The Last Gathering
75th Anniversary of D Day
Mark Hager, museum president, documentary film maker and producer is debuting his latest production here in Mocksville. On August 26, 2021 the film The Last Gathering: 75th Anniversary of D Day, will show in the Mocksville, First Baptist CORE at 6:30pm. June 6, 2019, marked the 75th Anniversary of the Normandy landings. It was viewed as the last large gathering of Normandy veterans. Forks of the Yadkin Museum Board President and adjunct history professor at LRU, Mark Hager, a US Army veteran himself, was given the honor to travel, with this last large gathering of Normandy Campaign Veterans. All together, they spent 10 days visiting remnants of the Atlantic Wall and battlefields stretching across France and Belgium.
Hager chose to focus on three Normandy Campaign veterans from NC. CSM Kenneth “Rock” Merritt of Fayetteville, NC, who jumped with the 82nd Airborne Division. James Deal of Faith, NC was a Sherman tank crew member in the 35th Infantry Division. Lastly, is our hometown hero, Harold Frank who fought in the 90th Infantry Division, and had been featured by Hager in a previous documentary. Frank was also at the center of an interview for the Davie Enterprise, appropriately entitled, To Hell and Back by Mike Barnhardt. The current film follows the story of each of the men during the Normandy campaign. Hager found that each veteran expressed the exceptional importance of faith, duty, and courage which still permeates from each of the veterans.
CSM Kenneth “Rock” Merritt, was in the 82nd Airborne’s 508th PIR (Parachute Infantry Regiment). On June 6th, at 0215 his unit jumped into Normandy. Their main objectives were to capture the town of Sainte-Mère-Église, and adjacent crossings along the Merderet River at Chef-du-Pont and the La Fiere Causeway. The weather combined with intense German anti-aircraft fire, to cause miss drops, which hampered the 508th and most other PIR’s. Many dropped into flooded fields and drowned. Others, caught in trees across the numerous entanglements notoriously used as hedgerows. Luckily, Corporal Merritt hit a piece of dry land and watched as a burning C 47 just 100 feet above him crashed close by. The chain of command of his unit had been wiped out. Merritt by D Day plus 4 (June 10) became locked in a desperate fight to reach Hill 30. Many of the men were badly wounded and needed blood plasma. The Battle for the Le Fiere Causway commenced from June 8 to 10. Then the 90th Division arrived and helped them cut through to Hill 30.
Harold Frank landed as a replacement for the 90th Infantry Division after D Day. Frank was a BAR Rifleman and was transported from Utah Beach to the 90th Infantry Division Reserve area near Foucarville. From Foucarville, Frank moved through Ste Mere Eglise and over the La Fiere Bridge and stopped at the 90th Infantry rendezvous area at the Pont-L Abbe Crossroads. Frank was quickly thrust into disparate fighting, along the side, of the men in the 82nd Airborne in Gourbesville, Hill 122, and Beaucaudray. The ultimate goal was to capture St Lo.
James Deal’s, unit landed at Omaha Beach after D Day to prepare for General Patton’s Operation Cobra. The goal was to break through the hedgerows of Normandy and follow the coast line and catch the German Army before it could retreat out of the Normandy Campaign. The first attempt to move into the hedgerows was met with disaster trying to move up and over hedgerow embankments which were over 5 feet tall in places. The Sherman Tank became very vulnerable and, in many cases, overturned. The tanks were brought back to the beach area. Engineers removed Germany tank / ship barriers and cut them into large spikes and welded them to the front of the tanks. The tanks of the 737th moved out and this time busted through the hedgerows and made it to St Lo. This effort helped the 90th and 35th Infantry Divisions to break through German defenses, thus securing the Cotentin Peninsula, which was the main goal of the Normandy Landings for the US Military.
The challenge for Hager was to record how the veterans would react to returning to Normandy. The trip would begin in Amsterdam. The WWII veterans would be visiting remnants of Nazi Germany’s “Atlantic Wall.” Followed by battlefields in Belgium to include the WWI American Cemetery at Flanders Field. Then, the veterans would visit Dieppe, France which was the scene of the first, and failed, attempt to make an amphibious landing of France. Over 2000, Allied soldiers are buried today in Dieppe. Afterwards, the WWII Veterans would be taken to the beaches of Normandy to prepare for the 75th Anniversary Ceremony.
Hager, credits the National WWII Museum in New Orleans for making the trip happen. The youngest veteran that he met on the journey was 94. Many felt that to pull off another reunion like this for an 80th Anniversary, would be difficult. That 94-year-old veteran would be 99 at that point. Approximately 100, WWII Veterans, were present for the main ceremony. A small number compared with the 150,000 who landed at Normandy on D Day. “This trip was special, and everyone I met knew it,” Hager remembered. “It had to be recorded and brought back for all Americans to watch. Especially for the people here in NC. We shouldn’t ever forget the sacrifices these men made during D Day and the Normandy Campaign. By the time Paris was liberated, one American soldier was wounded every 5 meters, and another, killed every 10.”
Besides teaching at Lenoir Rhyne University, Hager serves as President of the Forks of the Yadkin and Davie County History Museum. Recently, the museum purchased and cleared property in downtown Mocksville where they plan to build in the future. The film will debut in the Educational Building at Mocksville First Baptist Church on March 20, at 7 pm. Two of the WWII Veterans (James Deal and Harold Frank) will also attend. After the viewing, the WWII Veterans will be available for questions.