Henry Langrehr came from Clinton, Iowa. A river town. Factories, cold winters, work that didn’t ask how you felt. That kind of place teaches you to endure before it teaches you to dream.
On
June 6, 1944, he jumped into France with the 82nd Airborne. The sky over
Normandy was shredded with anti-aircraft fire. Men were hit in the air. Some
never reached the ground. Langrehr crashed through the glass roof of a
greenhouse in Sainte-Mère-Église and kept moving because stopping meant dying.
The
drop was chaos. Units were scattered. Orders didn’t exist. The survivors fought
German tanks with rifles and nerve. Most of the men he trained with were gone
within days. On June 29, he was captured.
From
there, the war showed its real face.
Langrehr
was held near a death camp and saw what the Nazis called efficiency. People
marched to their deaths. Bodies stacked like lumber. It wasn’t rumor or
ideology. It was machinery. He watched because he had no choice.








