Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Navy Lt. j.g. Sidney Wyeth Brinker's Craft First to Land on Omaha Beach

LCT-30 commanded by Sidney Wyeth Brinker (insert) 
on the sands of Omaha Beach, 6 June 1944
When the fog lifted over the Normandy coast on this day, 6 Jun 1944, the German officer in command of Omaha Beach fortifications reported seeing 4,000 ships headed directly at him. His men fired their guns on the Allied landing crafts until they ran out of ammunition. Navy Lieutenant j. g. Sidney Wyeth Brinker, veteran of invasions in North Africa and Sicily, was the skipper of LCT-30, the first craft to land on Omaha Beach at H-Hour. 

Sidney said the tide just pushed his boat ashore right into the sand. LCT-30 carried troops and gear of the 29th Infantry, many of whom never made it more than a few yards onto the beach. Sidney's college picture here is inserted into a photo from footage showing the LCT-30 in Victory at Sea, mark 26 min 05.  The documentary ends with allied soldiers moving forward after the breakthrough. The narrator states, "Behind the survivors lie those who died to enslave the world and those who died to free it." 

Although Sidney was wounded during World War II, he blessed the day when he returned home to the loving arms of his mother, Lorna Alice Wyeth. For Christmas 1943, it had been Lorna's fervent wish her other son, Lt. Comdr. Robert M. Brinker, would be found. Robert's submarine had been lost at sea near the Philippines on 9 Sep 1943. Lorna's hopes were kept alive until Robert was officially declared dead on 3 Jan 1946.