This photo was taken in 1943 in the ghetto of Warsaw during the abolition of the Jewish uprising. The commanding officer on German side is the 3rd soldier from the left: Brigadeführer Jürgen Stroop. He confirmed the death of 37359 jews. Because of his crimes against humanity he was executed in Warsaw in 1952.
A prison photo of Jurgen Stroop
From time to time I run across scale model dioramas that make me stop, and look again. A lot of work goes into these. This is a fantastic model of Kharkov, 1943.
The description:
Source
The description:
"This is the third battle of Kharkov. Some SS panzergrenadiers supported by a Panzer IV Ausf G are in their way to recapture the city"
Source
German paratroopers during the Battle of Crete, 1941.
German paratroopers on the ground in Crete, May, 1941
A Focke-Wulf FW-190 at Immola airfield (Finland) getting its prop removed for maintenance. This is a colorization by Mike Gepp. I had to look several times to make sure this was not an original photo.
Here's an excellent graphic by Barry Munden providing some specifics about the FW190A (click to enlarge).
In 1942, four Australian POWs tried to escape from their Japanese prisoner of war camp. The Japanese became so incensed that they ordered every POW in the Changi peninsula to sign an agreement promising not to escape. These prisoners refused.
In retaliation, the Japanese ordered them to assemble in the Selarang barracks without food or water—all fifteen thousand of them. For four days, the men were forced to stand shoulder-to-shoulder in a space only constructed to hold as few as one thousand people. After four days suffering from dysentery, malnutrition, and dehydration, the Australians relented and signed the agreement.
Artist Des Bettany
Source: World War II in Color
In retaliation, the Japanese ordered them to assemble in the Selarang barracks without food or water—all fifteen thousand of them. For four days, the men were forced to stand shoulder-to-shoulder in a space only constructed to hold as few as one thousand people. After four days suffering from dysentery, malnutrition, and dehydration, the Australians relented and signed the agreement.
Artist Des Bettany
Source: World War II in Color
A very well done scale model of a Dodge WC51, of the type used during world war II.
Available for purchase here
"Operation Citadel" - Battle of Prokhorovka - A soldier gives comrade a light for a cigarette. Colorization by Mike Gepp who does some really awesome work. And my apologies for not giving credit earlier, but I can't say I ever noticed his name underneath the cat.
Operation Citadel, June-July 1943: Motorized elements are advancing toward base areas. "Traffic cop" belonging to the motorcycle field gendarmery (military police) is directing traffic. The scout on the motorcycle faces hundreds of dust-filled miles.
The SG 500 Jagdfaust was an experimental airborne anti-bomber recoilless rifle designed for use in the Me 163 Komet rocket plane by the German Luftwaffe during World War II. The weapon featured a simple form of automated trigger in which an optical photocell detected the dark silhouette of an Allied bomber replacing bright blue sky and triggered the firing of the armed Jagdfaust guns.
A restored Me 163, shown without the Jagdfaust launchers
Dr. Andrew Duncan's WWII field kit, containing bandages, morphine, and other emergency medical supplies. Duncan was an army field surgeon during the Second World War. He was sent to the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) and given the rank of Captain. On the field, he saved the lives of soldiers by performing emergency operations, often in bombed-out houses.
This is a US Army field gear item. It is a shaving kit, as issued during World War two. The kit came in a metal box that was lined with a khaki cotton cover. The lid was hinged to the main body. Separate compartments are built into the carrying case to hold the different components of the shaving kit.