After high school graduation in 1942 McHugh was drafted and completed basic training at Fort McClellan in Alabama. After basic training he went to New York and was transported on the Queen Elizabeth to the United Kingdom. McHugh was in the 1st Infantry Division which landed at Normandy on D-Day and went on to fight at the Battle of Normandy and the Battle of the Bulge. The State of New York placed him in its Veterans Hall of Fame.
D-Day Invasion
McHugh and the First Infantry Division arrived in landing craft at Omaha Beach on D-Day, 6 June 1944, at 7:30am. McHugh and roughly 10 soldiers disembarked. As soon as they exited the landing craft, it was destroyed by a German shell. McHugh had been assigned to carry a tripod for a machine gun, however the soldier carrying the machine gun was killed in action so McHugh began crawling up the beach without a weapon. He spent the day in the sand avoiding German gunfire. Referring to his own experience on D-day, McHugh said, "It's hell day, it really is a hell day. Scared stiff, petrified and running like hell… It was a lot of bodies around, I didn't want to be one of them.” His experience has been cited as emblematic of the dire experiences and vanishing memories of D-Day vets. McHugh sent the money that he earned in the army to his mother ; his father John was deceased.
After the war, McHugh worked as a Transit Authority conductor and a private investigator for a security firm. McHugh died in his sleep 21 July 2019 at his home in Whitestone, New York. His hometown Whitestone New York approved a street co-named in honor of McHugh in 2019.
Personal life
McHugh was a first generation American, born in Union City, New Jersey; his parents were Irish immigrants. He came from a long line of soldiers. His father fought heroically in World War I and was shot six times in the Battle of the Argonne forest, and also gassed. McHugh's grandfather fought in the American Civil War. After World War II ended, John McHugh Sr. returned to the United States and married his childhood sweetheart Rosie McGee on 16 August 1947. Together they had three sons: John, Brian and Tim. He had three grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
External Links
John McHugh Sr.
The Normandy campaign: history, documents, testimonies, maps