1,093 items in this album on 55 pages.

Ruins of a German town, 22 Nov 1944Members of the US 22nd Infantry Regiment holding the line during heavy fighting near Großhau, Germany during the Battle of the Hürtgen Forest, 1 Dec 1944. Note the M1917 machine gun and M1 Garand rifles.Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery making his first visit onto German soil in the village of Hillensberg, 3 Dec 1944. Note the censor’s cropping marks on the photograph.Dead horses in a German town, 15 Dec 1944; 6 German soldiers (5 of whom were killed) were hitching them to an artillery piece on the previous day when a US shell exploded near them
Ruins of a German town, 22 Nov 1944Members of the US 22nd Infantry Regiment holding the line during heavy fighting near Großhau, Germany during the Battle of the Hürtgen Forest, 1 Dec 1944. Note the M1917 machine gun and M1 Garand rifles.Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery making his first visit onto German soil in the village of Hillensberg, 3 Dec 1944. Note the censor’s cropping marks on the photograph.Dead horses in a German town, 15 Dec 1944; 6 German soldiers (5 of whom were killed) were hitching them to an artillery piece on the previous day when a US shell exploded near them
US 7th Army troops checking a house for snipers, western Germany, 16 Dec 1944Major General William Simpson and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery touring the city of Aachen, Germany, 31 Dec 1944. Ten weeks earlier, Aachen became the first city inside Germany to be occupied by the Allies.A German town in ruins, 1945A US soldier walking through a destroyed German town, 1944-1945
US 7th Army troops checking a house for snipers, western Germany, 16 Dec 1944Major General William Simpson and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery touring the city of Aachen, Germany, 31 Dec 1944. Ten weeks earlier, Aachen became the first city inside Germany to be occupied by the Allies.A German town in ruins, 1945A US soldier walking through a destroyed German town, 1944-1945
A wooden bridge being destroyed by US Army engineers, Germany, 1944-1945Aerial view of Howaldtswerke shipyard, Hamburg, Germany, 1940sAerial view of Lübeck, Germany, 1945, seen from an American aircraft; Lübecker Flenderwerke shipyard located just right of center in this photoAllied crews inspect a captured Focke-Wulf 200 Condor shortly after war
A wooden bridge being destroyed by US Army engineers, Germany, 1944-1945Aerial view of Howaldtswerke shipyard, Hamburg, Germany, 1940sAerial view of Lübeck, Germany, 1945, seen from an American aircraft; Lübecker Flenderwerke shipyard located just right of center in this photoAllied crews inspect a captured Focke-Wulf 200 Condor shortly after war's end, Brunswick-Waggum Airfield, Germany. Note the radar antennae on the nose.
An American looking at a fallen German soldier near a destroyed German gun, Germany, 1945Ar 96 aircraft with Hungarian markings at rest, Germany, 1945B-17 bombers amidst heavy flak fire over Merseburg, Germany, circa 1944-1945Civilians in a ruined German town, 1944-1945
An American looking at a fallen German soldier near a destroyed German gun, Germany, 1945Ar 96 aircraft with Hungarian markings at rest, Germany, 1945B-17 bombers amidst heavy flak fire over Merseburg, Germany, circa 1944-1945Civilians in a ruined German town, 1944-1945
Heilbronn, Germany in ruins, 1945Me 262 aircraft viewed from atop, Germany, 1944-1945; Nazi German government propaganda photographSwedish Red Cross Buses in Germany, possibly near the Friedrichsruh Manor which was the field headquarters of the Swedish Red Cross for this operation, northern Germany, 1945; most men in this photo were Gestapo members who were ordered to follow the bussesTwo US Army medics amidst wrecks and rubble in a German town, 1944-1945
Heilbronn, Germany in ruins, 1945Me 262 aircraft viewed from atop, Germany, 1944-1945; Nazi German government propaganda photographSwedish Red Cross Buses in Germany, possibly near the Friedrichsruh Manor which was the field headquarters of the Swedish Red Cross for this operation, northern Germany, 1945; most men in this photo were Gestapo members who were ordered to follow the bussesTwo US Army medics amidst wrecks and rubble in a German town, 1944-1945

1,093 items in this album on 55 pages.



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"I have returned. By the grace of Almighty God, our forces stand again on Philippine soil."

General Douglas MacArthur at Leyte, 17 Oct 1944


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