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parsed(2014-04-15) - pubdate: 2014-04-15
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pub date: 1397538000
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The Forecast for D-day

And the Weatherman behind Ike's Greatest Gamble

April 15, 2014 | Hardcover
ISBN: 9780762786633
$31.95
Reader Reward Price: $28.76 info
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Description

Monday, June 5, had long been planned for launching D-day, the start of the campaign to liberate Nazi-held Western Europe. Yet the fine weather leading up to the greatest invasion the world would ever see was deteriorating rapidly. Would it hold long enough for the bombers, the massed armada, and the soldiers to secure beachheads in Normandy? That was the question, and it was up to Ike's chief meteorologist, James Martin Stagg, to give him the answer.

 

On the night of June 4, the weather hung on a knife's edge. The three weather bureaus advising Stagg--the US Army Air Force, the Royal Navy, and the British Met Office--each provided differing forecasts. Worse, leading meteorologists in the USAAF and Met Office argued stormily. Stagg had only one chance to get it right. Were he wrong, thousands of men would perish, secrecy about when and where the Allies would land would be lost, victory in Europe would be delayed for a year, and the Communists might well take control of the continent.

About this Author

John Ross is the author of magazine articles and books on trout fishing. His first edition of Trout Unlimited's Guide to America's 100 Best Trout Streams (Globe Pequot Press) earned a National Outdoor Book Award. It was at about that time that Ross began to focus on the story behind the story of D-day--in the vein of Isaac's Storm and The Map that Changed the World. The son of a World War II Air Corps pilot instructor, Ross grew up on a diet of US military history. He knew that Eisenhower postponed the D-day invasion of Normandy for 24 hours because of weather. But given the state of meteorology in the 1940s--before satellites, weather radar, and instant communications--he wondered how Ike knew to order the delay. Over the last decade he interviewed men and women who participated in making that important weather forecast and scoured archives in England and the United States for historic documentation.

ISBN: 9780762786633
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Publisher: Lyons Press
Published: 2014-04-15

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