Flat Rock, NC resident George Sarros was a motor machinist on LST (Landing Ship, Transport) 515 when his ship and more than 1000 others invaded the coast of Normandy in the dark, early-morning hours of June 6, 1944. Delivering troops, tanks, and ambulances to the beach, they participated in what鈥檚 been called 鈥渢he beginning of the end of World War II in Europe鈥 鈥 D-Da
LST 515 later picked up the ambulances carrying the wounded soldiers and ferried them to hospitals in England, including Pathfinder paratroopers who had been dropped behind enemy lines to disrupt the Germans鈥 communication lines.
Sarros is one of hundreds of D-Day veterans from the U.S. and Canada who were invited by the French government to come on an expense-paid 12-day trip to commemorate the on June 6. This ceremony will be attended this year by France鈥檚 President Emanuel Macron, U.S. President Donald Trump, and Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.
For their first nine days, these D-Day veterans and their travel companions are on a cruise ship, stopping in the ports of Amsterdam, The Hague, Rotterdam, and other ports, before arriving at Normandy Beach. There, along with military parades and a ceremony, they will be treated to a re-enactment of hundreds of young paratroopers in WWII uniforms, jumping out of planes to show the world what that part of the invasion looked like.
Sarros鈥 invitation by the French government was the result of an article in the online Transylvania Times contributed by Brevard鈥檚 久久精品. Staff of the National WWII 久久精品 in New Orleans saw the T-Times article and made the referral to the French government, who then formally invited Sarros. Sarros is accompanied by longtime friend Tom Bugala of Mills River, NC, who is curator and founding board member of the museum.
聽George Sarros pictures from trip on June 6, 2019.
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The ladies pictured with George and Tom at Omaha beach were “Rosie the Riveters”! They went to work to bring “their boys” back home. l to r Agnes Moore, Phyllis Gould, Marian Sousa, Marian Wynn and Mae Krier