Battle-scarred U.S. flag from D-Day
landing goes up for auction
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[June 04, 2019]
LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) - A
battle-scarred American flag believed to be the first planted on Omaha
beach during the 1944 D-Day landings is expected to fetch more than
$55,000 at auction next week, Heritage Auctions said on Monday.
The flag, with a distinctive gold fringe and a repair from an apparent
bullet hole, was planted by a U.S. army engineer on Omaha Beach, the
scene of some of the bloodiest battles when Allied forces stormed the
Normandy coast of France in World War Two.
The Dallas auction house said the flag was planted by Columbus, Ohio
bartender turned army engineer John Horvath, who later sent the flag to
his wife with a letter.
"Take care of the flag. It's the first which went up on the beachhead,
two hours after the invasion started. I had to use my tent pole to raise
it," Horvath wrote in the letter to his wife.
The letter and the flag's arrival in Columbus were chronicled in a 1944
newspaper clipping with the headline "First Flag on Beachhead in
Normandy Arrives Here as Souvenir of Battle." The clipping, which shows
Horvath's wife posing with the flag, is believed to be from the Columbus
Citizen-Journal in August 1944 and is being sold along with the flag,
Heritage said.
Horvath died of a stroke in either 1961 or 1962 and left the flag and
other war medals and mementoes to his nephew. The flag is being sold by
a private collector.
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A battle-scarred American flag believed to be the first planted on
Omaha beach during the 1944 D-Day landings during World War II,
which will be auctioned next week, is shown in this photo provided
June 3, 2019. Courtesy of Heritage Auctions/Handout via REUTERS
The flag will be auctioned on June 9, along with Horvath's Purple
Heart and other medals. Online bidding is already underway and by
Monday had reached $55,000 - above the pre-sale estimate of $50,000.
Flags have become prized items among military collectors. The U.S.
flag that flew from the boat that led the first American troops onto
Utah Beach during the D-Day landings sold for $514,000 at a Heritage
Auction in 2016 - more than five times its estimate.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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