Thunder Over Normandy: How Allied Airmen Helped Liberate France from D-Day to Paris and Beyond
They dropped from the skies, roared over the hedgerows, and turned the tide of history—this is the untold story of the airmen who helped liberate France.

By June 1944, Allied air forces were ready to unleash hell on the Germans in occupied France. Massive numbers of bombers and fighters had been assembled in the United Kingdom, as well as more than one million troops poised to invade the continent. Thunder Over Normandy tells the story of the air campaign that began on D-Day, June 6, 1944, and culminated in the liberation of France—one of the largest, most complex, and most successful aerial operations in history. 

In April 1944, Allied air forces in Europe—including the vaunted U.S. Eighth Air Force and RAF Bomber Command—were placed under Dwight Eisenhower’s Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force and given a twofold mission to lay the groundwork for D-Day: destroy the Luftwaffe’s battle strength and isolate Normandy from reinforcements. American and British heavy bombers completed these tasks with devastating effectiveness.

D-Day began with the midnight launching of 1,200 transports to drop American and British paratroopers and gliders behind enemy lines in Normandy. In a monumental effort, the U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions landed behind Utah Beach and fought for towns like Carentan; the British 6th Airborne seized Pegasus Bridge and other crossings near Caen. Toward dawn, 1,000 bombers hammered German positions along the coast, just ahead of the troops who stormed the beaches.

As the fighting moved inland during the next two months, Allied fighters and fighter-bombers swarmed in to provide close support for the ground forces slogging through the hedgerows of Normandy. The bombers continued to strike German industry, but priority was now given to destroying V-1 and V-2 rocket sites as part of Operation Crossbow. Bombers were also used tactically in conjunction with ground operations, including the heavy bombardment that preceded the breakout from Normandy in late July.

By the time Paris was liberated in August 1944, air power—thousands of sorties, hundreds of thousands of tons of bombs—had contributed mightily to Allied victory. Thunder Over Normandy details the air operations that made this happen, from thundering bomb runs and low-level strafing attacks to paratrooper drops, glider flights, and wheeling dogfights with the Luftwaffe. During the summer of 1944, as this stirring account vividly shows, the Allies were truly masters of the air.
1147495572
Thunder Over Normandy: How Allied Airmen Helped Liberate France from D-Day to Paris and Beyond
They dropped from the skies, roared over the hedgerows, and turned the tide of history—this is the untold story of the airmen who helped liberate France.

By June 1944, Allied air forces were ready to unleash hell on the Germans in occupied France. Massive numbers of bombers and fighters had been assembled in the United Kingdom, as well as more than one million troops poised to invade the continent. Thunder Over Normandy tells the story of the air campaign that began on D-Day, June 6, 1944, and culminated in the liberation of France—one of the largest, most complex, and most successful aerial operations in history. 

In April 1944, Allied air forces in Europe—including the vaunted U.S. Eighth Air Force and RAF Bomber Command—were placed under Dwight Eisenhower’s Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force and given a twofold mission to lay the groundwork for D-Day: destroy the Luftwaffe’s battle strength and isolate Normandy from reinforcements. American and British heavy bombers completed these tasks with devastating effectiveness.

D-Day began with the midnight launching of 1,200 transports to drop American and British paratroopers and gliders behind enemy lines in Normandy. In a monumental effort, the U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions landed behind Utah Beach and fought for towns like Carentan; the British 6th Airborne seized Pegasus Bridge and other crossings near Caen. Toward dawn, 1,000 bombers hammered German positions along the coast, just ahead of the troops who stormed the beaches.

As the fighting moved inland during the next two months, Allied fighters and fighter-bombers swarmed in to provide close support for the ground forces slogging through the hedgerows of Normandy. The bombers continued to strike German industry, but priority was now given to destroying V-1 and V-2 rocket sites as part of Operation Crossbow. Bombers were also used tactically in conjunction with ground operations, including the heavy bombardment that preceded the breakout from Normandy in late July.

By the time Paris was liberated in August 1944, air power—thousands of sorties, hundreds of thousands of tons of bombs—had contributed mightily to Allied victory. Thunder Over Normandy details the air operations that made this happen, from thundering bomb runs and low-level strafing attacks to paratrooper drops, glider flights, and wheeling dogfights with the Luftwaffe. During the summer of 1944, as this stirring account vividly shows, the Allies were truly masters of the air.
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Thunder Over Normandy: How Allied Airmen Helped Liberate France from D-Day to Paris and Beyond

Thunder Over Normandy: How Allied Airmen Helped Liberate France from D-Day to Paris and Beyond

by Joseph T. Molyson Jr.
Thunder Over Normandy: How Allied Airmen Helped Liberate France from D-Day to Paris and Beyond

Thunder Over Normandy: How Allied Airmen Helped Liberate France from D-Day to Paris and Beyond

by Joseph T. Molyson Jr.

