I’ve been researching France in World War 2 recently, and I stumbled upon this article on JSTOR:
Unfortunately, my regular free JSTOR account cannot access this.
Please let me know if you have access to this article in any way. Thank you!
Cool!
GIs with Company M, 26th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, advance behind two Sherman Tanks in Aachen, Germany - October 15, 1944
US Army Signal Corps - SC 195638
wonder who the guys without helmets are ? Looks like they have different boots too. Maybe British ? That would seem unusual
@barnee the guy on the left looks like he’s wearing a beret. The other guy looks like he’s wearing German boots…it is kind of odd.
well maybe his boots didn’t fit very good :) Both hatches are open. Maybe Tank Commanders got out on the ground ? That would seem unlikely Idk though
Edit
They don’t have any gear either like the GIs do. Wonder if they’re German prisoners ? Pointing out where to go ?
@The-Captain what do you think ?
I have this picture in one of my History books - I’ll have to check.
If I remember correctly, the guy without helmet on the right is a German POW - he is wearing German boots (Knochelbrecher - Bone Crusher) and a German Army belt.
I’ll be back, when I find the picture…
Captain
iger II “234” of the 503rd Heavy Panzer Battalion during Operation Panzerfaust, Budapest, Hungary, October 15th or 16th, 1944
@captainwalker now that’s a Tank.
Nice pic; thanks .
Looks a bit more different from the Tiger 1 than I expected/imagined.
Nice.
Today is the 80th anniversary of the end of the Formosa Air Battle.
On October 12 the US Fast Carrier Task Force (now capable of launching over 1000 planes in the air at once, seriously impressive, the epitome of US power during the war, if I might add) launched a series of air raids on Japanese held Formosa (now what we call Taiwan).
The Japanese had a series of plans for a major air and naval counteroffensive in case the US invaded either the Phillipines or Formosa (there were serious debates in the US command over whether the next target would be the Phillipines or Formosa, with MacAuthur getting his way at the Phillipines, with the Formosa attacks merely as a prelude or diversion). Unsure of what US plans were, the Japanese decided to only launch the air component of the counterattack, assembling over 1000 aircraft from other bases in Kyushu and China in addition to the 300 aircraft already on the island.
Due to the inexperience and techinical inferiority of Japanese air formations, all Japanese attacks on the Fast Carrier Task Force were an utter failure, sinking no ships and losing over 500 aircraft while the US lost than 50.
The battle left the Japanese with no air power to combat the imminent US invasion of the Phillipines, leaving the navy to fight on by itself.
@SuperbattleshipYamato great write up and buy of history. Thanks .
You’re welcome!
Prepare for much more on the Battle of Leyte Gulf, my favorite World War 2 battle (80th anniversary comes in just a couple of days)!
Churchill Tanks of the 4th Grenadier Guards advance on Venray / Venraij Netherlands - October 17, 1944
IWM - Norris (Sgt) Photographer
IWM BU 1205
It’s the 80th anniversary of the US landings at Leyte. Almost to Leyte Gulf…
PT-194 refueling from the PT Boat Tender USS Wachapreague AGP-8 while enroute from Palau to Leyte Gulf - October 20, 1944
PT-194 was an 80’ Elco launched in February 1943, assigned to MTBRon 12 in the Pacific, she participated in the Guadalcanal Campaign, New Guinea, Leyte Gulf, and the Battle of Surigao Strait.
PT-194 was stripped and burned at Samar in October 1945….
80 Years Ago Today - US General Douglas MacArthur wades ashore during the initial landings at Leyte in the Philippines - October 20, 1944
In his prepared speech, MacArthur said;
People of the Philippines: I have returned. By the grace of Almighty God our forces stand again on Philippine soil—soil consecrated in the blood of our two peoples. We have come dedicated and committed to the task of destroying every vestige of enemy control over your daily lives, and of restoring upon a foundation of indestructible strength, the liberties of your people.
NARA - US Army Signal Corps
Gaetano Faillace Photographer
Cool!
And so begins my ongoing coverage as the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Leyte Gulf approaches:
October 22, 2024 is the 80th anniversary of when most the Japanese fleet embarked for Opeeration Sho-go 1 set sail towards the Phillipines to counter American landings there.
The ships sailed in multiple seperate task forces from different places, with the Center Force, the most powerful of the fleets and containing battleship legends Yamato and Musashi, led by Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita, and the Southern Force, composed of Force C which included the battleships Fuso and Yamashiro and led by Vice Admiral Shoji Nishimura, departing from Brueni Bay in Borneo that day (likely where a good amount of Japan’s oil supplies were kept). Vice Admiral Kiyohide Shima’s Second Striking Force, consisting exclusively of cruisers and destroyers, left the Pescadores, Formosa the same day.
Vice Admiral Jisaburo Ozawa’s carrier force sortied from the Japanese Home Islands two days earlier, in a fleet consisting of the carrier-battleships Ise and Hyuga and 4 mostly empty carriers, including Zuikaku, the only fleet carrier in the group and the last surviving carrier from the Attack on Pearl Harbor.
Stay tuned for more coverage tommorow as the battle officially starts.