History
THE INVASION OF EUROPE
For D-Day cameramen carried pocket-sized note pads (A5 format) known as ‘Dope Sheets’ requiring them to provide written information on subject, cameraman’s name, date, film stock, camera number, cine or still, footage exposed, exclusive or not, roll number and length, followed by a brief outline of the story; and finally the name of the formation or unit seen on film and it’s location. Later these became foolscap size with ‘Top Secret’ heavily printed across the top.Cameraman were also issued with a slate-board and boxes of chalk, and were supposed to print their name and film roll number and shoot these as their first exposure.
Some cameramen obliged but others disposed of these in the heat of battle and adopted a more pragmatic approach of scrawling their name and roll number on walls, sides of tanks, the canvas tilt of Jeeps and anywhere convenient.
On D-Day cameraman from No.5 A.F.P.S. were allocated to units that formed the first wave of assault troops for the British and Canadian beaches code named ‘Gold’, ‘Sword’ and ‘Juno’.
By the end of D-Day the section had lost two cameraman wounded (Billy Greenhalgh and Des O’Neill) and one killed (Norman Clague).