11,178 items in this album on 559 pages.

  • « Previous
  • First
  • ...
  • 299
  • 300
  • 301
  • 302
  • 303
  • 304
  • 305
  • 306
  • ...
  • Last
  • Next »
Cutaway view of a proximity fuze for aerial bombs developed by Section E for the United States Army Air Corps. Rather than relying on a battery, this design employs a turbine driven by external blades.Dai Li dining with Chinese and American officers and men, China, 1940sDamaged Finnish BT-42 self-propelled gun, Finland, 1944Deck crews aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable man lines to right an FM-2 Wildcat that had nosed completely over. Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-45. Photo 1 of 3.
Cutaway view of a proximity fuze for aerial bombs developed by Section E for the United States Army Air Corps. Rather than relying on a battery, this design employs a turbine driven by external blades.Dai Li dining with Chinese and American officers and men, China, 1940sDamaged Finnish BT-42 self-propelled gun, Finland, 1944Deck crews aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable man lines to right an FM-2 Wildcat that had nosed completely over. Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-45. Photo 1 of 3.
Deck crews aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable man lines to right an FM-2 Wildcat that had nosed completely over. Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-45. Photo 2 of 3.Deck crews aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable man lines to right an FM-2 Wildcat that had nosed completely over. Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-45. Photo 3 of 3.Deck crews secure a damaged FM-2 Wildcat following a hard landing aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable on Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-44.Destroyed Japanese coastal gun at Tarawa, Gilbert Islands, late 1943-1944
Deck crews aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable man lines to right an FM-2 Wildcat that had nosed completely over. Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-45. Photo 2 of 3.Deck crews aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable man lines to right an FM-2 Wildcat that had nosed completely over. Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-45. Photo 3 of 3.Deck crews secure a damaged FM-2 Wildcat following a hard landing aboard the training aircraft carrier USS Sable on Lake Michigan, United States, 1943-44.Destroyed Japanese coastal gun at Tarawa, Gilbert Islands, late 1943-1944
Dr. Charles Drew of the Medical Corps of the Office of Civilian Defense in the United States practicing treating air raid victims, Washington, DC, United States, date unknownDragoljub Mihailovic with Americans Lieutenant Michael Rajacich (left), Captain Nick Lalich (with sunglasses), Captain George Musulin (looking at MMihailovic), and Colonel Robert McDowell (right edge of photograph), Pranjani, Yugoslavia, 6 Sep 1944English countryside seen through the Norden bombsight, 1944Erwin Rommel inspecting Atlantic coast defenses along the French coast, circa early 1944
Dr. Charles Drew of the Medical Corps of the Office of Civilian Defense in the United States practicing treating air raid victims, Washington, DC, United States, date unknownDragoljub Mihailovic with Americans Lieutenant Michael Rajacich (left), Captain Nick Lalich (with sunglasses), Captain George Musulin (looking at MMihailovic), and Colonel Robert McDowell (right edge of photograph), Pranjani, Yugoslavia, 6 Sep 1944English countryside seen through the Norden bombsight, 1944Erwin Rommel inspecting Atlantic coast defenses along the French coast, circa early 1944
Ethnic Korean pilot Fumihiro Mitsuyama (born Tak Kyonghyong) of the Japanese Army, date unknownEthnic Korean pilot Kiyoharu Kawada (born Roh Yong-U) of the Japanese Army, 1940sF4U-1A Corsair fighters of US Navy squadron VF-17 in flight, Southwest Pacific, 1944; seen in Feb 1969 issue of US Navy publication Naval Aviation NewsF4U-2 Corsair nightfighters on a carrier flight deck, 1944; seen in May-Jun issue of US Navy publication Naval Aviation News
Ethnic Korean pilot Fumihiro Mitsuyama (born Tak Kyonghyong) of the Japanese Army, date unknownEthnic Korean pilot Kiyoharu Kawada (born Roh Yong-U) of the Japanese Army, 1940sF4U-1A Corsair fighters of US Navy squadron VF-17 in flight, Southwest Pacific, 1944; seen in Feb 1969 issue of US Navy publication Naval Aviation NewsF4U-2 Corsair nightfighters on a carrier flight deck, 1944; seen in May-Jun issue of US Navy publication Naval Aviation News
F6F Hellcat of VF-16 launches from the carrier Lexington (Essex-class) while two others wait along with an SBD Dauntless, 1943-44.F6F-3 Hellcat of Fighting Squadron 1 aboard the Fleet Carrier USS Yorktown (Essex-class), 1944.F6F-5F Hellcat of VF-23 loses its tail section upon landing aboard the carrier Princeton, 1943-44.F6F-5N Hellcat nightfighter in flight, 1943-45. Based at NAS Jacksonville, Florida, USA. Note radome on starboard wing.
F6F Hellcat of VF-16 launches from the carrier Lexington (Essex-class) while two others wait along with an SBD Dauntless, 1943-44.F6F-3 Hellcat of Fighting Squadron 1 aboard the Fleet Carrier USS Yorktown (Essex-class), 1944.F6F-5F Hellcat of VF-23 loses its tail section upon landing aboard the carrier Princeton, 1943-44.F6F-5N Hellcat nightfighter in flight, 1943-45. Based at NAS Jacksonville, Florida, USA. Note radome on starboard wing.

11,178 items in this album on 559 pages.

  • « Previous
  • First
  • ...
  • 299
  • 300
  • 301
  • 302
  • 303
  • 304
  • 305
  • 306
  • ...
  • Last
  • Next »


Search WW2DB
Famous WW2 Quote
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. You win the war by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country!"

George Patton, 31 May 1944


Support Us

Please consider supporting us on Patreon. Even $1 a month will go a long way. Thank you!

Or, please support us by purchasing some WW2DB merchandise at TeeSpring, Thank you!