Showing posts with label wwii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wwii. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2011

"The Gallery." Naples, Italy, 1944.

I won a Bantam paperback on an eBay auction not too long ago called "The Gallery." Although a work of fiction, it portrays accurately the main drag in Naples during the war where GI's would pick up women, get drunk, and go AWOL from the MPs. It's a pretty desperate book and there are a whole lot of not-so-great human beings in it.

Here's the cover, it pretty much explains it all.



And here is a real photo of GI's in Naples around the same time.



Happy to be there, serving their country, protecting mom's apple pie and the pretty gal next door! Yessir, red-blooded american boys as innocent as the day is long...

Monday, February 14, 2011

Folk Hero




Pete Seeger entertaining (unusually) mixed company at a Valentine's Day party, 1944. Seated between the two sailors is icy Eleanor.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Cavalry Man



2nd Lt. Ronald Reagan, circa May 1942. He would have been 100 years old today.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Handlebar




Woah woah woah, better squared away there, Captain! What would the CO say...oh wait that's you. Well, back in '88 no CO of mine would've gotten away with that!

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Friday, November 5, 2010

Thursday, September 30, 2010

RIP Tony Curtis

Long before Tony Curtis became a gay icon known for his cross-dressing onscreen with Marilyn Monroe and of course, "Spartacus," (and also for being the father of Jamie Lee Curtis), he was Bernard Schwartz, a Jewish kid from New York City. At 17 he joined the Navy, and he wanted to be a submariner.


Bernard Schwartz, 1943.

He was assigned to be a tender to submarines on Guam, where he would scrape off the barnacles and clean the sub up when it came back from war patrol. Dirty work for sure, but Curtis never qualified for permanent duty aboard a sub. He was however onboard the USS Proteus when she steamed for the Japanese submarine base at Yokosuka where he witnessed the historic signing of the famous Document of Surrender aboard the USS Missouri.



He was standing on the signal bridge and actually got to witness the formal surrender of the Japanese, thus closing WWII into history.

He died in his home in Las Vegas Sept. 29, 2010.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Medic With a Gun


509th Parachute Infantry Battalion medic with .45.

Posed or for real?

Friday, August 6, 2010

Home Movies



This is a home movie shot during the war of the 552nd Ordnance Tank Repair Co. in 1944-45. I'm glad so many guys had the foresight to record what was going on.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Relaxed Fit

My favorite period of Class "A" uniforms of the US Army was late-war and post-war. Most photographs I've seen during the occupation of Germany and Japan show men done with the fighting and waiting it out to get the hell home. Because the war was over and the celebrating had since ceased, soldiers were already getting back to the civilian mindset, as most during WWII were not career military men. Because of this, uniforms started to get relaxed. Ties were stopped being worn when possible and collars would be flared out over the jackets, pants got non-regulation cuffs (the style at the time), and jackets were thrown on and unbuttoned when worn or not worn at all.

Many photos of the time show guys during the occupation as goofing around and seeing the sights, still in the military but trying to act more like they were home, and generally over the whole thing and not really caring anymore. Here are some great photographs that show the soldiers, sick and tired of being overseas, trying to get back to some normalcy.


S/Sgt. Christopher Garney of Oklahoma. Austria, 1945.


PFC Charles K McGrane. Germany, 1945.


John Schaffner. Germany, 1945.


Vernon H. Brown and Jim Minn. Soyen, Germany, 1945.


Thomas Buettner. Munich, Germany, 1945.


Winters and Lewis Owen. Oberammergau, Germany,1946.


William Jackson. Schweinfurt, Germany, 1946.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Derailed (A bit how I'm feeling lately.)


Officers with musette bags in front of a derailed troop train in Piqua, Ohio. May 21, 1945.

One man killed, T/Sgt Jerrell H. Adamson of Oklahoma. He had successfully flown 35 missions over Europe and was on his way home.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Pacific Army

The Pacific Theater of Operations was not all Marines and Navy. The Army was there too...


25th Infantry Division on Guadalcanal.


Dead Japanese on Leyte.


