Elisha Ray Nance
From WWII Archives
Elisha Ray Nance | |
---|---|
Born | 26 June 1914 |
Died | 19 April 2009 |
Occupation(s) | Lieutenant in A Company, 116th Infantry Regiment, of the 29th Infantry Division. |
Elisha Ray Nance was a Lieutenant in A Company, 116th Infantry Regiment, of the 29th Division on Omaha beach on D-Day. He was one of the few surviving officers of the company of that morning[1].
Childhood
26 June 1914 - Birth
On 26 June 1914 Elisha Ray Nance was born in Bedford, Virginia, in the United States[1].
Adulthood
July 1943
After Nance had went on leave and come back he discovered that A Company would become more than just an infantry company. Now, the Company began being trained as an amphibious outfit, with assault teams, demolitions, and used the gear and equipment for such[2]. This is possibly around the time that Ray became the Company Executive Officer[2].
Before 6 June 1944 - Preparation for training in Operation Neptune
At some point while the Company and the rest of the 1st Battalion was training, the company commanders, including Captain Taylor N. Fellers were called together, by what would have been a colonel, to be told what they were to be doing in Operation Neptune[2]. They would have been told that they were going to land on the beach and assault the positioned areas that the Germans were holding. Captain Fellers objected to what they were going to do, and, out of character, told the colonel[2]:
Colonel, I can take one Browning automatic rifle and get on that cliff and deny that beach to any infantry group
Later on Captain Fellers told Ray Nance that he told the colonel[2]:
Colonel, I can take one Browning automatic rifle and get on that cliff and deny that beach to any infantry group
Ray thought that this was out of character for him to say that. He then later on told Ray[2]:
Ray, we'll all be killed!
During the preparations for the landings before the landings, if Nance wasn't the Company Executive Officer yet, he would have become such[2]:
6 June 1944 - Operation Neptune
Approximately 0300 - Company A circles around
At around 0300 6 June, while they were twelve miles out from the beach, the boats of A Company and at least Company B (since Ray later goes in with B Company), circled around waiting until the sun illuminated the scene. Company A on its own had seven boats for landing. of which six were to be in the first wave, and the seventh, the one that Ray was aboard, was the boat carrying Company Headquarters, which was to land with B Company. In total, including Lieutenant Nance, there were seventeen A Company soldiers on the boat. As per divisional orders, an officer was to jump out of the boat first. In this case for Nance's boat, he was the one to jump out first[2].
Possibly around 0500 - The sun lights the area
At around 0500 the outside was illuminated enough that the Companies wouldn't have to keep waiting and could go. As a result the company would have begun its way to the beach[2]. En route to the beach, boat number five was lost at sea[2].
0636 - A Company drops the ramps, the massacre begins
At 0636[3], at what Raymond thought was 6:30[2], the first ramps of A Company dropped.
Between 0636 and 0645
Between 0636 and 0645, while Nance's boat along with the B Company boats were still out from the shore, Nance caught his first glimpse of the beach, through a slit up at what would have been the front of the boat. He thought that it seemed like there was a pall of smoke or dust hanging over the beach[2].
0645 - Boat number seven with Ray Nance and the rest of A Company, along with B Company boats, land
At 0645, nineteen minutes after A Company landed, the Company Headquarters boat along with B Company, reached the beach. The coxswain of boat number seven, who was standing in a steel compartment in the front of the ramp, had brought them to exactly where they were ordered to be. He pulled the latch release, but it didn't go down. Nance said to him[2]:
Get it down
The coxswain then yanked the latch release a couple more times, and then it finally went down. Lt Nance pushed and made two steps on the ramp, and then jumped as far as he could forward into the water. At first when he landed the water line was up to his chest, but then a wave came in and now was up to his neck. He walked up and in the beach for what seems to him to have been fifteen to twenty yards. After that he dropped on the ground and began to look around for anyone of A Company. He couldn't see anyone, no one in front of him, and no one behind him. He would have thought[2]:
Where was everybody? Where was A Company?
He didn't figure out what happened to the Company until he got into high water. Before he did so, he was shot three times. He then turned around and saw the water so thick in the amount of bodies that they were bumping against each other. He looked around and saw nobody. The men of his boat that were behind him were killed or back around the boat[2].
Sometime after 0645
A little after looking around for anyone, finally some people showed up around Nance. On the right of him was one of his runners, radioman Clifton. Clifton called to Ray and said to him that he had been hit. Ray looked at him and thought he looked good. He asked Clifton[2]:
Can you move?
Ray could see four men from the 29th Reconnaissance behind one of the steel obstacles. He yelled at them to scatter out. No sonner than after he said that, a German mortar came in and killed three of them while wounding the other. Ray could also see Lieutenant Emil Winkler of B Company to his right, and him and some other men were mown down by machine gun fire, Winkler being killed among them[2].
Nance might have seen at this point that none of the thirty-two men of boat number two had survived, which included Captain Bellegin, of which he thought that the demolitions on board the boat could have exploded. Therefore out of the six boats of Company A (excluding his), number 5 and 2 were lost[2].
He possibly also saw or maybe later found out that two boats of Company B had mislanded on Dog White sector, which was where G Company was supposed to land but didn't land there. The two boats and the men on board came in without much difficulty. Then C Company mislanded right behind them[2].
