Mémorial des Reporters at Bayeux and the fate of Sergeant Pete Paris
Alexander Braun • February 6, 2023
The Mémorial des Reporters at Bayeux lists all the photojournalists, war correspondents and cameramen and camerawomen killed in the line of duty on the battlefields since 1944.
Off the beaten track in Bayeux, between the CWGC Cemetery, the Bayeux Memorial, and the Musée Memorial de la Bataille de Normandie, is the impressive Mémorial des Reporter. The Memorial lists the names of more than 2,000 reporters, photographers, cameramen and camerawomen who have died in the line of duty on the battlefields since 1944. Each year that war reporters, photographers or cameramen/women have died in combat is represented by a stele engraved with the names of the victims. There are two famous reporters and photographers commemorated who are inextricably linked to the D-Day landings and the Battle of Normandy: Ernie Pyle (killed in 1945) and Robert Capa (killed in 1954). There will soon be separate posts about these two famous men.
This post is about Sergeant Peter Paris, the first photographer killed in Normandy on D-Day working for the American YANK magazine.
Sgt. Pete Paris was the first enlisted man to report for duty on the editorial staff of YANK when it was activated in 1942. Sgt. Pete Paris, made history with his first-ever cover story of a black unit in combat in the early stages of the war in Africa and Sicily. He was killed in action June 6 on the Normandy beachhead while he was covering the D-Day landings of the 1st Division for this magazine.
In the thick of action during the D-Day landings in 1944, Paris managed to avoid machine-gun fire only to step on a land mine and have his leg torn off at the hip. He was evacuated from Normandy aboard a Navy LST but never made it back to England - the ship was bombed and sunk in the English Channel, killing all aboard.
Pete was an illustrator and photographer. He took some award winning photos during the African campaign.
Pete Paris was 30 years old when he died, he received his Purple Heart posthumously.