'Each of us had a job to do and if you're doing it, you're not concentrating on anything else'
Phil Sweet, 99, who was in the Royal Navy, was part of the initial wave that landed at the village of La Riviere as part of the Gold Beach landings when he was 19.
He said: "I was on a tank landing craft, we had two tanks mounted on the tank deck to fire on the beach ahead of the first troops landing, but with the bad weather, it didn't work out and we arrived a little bit later, so we hit the beach and offloaded our tanks close to La Riviere.
"We lost our drag anchor going in, so we went in on a very high tide and got stuck on the beach until the 19th and acted as a Prisoner of War camp before the prisoners were shipped out."
Mr Sweet ended up becoming unwell with acute peritonitis and was in a tented hospital in Bayeux "with all the Canadian wounded".
He said: "We didn't really know what we were in for. I joined in the April, 16 weeks after I joined I was a naval officer and still hadn't been on board a ship. I was drafted to a landing craft and did my training.
"Each of us had a job to do and if you're doing it, you're not concentrating on anything else. I suppose I was afraid as much as anyone else would have been, but there was a huge sense of camaraderie."
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