On June 6, 1944, during Operation Overlord, the 82nd Airborne Division arrived at the French town of Sainte-Mère-Église. From the article:
"However, despite all set-backs, by 04:30 on the morning of 6th June the Stars & Stripes flag was flying proudly over Sainte Mère Église which became the first town in France to be liberated.
During the first few months of 1944 there were quite a number of allied air raids on and around this small town; the night of 5th June was initially thought by the enemy garrison not to be any different. As it happens a prominent house in the town square caught fire, most likely the result of one or more flares dropped by the Pathfinder squadron.
As is shown in vivid scenes in the 1962 film, ‘The Longest Day’, the townsfolk formed a human chain passing buckets of water filled from the pump in the square. At this point, with all the people busy, parachutists from the 82nd Airborne Division along with a few scattered units of the 101st began landing in and around the town. Soldiers of the German Garrison opened fire and ordered the locals back into their houses. Despite significant losses, the town was taken by members of the 505th led by Lieutenant Colonel Edward Krause.
In this odd quirk of fate, the town has been made more famous by John Steele. This story has caught the imagination, knowing that one of these men was stuck helplessly on the side of the church tower throughout the intense ground battle, witnessing the fighting below for two hours. After repelling this first stage of the attack, members of the German Garrison took Steele prisoner but were later forced to release him to the Americans. An effigy of John Steele is maintained to this day, hanging on the church tower. Inside the church there are two stained glass windows, one shows the Virgin Mary surrounded by paratroopers; the other shows St. Michael (patron saint of the paratroopers) and was dedicated in 1972."