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101st Airborne Division commemorates 78 years since bloody cabbage patch fighting in France

Fort Campbell KY - 101st Airborne DivisionCarentan, France – Soldiers from the armies of the United States, France, and Germany alongside French civil servants honored veterans of World War II at the memorial on June 3rd, 2022 in Carentan, France at what was once a cabbage patch.

The Cabbage Patch Square, eight miles inland from Utah Beach and behind what were once enemy lines, is the location where 78 years ago, U.S. paratroopers began the bloody, close combat battle, to liberate the city of Carentan.

The Cabbage Patch got its name from the fields where the German occupiers allowed the French population to grow food for survival. On June 11th, 1944, those same humble fields bore the fruit of future victory.

The cabbage patch has an official name, Hancock Field, named for Captain Fred Hancock, a 34-year-old company commander in the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division. Hancock was awarded the Silver Star for his company’s action during the campaign and a Purple Heart.
 
This year marks 80 years since the 101st Airborne Division, first activated on August 16th, 1942. In June 1944, the division was not yet 2 years old, but the Screaming Eagles found themselves in skies over Normandy, preparing to fight to the death for the free world, in a country they’d never visited and for a people whom they had never met.
 
Jean-Pierre LHonneur, mayor of Carentan, hosted the event.
 
Speaking to the veterans who attended the ceremony, LHonneur said, “You know the value of peace and your presence reminds us of the price that you and your comrades in arms had to pay 78 years ago to restore it.”

Maj. Gen. JP McGee, commanding general of the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) salutes during a ceremony June 3rd, 2022, to honor surviving veterans and those who lost their lives during the fighting in the Carentan cabbage patch on June 11, 1944. 101st Soldiers are participating in D-Day 78 commemorations in Normandy, France. Seventy-eight years later, the bravery and heroism demonstrated by Allied soldiers during WWII continue to resonate with 101st Soldiers. (101st Airborne Division (Air Assault))
Maj. Gen. JP McGee, commanding general of the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) salutes during a ceremony June 3rd, 2022, to honor surviving veterans and those who lost their lives during the fighting in the Carentan cabbage patch on June 11, 1944. 101st Soldiers are participating in D-Day 78 commemorations in Normandy, France. Seventy-eight years later, the bravery and heroism demonstrated by Allied soldiers during WWII continue to resonate with 101st Soldiers. (101st Airborne Division (Air Assault))

During the ceremony, the French Government bestowed two veterans the French Legion of Honor, the highest French award for merit.

Reid Clanton, 98, was one of the two veterans to receive the French Legion of Honor during the ceremony. On May 20th, just three weeks before the DDay 78 commemorations, Maj. Gen. William Prendergast, Army North Deputy Commanding General, presided over a ceremony in San Antonio, Texas to award Clanton the Bronze Star and other military service awards in recognition of his contributions to combat operations during the war.

Other notable veterans attended the ceremony including well-known Screaming Eagles Vinny Speranza and Tom Rice.

“Allow me to greet in particular Mr. Tom Rice, a friend of Carentan-les-Marais whose parachute jump illuminated the 75th anniversary of the DDay landings in front of the cameras of the entire world,” said Lhonneur.

In his remarks to the Soldiers, veterans, city officials, and civilians, Maj. Gen. JP McGee, commanding general of the 101st Airborne Division said the Allied soldiers that landed in the cabbage patch were not alone in their efforts to free Carentan, but were aided by the support of the local people of Normandy and by members of the French resistance – “forever solidifying the bonds between this part of France and the 101st Airborne Division.”

The French government bestowed the French Legion of Honor, the nation's highest military award for merit, to WWII veterans during the Cabbage Patch Ceremony June 3rd, 2022, held in Carentan, France. Seventy-eight years later, the bravery and heroism demonstrated by Allied soldiers during WWII continues to be recognized and honored by the people of the Normandy region and U.S. soldiers. (101st Airborne Division (Air Assault))
The French government bestowed the French Legion of Honor, the nation’s highest military award for merit, to WWII veterans during the Cabbage Patch Ceremony June 3rd, 2022, held in Carentan, France. Seventy-eight years later, the bravery and heroism demonstrated by Allied soldiers during WWII continues to be recognized and honored by the people of the Normandy region and U.S. soldiers. (101st Airborne Division (Air Assault))

During the ceremony, the attendees took several opportunities to recognize the veterans, between the ages of 97 and 101, who traveled to France with a standing ovation and a round of applause.

Despite the accolades, McGee reminded those gathered that anyone can take on the spirit of those WWII-era Screaming Eagles – the spirit to rise to any challenge and win – and apply it in their daily lives.

“The Soldiers of the 101st Airborne were not superheroes,” said McGee. “They were ordinary people who rose to the challenges of their day and fought through cabbage patch fields in the Norman countryside. They rose to this challenge with courage and a tremendous will to win and helped restore freedom and liberty.”

The translation of the inscription on the monument at Hancock Field reads:

June 11th, 1944

“It’s from here where it started in the Cabbage Patch, the decisive assault of the 502nd Regiment, paratroopers from the 101st Airborne, disrupted the Germans permitting the liberation from Carentan.”

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