Time To Duel!
June 6, 1944
June 8th 1944
No records remain about the number of Germans who died in the attack on Juno Beach in June of 1944. About 360 Canadian and British soldiers died at the attack.
Like most of the French coastlike, Juno Beach started as a result of continetnal drift, the effects of glaciation, and soil erosion.
Sword Beach happened on 1944-06-06.
Gold Beach happened on 1944-06-06.
Omaha Beach happened on 1944-06-06.
Utah Beach happened on 1944-06-06.
On 6th June 1944 - Juno Beach - 21,400 Canadian troops were landed.
Utah, Omaha, Sword, Juno and Gold...................... on 6 June 1944, Normandy, France
there were 5. utah, omaha, sword, gold and juno all in France. *^ More specifically, those beach-heads were spread out over 60 miles in the Normandy region of France, which is the North-west of France that was directly across the English Channel from Britain.
On D-Day, June 6, 1944, approximately 21,000 Canadian soldiers landed on Juno Beach as part of the Allied invasion of Normandy. They faced strong German defenses but were able to achieve their objectives by the end of the day, despite suffering significant casualties. Juno Beach was one of five designated landing areas during the operation.