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Every D-Day documentary starts the same way. Omaha Beach. American soldiers. Saving Private Ryan. That twenty-seven-minute opening sequence grossed four hundred and eighty million dollars, won five Academy Awards, and permanently branded the visual grammar of June 6th, 1944 into global consciousness. Band of Brothers reinforced it three years later. Purely American. The Longest Day in 1962 at least included British storylines, but the film is remembered for John Wayne wading ashore, Robert Mitchum on the bluffs.And so the story narrowed. And narrowed. Until it became a single image: American soldiers on an American beach.But here's the thing. On June 6th, 1944, roughly seventy-five thousand British and Canadian troops landed by sea across three beaches — Gold, Juno, and Sword — while fifty-seven thousand Americans came ashore at their two. The British and Canadian seaborne contingent was larger. The entire naval operation, Operation Neptune, was commanded by British Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay. The Allied air forces answered to Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory. The ground forces commander was Montgomery. And on the easternmost beach of the invasion — a stretch of Normandy sand code-named Sword — a twenty-one-year-old Scottish piper walked through machine-gun fire playing "Highland Laddie" while men died around him, and the Germans didn't shoot him because they thought he'd gone completely mad.You've never heard that story.