Hardcover

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Overview

They dropped from the skies, roared over the hedgerows, and turned the tide of history—this is the untold story of the airmen who helped liberate France.

By June 1944, Allied air forces were ready to unleash hell on the Germans in occupied France. Massive numbers of bombers and fighters had been assembled in the United Kingdom, as well as more than one million troops poised to invade the continent. Thunder Over Normandy tells the story of the air campaign that began on D-Day, June 6, 1944, and culminated in the liberation of France—one of the largest, most complex, and most successful aerial operations in history. 

In April 1944, Allied air forces in Europe—including the vaunted U.S. Eighth Air Force and RAF Bomber Command—were placed under Dwight Eisenhower’s Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force and given a twofold mission to lay the groundwork for D-Day: destroy the Luftwaffe’s battle strength and isolate Normandy from reinforcements. American and British heavy bombers completed these tasks with devastating effectiveness.

D-Day began with the midnight launching of 1,200 transports to drop American and British paratroopers and gliders behind enemy lines in Normandy. In a monumental effort, the U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions landed behind Utah Beach and fought for towns like Carentan; the British 6th Airborne seized Pegasus Bridge and other crossings near Caen. Toward dawn, 1,000 bombers hammered German positions along the coast, just ahead of the troops who stormed the beaches.

As the fighting moved inland during the next two months, Allied fighters and fighter-bombers swarmed in to provide close support for the ground forces slogging through the hedgerows of Normandy. The bombers continued to strike German industry, but priority was now given to destroying V-1 and V-2 rocket sites as part of Operation Crossbow. Bombers were also used tactically in conjunction with ground operations, including the heavy bombardment that preceded the breakout from Normandy in late July.

By the time Paris was liberated in August 1944, air power—thousands of sorties, hundreds of thousands of tons of bombs—had contributed mightily to Allied victory. Thunder Over Normandy details the air operations that made this happen, from thundering bomb runs and low-level strafing attacks to paratrooper drops, glider flights, and wheeling dogfights with the Luftwaffe. During the summer of 1944, as this stirring account vividly shows, the Allies were truly masters of the air.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780811777780
Publisher: Globe Pequot Publishing
Publication date: 02/03/2026
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.85(d)

About the Author

Joseph T. MolysonJr. is a thirty-year U.S. Air Force veteran who spent most of his service in intelligence and retired as a colonel. His previous books are Six Air Forces over the Atlantic (Stackpole) and Air Battles before D-Day (Stackpole). He lives outside Atlanta, Georgia.

Table of Contents

List of Maps

List of Illustrations

List of Tables

Preface

Introduction

Chapter 1: Air Plans for OVERLORD

Chapter 2: The Oil Plan

Chapter 3: Mistletoe in March

Chapter 4: Arena

Chapter 5: Best Laid Plans

Chapter 6: Festung Europa

Chapter 7: Improving the Odds

Chapter 8: The Outer Rampart

Chapter 9: Postcards

Chapter 10: FORTITUDE

Chapter 11: The Information War

Chapter 12: Wounded Hearts

Chapter 13: Blinded

Chapter 14: Storms

Chapter 15: Unfinished Business

Chapter 16: The Slapton Sands Disaster

Chapter 17: Defending the Coast

Chapter 18: Water’s Edge

Chapter 19: Airborne

Chapter 20: Getting There

Chapter 21: The Eve of Battle

Chapter 22: The Approach

Chapter 23: Over the Cotentin

Chapter 24: Shot Up and Shot Down

Chapter 25: Gliders

Chapter 26: The Paras

Chapter 27: DEADSTICK

Chapter 28: Merville Battery

Chapter 29: Red Devil Tenacity

Chapter 30: The Sky Above

Chapter 31: The Luftwaffe’s Longest D-Day

Chapter 32: Imminent Danger – West

Chapter 33: Bombers Above the Clouds

Chapter 34: Under the Clouds

Chapter 35: When Seagulls Became Eagles

Chapter 36: Air Landing Grounds

Chapter 37: Forward Into France

Chapter 38: Death by Jabo

Chapter 39: Expansion

Chapter 40: COBRA

Chapter 41: Mortain

Chapter 42: The Road to Falaise

Chapter 43: Paris

Chapter 44: Aftermath

Acknowledgments

Appendix 1: Senior Allied Air Commanders and Their Force

Appendix 2: Deceptions and Actual Operations Plans in Support of Operation OVERLORD

Appendix 3: German Radar Installations in the Invasion Area May 1944

Appendix 4: Jagdkorps I Reinforcements from Germany to France June 7, 1944

Appendix 5: Air Landing Grounds Support OVERLORD Air Operations

Bibliography

Endnotes
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