D-Day Broadcasts

6 June 1944

Picture shows C.D Adamson, engineer correspondent of the BBC War Reporting Unit, with a midget Recorder of the type used in Normandy.

When Operation Overlord – to reclaim mainland Europe from the Nazis - began with the Normandy Landings on 6 June 1944, BBC news reporters were in at the start, reporting from the frontline. The news broke at home with the 8.00am bulletin, when Freddy Allen reported that paratroops had landed in France. Any doubt that D-Day had come vanished with the newsflash just after 9.30, when John Snagge introduced General Eisenhower’s announcement.

Audio - John Snagge announces that "D-Day has come..."

The BBC set up a War Reporting Unit to cover the allied invasion. Seventeen reporters were embedded with the initial British and US invading forces. For Guy Byam this meant jumping with the 6th Airborne Division. For Howard Marshall it involved wading ashore from his landing craft, which had hit a mine.

They were aided by the portable “Midget” recorder which - though a cumbersome 18kg - was able to capture sound in the field as never before. The results were heard on the pioneering news special War Report, which began that night. It carried vivid accounts of the conflict, including one from Marshall.

Two BBC correspondents were among the many casualties of the invasion. Kent Stevenson died reporting on a raid over Germany two weeks after D-Day, and Guy Byam was killed in a raid over Berlin early in 1945. War Report continued nightly as the Allies pushed into Europe, ending after 235 editions.

  • D-Day and War Report

    The events which followed the declaration that D-Day had come, and the men who broadcast from the front line. From the series of articles "The BBC at War".

World War 2 and the BBC

  • The BBC at War

    The BBC reinvented itself during World War 2 and public perception of the institution changed dramatically. Explore its expansion into a global media network, the changing nature of its programming, and the way that war re-defined its relationship with both government and audiences.
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    The Proms loses its home, but rises from the ashes at the Albert Hall.
  • London Calling Europe began - 6 July 1941

    London Calling Europe was one of many programmes broadcast by the BBC to occupied Europe.
  • D-Day broadcasts - 6 June 1944

    John Snagge announces that "D-Day has come..." as the Allies land on the beaches in Normandy.
  • VE Day broadcasts - 8 May 1945

    Winston Churchill announced the end of the War in Europe with a speech broadcast from Downing St, but the war in the Far East continues.
  • June anniversaries

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    5 June 2005
  • Real Lives

    5 June 1984
  • D-Day broadcasts

    6 June 1944
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    7 June 1962
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    15 June 1983
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    17 June 1971
  • Our World

    25 June 1967
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