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An estimated 10,000 Allied troops were left dead, wounded or missing, while Nazi Germany lost between 4,000 and 9,000 troops, and thousands of French civilians were killed. – In what remains the biggest amphibious assault in history, some 156,000 Allied personnel landed in France on June 6, 1944.
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(Photo by – / AFP) (Photo credit should read -/AFP via Getty Images) (FILES) This photograph from the National Archives taken on June 6, 1944, shows US Army troops wading ashore at Omaha Beach in north-western France, during the D-Day invasion. Following the massive invasion of France, allied forces rolled across the country in their move toward Germany and victory. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images) American soldiers in a halftrack roll down a street in Ger, France, in this undated photo taken sometime after the 06 June 1944 D-Day landing on the Normany coast.
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(Photo by Keystone/Getty Images) June 1944: A heavy truck pulls a field kitchen up the bow ramp of an LST (Landing Ship-Tank), during invasion embarkation at an English port. (Photo by Reg Speller/Fox Photos/Getty Images) June 1944: Engineers of the 531st Engineer Shore Regiment explode a German landmine during the Allied invasion of France. (Photo by Horace Abrahams/Keystone/Getty Images) British Invasion troops waiting for D-Day marching through a village street, 28th May 1944. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images) 15th March 1944: US Thunderbolts lined up for testing after their arrival in Britain prior to the D Day invasions. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images) 1944: A Royal Canadian Navy invasion craft, protected by barrage balloons and heading for a hostile beach.
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6th June 1944: US soldiers in full battle-dress boarding an LCVP or Landing Craft Vehicle-Personnel, ready for the Invasion of Europe. On June 6, 1944, during World War II, Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy, France, on “D-Day” as they began the liberation of German-occupied Western Europe. NATIONAL (AP) – Sunday, June 6, marks the 77th anniversary of D-Day.