How Higgins and His Boats Won the War (from HISTORY This Week)
7/9/202631 min
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June 6, 1944. As thousands of Allied soldiers prepare to storm the beaches of Normandy, they climb down rope nets into small wooden landing craft bobbing in the dark waters of the English Channel. Within hours, these boats will carry them into the largest amphibious invasion in history.
The craft are known as Higgins boats, named for their inventor, Andrew Higgins: a hard-driving New Orleans boatbuilder who built his reputation designing vessels that could speed through swamps, crash through obstacles, and go places other boats couldn't. Higgins was stubborn, abrasive, and relentless. The Navy repeatedly dismissed his ideas. He refused to go away.
How does a small-time New Orleans boatbuilder force his way into the military industrial complex? And what exactly is so special about these boxy little Higgins boats?
Special thanks to Dr. John Curatola, Samuel Zemurray Stone Senior Historian at the National WWII Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana. His book is Armies Afloat: How the Development of Amphibious Operations in Europe Helped Win World War II.
You can find the rest of the books we used to research this episode at historythisweekpodcast.com.
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First 90 secondsSpeaker 10:00
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Speaker 21:00
The History Channel original podcast.
Sally Helm· Host1:02
[instrumental music] Hello, World War II with Tom Hanks listeners. If you have listened to History Channel podcasts before, you might possibly recognize my voice. My name is Sally Helm, and I'm the host of History This Week. What you are about to hear is an episode we just produced about the colorful character who made the boats that some say won World War II. It is the kind of story we really like to tell on History This Week, something you might have heard of or know a little bit about, but we

