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D-Day plus 80: Paratrooper who helped liberate French town portrayed in epic film

WASHINGTON — On D-Day, June 6, 1944, paratroopers of the U.S. Army’s 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions landed between 1:30 and 2:30 a.m. near and in the town of Sainte Mere-Eglise in Normandy, France.

Among them was Army Pvt. John Steele of the 82nd, who landed on the pinnacle of a church tower, where he hung from his parachute for about two hours before being taken prisoner by the Germans.

Steele later escaped and went on to fight for the rest of the war.

The paratroopers figure prominently in the 1962 film “The Longest Day,” with Steele portrayed by actor Red Buttons, who also served in the Army during World War II. The film was adapted from Cornelius Ryan’s 1959 nonfiction book of the same name. Ryan interviewed Steele and others for the book.

Spotlight: Commemorating World War II

The paratroopers had flown across the English Channel in C-47 aircraft and jumped from an altitude of just 600 feet, leaving little time to maneuver on the way down. Plus, darkness and heavy cloud cover resulted in a scattered drop.

Taking the town was of strategic importance because of its proximity to Utah Beach, and the Allies needed to capture it and move inland quickly to avoid getting pushed back into the sea, where soldiers in landing craft had come ashore.

Steele, a Metropolis, Ill., native, enlisted in the Army in 1941, just days after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor. He was 29 at the time, considerably older than most of his fellow soldiers.

In 1943, he made battle jumps into Sicily and then Naples, Italy.

After his jump into Sainte Mere-Eglise, Steele fought in Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands, attaining the rank of staff sergeant.

Steele survived the war and returned to Metropolis, but his brother was killed while fighting in Germany in April 1945, shortly before the end of the war in Europe.

In 1962, Steele attended the premier of the film, commenting that Buttons did a good job of portraying him.

Steele returned to Sainte Mere-Eglise in 1964 for a regimental reunion and was made an honorary citizen of the town. He died in 1969.

Other paratroopers had interesting stories, as well, during their drop into Sainte Mere-Eglise.

Fellow paratrooper Army Pvt. Ken Russell landed on the same church roof as Steele, but never achieved the same level of fame. He, too, survived the war.

Army Pfc. Clifford A. Maughan parachuted into the garden of a house in the town. He was taken prisoner by a German soldier billeted in the house, who then surrendered to Maughan a short time later when U.S. troops overwhelmed the German occupiers. He, too, survived the war, participating later in the invasion of the Netherlands.

A plaque honoring Maughan and others is in front of the garden and house, which is now a restaurant.

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