25th ID on Luzon, 1945.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Two MPs





Aside from the whole "having to be an asshole" part, I wouldn't mind riding around on one of these babies.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Monday, July 26, 2010

Kodachrome

So, my mom went to visit my Aunt in Virginny and gave her a box of stuff to take to me. To my surprise, it was one of my Grandpa's 4-pocket tunics and whole carousel of Kodachrome slides he took.

My grandpa must have had a hell of a lot of foresight to take photos in the novelty of color.

Here's a few previews, until I get a good camera. These are projections on the wall I took photos of, so the color and sharpness of the pictures do the real thing no justice.


Aviation student, 1943.


Grandpa in the cockpit of a Waco CG4A glider.


Hangar being built. All those footlockers...


Glider maneuvers stateside. I would be biting the hell out of my nails watching that controlled disaster.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Glider Pilot reenacting

As many of you know, I am a reenactor. And as such, I take pride in recreating "impressions" of WWII soldiers. My primary focus of interest, as you may or may not have already gathered, are the glider pilots of WWII. Primarily trained as pilots and without a lot of thought given to infantry tactics, they were forced to find their way back to whatever friendlies they could happen upon once they landed behind enemy lines.

These pilots were all volunteers and much older than the average Air Corps pilot of the day, most being between 25-35. They were primarily washouts from Cadet school, or simply lacked the proper vision or age requirements. But, they all wanted to get their chance to fly and "get into the action," so they were given perhaps the most dangerous position in the entire armed forces of WWII. Criminally overlooked by the history books and not given their proper due, I have taken it upon myself to portray a little-known chapter in WWII history. Plus, it's a lot of fun to get dressed up and shoot things.


Flight Officers George Brennan and Bernie Cantwell, Operation Dragoon (the invasion of southern France after D-Day).


"Flight Officer" Blake D. Thomas, Operation Vanity (the invasion of his backyard).

Saturday, July 24, 2010

1st Air Commandos

The story of the 1st Air Commandos is probably one of the most badass of the entire war. General "Hap" Arnold enlisted the help of Phil Cochran, a commander of P-40 fighters in North Africa, to plan an invasion of Burma behind Japanese lines. Cochran, who was criminally never portrayed by Marlon Brando, was a Colonel who didn't care so much about regulations or how his men looked, just as long as they got the job done.


Allison, Wingate, and Cochran (L-R)

British General Orde Wingate was to be the leader of the British "Chindits" fighting force, and were to be flown in by glider behind the Japs and construct fortified airbases from which the operations could be carried out by bomber, liaison, and transport aircraft. On March 5, 1944, Operation Thursday was carried out.



Airlifts inserted almost 10,000 men, well over 1,000 mules, and approximately 250 tons of supplies. Casualties from the high-risk operation, including missing, were less than 150, and for the first time in military history aircraft evacuated all killed, wounded, and sick from behind enemy lines. This was when the "glider snatch" was used. Glider snatching consisted of a C-47 flying over a glider on the ground attached to a tow rope between two poles. The C-47 would hook onto the tow rope and slingshot the glider into the air. Pilots equated it to being shot out of a cannon.



The 1st Air Commando Group also went on to test the first use of helicopters in a combat zone, using Sikorsky R-4's. The helicopter rescued a downed liaison aircraft pilot and his three British soldier passengers, two at a time. The 1st AC were pioneers and deserve their place in aviation history. Oh yeah, and Jackie Coogan, who played Uncle Fester on "The Addams Family," was also a glider pilot with the 1st AC. He was the first glider pilot to land Allied troops behind enemy lines in the whole damn operation.



Hard to believe?

Friday, July 23, 2010

Sergeant Pilots, crazy uniforms...



If you notice the guy in the middle, he's wearing an officer's jacket with S/Sgt. stripes sewn on. Also note the officer's gabardine cap with enlisted device. The caption says that he bought them in the States anticipating they'd give him a commission when they got to the Middle East, but no such luck. He took it upon himself to sew them on in defiance (and possibly protest) of regulations. There were a lot of Sgt. pilots in the 316th Troop Carrier Group that flew C-47's and gliders as enlisted pilots.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Some favorites


African-American soldier with captured weapon.


Spoils of war. (we need to have a war in a civilized, wine-drinking country again.)


Signal Corps DJ.


509th PIB, Italy.