Compared to other units in the 17th Airborne Division, the 507th Combat Team’s casualties had been light—about 150 killed and wounded. Eighty planes were shot down, and only 172 of the 1,305 gliders … The U.S. airborne landings in Normandy were the first U.S. combat operations during Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy by the Western Allies on June 6, 1944, during World War II.Around 13,100 American paratroopers of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions made night parachute drops early on D-Day, June 6, followed by 3,937 glider troops flown in by day. This successful operation was the last major airborne paratroop drop of the war. Its medics treated over a hundred casualties. For its actions, the 680th received a Distinguished Unit Citation. Over 1,070 members of the 17th Airborne and the 6th British Airborne Divisions were killed and thousands more wounded on March 24, 1945. As the battle for the castle raged, other companies of Timmes’ 2nd Battalion continued fighting their way through the area, reducing enemy strongpoints one AIRBORNE DIVISIONS: 11th: 13th: 17th: 82nd: 101st: 1st Airborne Task Force: INFANTRY BRIGADES: 1st ... Airborne Infantry: 550th Parachute Infantry Colored: 2671st Special Recon: 5217th Recon, ... USMC Casualties - Pearl Harbor December 7, 1941 The 17th Airborne had 430 killed, with 834 wounded and 81 missing. The 17th Airborne Division suffered a similar casualty rate, reporting around 1,300 casualties out of 9,650 personnel who took part in the operation, while the division claimed to have taken 2,000 POWs, a number similar to those taken by 6th Airborne. They were to assist the 17th Airborne Division in securing a designated area northeast of Wesel, establish roadblocks, and make contact with British forces northeast of the town. The 17th Airborne Division was activated at Camp Mackall on April 15, 1943 under the command of General William M Miley. However, because the 11th Armored absorbed heavy casualties, and the 17th Airborne’s delay, the plan didn’t fully function. The core units of the newly formed division were the 513th Parachute Infantry Regiment (PIR), the 193rd and 194th Glider Infantry Regiments (GIR). Casualties among the glider pilots and the troop plane pilots and crews included 91 killed, 280 wounded and 414 missing in action. For example, by the end of January, 1945, the 47 th Infantry Regiment (which fought in France and Germany) had lost well over 100% of their strength to battle casualties, where men were either killed, wounded, missing, or taken as prisoner of war. That was the plan; those were the carefully weighed objectives. The third division was the 17th Airborne, which was delayed in arriving until January. The 17th Airborne suffered almost 1,300 casualties, almost 14 percent of the troops involved. Operation Varsity was the single largest airdrop during the war, but also produced the worst day for casualties as well. For the first time, each of the 435th’s C-47s would be towing two gliders; and, for the first time, their landing zones would not have been secured by paratroopers. The Airborne Component of Operation Plunder ... having suffered heavy casualties in the brutal and bitter conditions of the Belgian Ardennes. 162nd Assault Helicopter Company, Casualties, V'nam 16th Inf Rgmt, 1st Inf Div, WW2 173rd Airborne Bde, Vietnam 17th Armored Inf Bn, Casualties 17th Connecticutt Vol Inf, Civil War, Casualties 17th Connecticutt Volunteer Inf, Civil War Casualties 196th Light Inf Bgd, Vietnam US, Casualties The casualties suffered by a typical American infantry regiment serving in World War II were horrendous.