The Battle at Prairie Dog Creek 12x18 Military Art Print
When you are comparison-shopping, please make sure you compare the shipping costs also. Many sellers will lower the price to get their listing to sort higher on the list and then raise the shipping price. We do not do that.
I prefer PayPal to my account: [email protected], but will accept cashiers check, personal check or money orders. Please contact me immediately after sale closes at [email protected] to make arrangements for payment and shipping.
We ship via US Postal Service First Class or Priority Mail. Our standard shipping fee applies only to domestic shipping. All out of the country shipping will be calculated and you will be contacted if there is additional charges.
Satisfaction guaranteed. 100% of the purchase price will be refunded if item is returned in original condition within 14 days of date of purchase.
Any questions at all email me at [email protected]
Thank you!
Sign up for PayPal; the fast, easy, and secure way to pay online.
Omaha Beach, D-Day -- June 6, 1944
Behind them was a great invasion armada and the powerful sinews of war. But in the first wave of assault troops of the 29th (Blue and Gray) Infantry Division, it was four rifle companies landing on a hostile shore at H-hour, D-Day -- 6:30 a.m., on June 6, 1944. The long-awaited liberation of France was underway. After long months in England, National Guardsmen from Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia found themselves in the vanguard of the Allied attack. In those early hours on the fire-swept beach the 116th Infantry Combat Team, the old Stonewall Brigade of Virginia, clawed its way through Les Moulins draw toward its objective, Vierville-sur-Mer. It was during the movement from Les Moulins that the battered but gallant 2d Battalion broke loose from the beach, clambered over the embankment, and a small party, led by the battalion commander, fought its way to a farmhouse which became its first Command post in France. The 116th suffered more than 800 casualties this day -- a day which will long be remembered as the beginning of the Allies' "Great Crusade" to rekindle the lamp of liberty and freedom on the continent of Europe.