"The war was in my ears," she recalled, describing the radio machine she was operating via levers.
"When they (communication officers) had to respond to my messages and they lifted their lever, you heard all the sounds of the men on the beaches, bombs, machine guns, men shouting, screaming."
Scott, who will soon turn 96, said she got very "emotional" when arriving to Normandy on Saturday as part of the trip organized by the Taxi Charity for Military Veterans and was in tears when seeing the Normandy beaches.
"Suddenly I thought maybe some of those young men I spoke to... that they had died."
The symbol is even stronger as across the Channel, Queen Elizabeth II, who served in World War II as an army driver and mechanic, is celebrating her 70 years on the throne.
"Women were involved," Scott stressed. "I mean, I'm enormously proud to have been a minute part of Operation Overlord."
Many visitors have come out to visit the monuments marking the key moments of the fight and show their gratitude to the soldiers. World War II history enthusiasts dressed in wartime uniforms could also be seen in jeeps and military vehicles on the small roads of Normandy.
Greg Jensen, 51, came with his 20-year-old daughter from Dallas. On Saturday, they visited the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, overlooking Omaha Beach.
"I took a moment to just hold the sand and you think, gosh, the blood that was spilled to give me that moment and the freedom to hold that sand," he said. "That was emotional for me."
"I hope a lot of this younger generation is watching because we can't forget what happened 78 years ago," Jensen said, especially thinking of the current fighting in Ukraine.