldiers lost their close friends in the fighting and somehow found the courage to keep going. Through the terror of the battle the disciplined soldiers pushed on to overcome the enemy positions. The fierce battles were won by the bravery of the individual Canadian soldiers and the collective actions of their regimental units.