Horsa Bridge
Renaming of the bridge
Following the capture of the bridge over the Orne, members of the coup de main operation supported naming the bridge "Light Infantry Bridge". The captured Benouville Bridge had been sign-boarded Pegasus Bridge.
After the Second World War the bridge over the Orne became known as Horsa Bridge, in recognition of the Horsa gliders that had carried the troops to the bridge. The original bridge, which was a steel lattice swing bridge, was replaced in 1971; however, some of the original bridge support structure remains.
In June 1989, on the forty-fifth anniversary of D-Day, the mayor of Ranville unveiled a plaque to commemorate the capture of the river bridge, and the bridge was officially named Horsa Bridge. The memorial plaque was dedicated to the glider pilots and Lieutenant Dennis Fox's and Lieutenant Tod Sweeney's platoons, which had captured the bridge before the Allied invasion of the Normandy beaches began.
Book and film
The operation to capture the bridges was portrayed in the book The Longest Day by Cornelius Ryan and the eponymous film of 1962.
References
- The Pegasus Diaries by John Howard and Penny Bates (2006)
- Pegasus Bridge by Stephen Ambrose (1984)
- The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (The 43rd/52nd Regiment of Foot) by Philip Booth (1971)
- The Longest Day by Cornelius Ryan (1959)
- The Pegasus and Orne Bridges by Neil Barber (2009)
- The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, War Chronicle Vol IV 1944/1945 (1954)
- All Spirits by John Vaughan (1988)
- Pegasus Bridge and Horsa Bridge by Carl Shilleto (2010)
- Gliderborne: The Story of the 2nd Battalion, The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (The 52nd) in World War II by Michael Massy-Beresford (2007)