Approximately 1000
The two sections of B Company were able to get through the barbed wire and then the plateau. C Company then followed up behind and they were able to come up into the Vierville ridge by 1000. By that time the firing onto the remainder of A Company as well as B Company finally almost ceased due to the two B Company sections and C Company coming behind the Germans. Nance thought that they were the ones that saved the men on the beach with him[2].
Then or sometime later Reed came by Nance and was talking to a medic when he told Nance what he had seen. He explained to Nance that he had seen Feller's body, and at that moment Nance realized that he was Company Commander. He couldn't see a man with a weapon around, to Nance it was a peculiar feeling[2].
Before or during 1994
Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 41.
Before or during the year 1994, Ray and many other veterans of D-Day, were interviewed for a project that would be turned into a book by Ronald J. Drez who was collaborating with Stephen E. Ambrose. The oral histories would be stored at the Eisenhower Center, University of New Orleans[4]. Here the first thing that he said during his interview[5]:
This actually began in the month of July, 1943. I went on leave and when I left, we were infantry, just a plain old infantry company, and when I got back from leave, we got in gear and became like assault teams, demolition, and stuff like that. That was in July, the beginning of that training as an amphibious outfit.
This is another thing that he said[6]:
When the company commanders were called and the battalion commander told them where they were going, what they were going to do, etcetera, my company commander, Taylor Fellers, told me later that he said, "Colonel, I can take one Browning automatic rifle and get on that cliff and deny that beach to any infantry group." And he wasn't a fellow that normally talked like that, and later he said, "Ray, we'll all be killed!"
Afterwards he possibly explained that he became the Company Executive Officer, and said[7]:
We circled a lot. About twelve miles out. From about three o'clock, we circled until it started getting light, which must have been around five. We landed at six-thirty.
Later on he said[8]:
The first sight I got of the beach, I was looking through sort of a slit up there, and it looked like a pall of dust or smoke hanging over the beach
Then sometime after that he said during the interview[9]:
I went in with B Company, which actually was ninteen minutes after A Company. I was the first one off. It was a division order that an officer be the first man to go off the boat. When it touched the bottom, our coxswain brought us in right precisely where he was supposed to, and he was in front of that ramp in a steel compartment, and he pulled the latch release, and the ramp didn't go down. I said, "Get it down," and he yanked it a couple more times and it dropped, and then I pushed and made two steps on that ramp and jumped as far as I could into the water. The water was first up to my chest , and then a wave came and put it up to my neck, and I walked in and went up on the beach about fifteen to twenty yards. My boat was the Company Headquarters boat, and it was in with B Company—seventeen of us on that boat.
When I got up there and dropped and I looked around in front and all around—I mean not a soul. Nobody in front. Where was everybody? Where was A Company? I didn't know until I got in above high water what happened to A Company. I turned around and saw bodies in the water—they were bumping against one another it was so thick. There was nobody in sight. I turned and looked—nobody in sight, nobody behind me.
The people who came off with me were somewhere back—killed, or back around that boat; and then later, I started towards the high water, towards the shore. A little later a few people showed up around me. Over on the right was one of my runners, and over on the left was my radio man, Clifton, and he called me and said he'd been hit, and I looked at him and he looked pretty good, and I asked him "Can you move?" and I was hit three times before I got to the high water-mark.
Four men from the 29th Recon were behind one of those steel jack things, and I yelled for them to scatter out, and no sooner than I said that, a mortar round came in and killed three of them and wounded the other. I saw Lieutenant Winkler of B Company; he was on my right, and they were going down just like hay dropping before the scythe, just mown down, and Winkler was killed.
Of our six assault boat sections, mine was the seventh; we lost number 5 at sea. Another one, number 2, with Captain Bellegin on it—there were thirty-two men on; not one single person is known to have survived. It could have exploded with all the demolitions on board, too. So we lost the number 5 and number 2 boats out of six boats of Company A
Then after that he described[10]:
There were two things that saved us. There were two teams mislanded by Company B in Dog White Beach. G Company was supposed to land there. Not a single G Company man landed there. Those two boats from B got in fairly easily, and just a little later C Company came in and mislanded right behind. They all got up through the barbed wire and went up that plateau which sloped up into the Vierville ridge, and C Company followed those two sections up there and were in Vierville by ten o'clock. That is what saved us, because on the beach the fire almosted stopped, because they were behind the Germans.
Finally he made this description in the interview[11]:
Reed came by and was talking to a medic, and he came by and was telling me what he'd seen. And he told me he'd seen Captain Feller's body, and it suddenly hit me that I was company commander—and not a man in sight with a weapon. That's a peculiar feeling.
After death
Citations
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Elisha Ray Nance (1914-2009) - Find a Grave Memorial". Findagrave. 19 April 2009.
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 "Elisha Ray Nance". WWII Archives. 10 May 2023.
- ↑ "A Company, 1st Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment (United States)". WWII Archives. 10 May 2023.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. pp. xviii.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 40.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 41.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 200.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 201.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 212.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 220.
- ↑ Drez (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there. p. 227.
Bibliography
- "Elisha Ray Nance". WWII Archives. 10 May 2023.
- "Elisha Ray Nance (1914-2009) - Find a Grave Memorial". Findagrave. 19 April 2009.
- Drez, Ronald J (1994). Voices of D-Day : the story of the Allied invasion told by those who were there (1st ed.). Baton Rouge : Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0807119024.
Contributors: Paul Sidle