Photos Colour and Colourised Photos of WW2 & earlier conflicts

Australian soldiers belonging to the 21st Battalion 6th Australian Division take a rest after marching along the Kokoda Track New Guinea October-November 1942

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2/1st not the 21st my friend ;)
(Front left, Norman Carter identified by his daughter, he survived WW2)
In the South-West Pacific theatre the 2/1st Battalion fought in two campaigns - the advance along the Kokoda Track to the Japanese beachheads between September 1942 and January 1943, and the drive to clear the Japanese from the Aitape-Wewak region of New Guinea between December 1944 and August 1945. The period in between was occupied with training in northern Queensland. The Kokoda Track fighting, involving major battles at Eora Creek (20-29 October), Gorari (9-12 November 1942) and Sanananda (20-21 November) was particularly costly, with over two-thirds of the battalion killed, wounded, or evacuated sick.
 
An American GI inspects a P47 Thunderbolt captured by German forces and studied in this hangar Germany April 1945 In the foreground you can see a P51D Mustang .
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A Wehrmacht soldier enjoys a wine bottle most likely somewhere in France MayJune 1940 The helmet he is wearing is the famous M40 the greatest helmet of the war.
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A Wehrmacht soldier helps his injured and battleweary friend to a Medic taken during Operation Barbarossa Winter 1942 The expression in their faces talk about .
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A German soldier stands guard at his post with a ornately decorated Christmas tree in the background
Berlin late 1930s
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Four Durham Light infantry Regimental Police in a photographers garden in Warloy-Baillon, Somme, Northern France, in 1916
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German Wehrmacht troops rest and enjoy their hot meal from a Goulsch food wagon container which was used to carry hot meals from behind the lines to the front .
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2nd Lt. Hugh Fletcher and his crew, and his dog mascot para-pup "Salvo", of the 322nd Bomb Group - 452nd Bomb Squadron, with their B-26B-4-MA Marauder (serial number 41-18054), DH-R, nicknamed "Jezabelle", photographed on 31st August 1943, after rainfall.'Jezabelle' was built in the fall of 1942 as a Block 4 Marauder, which put her in a very early configuration indeed.

She had the original short wing (65′ rather than the later 71′ wing introduced on Block 10 B-26s). She also had the original short fin and rudder, which was 20″ shorter than the final configuration. Block 4 was the first time package guns were mounted at the factory. 'Jezabelle' had the original “sharp” tail gun stinger with twin hand-held .50 machine guns. No tunnel guns were fitted on the production line, but were obviously added later.

Little is known about JEZABELLE’s combat career with the 322nd Bomb Group. We know she was one of the early ships assigned to the 452nd BS, and based at AAF 485, Great Saling, Essex, United Kingdom, which had been named “Andrews Field” in honor of Lt Gen Frank Andrews.
However, by April 1944, she had been re-assigned to the 3rd Combat Crew Replacement Center at Toome, Northern Ireland, about 15 miles NNE of Belfast. It’s believed she was broken up at Stansted, in February 1945, making her (at that time) one of the oldest USAAF ships left in Europe.

USAAF  322nd Bomb Group - 452nd Bomb Squadron, with their B-26B-4-MA Marauder (serial number ...webp
 
type VIIB U-52 was initially ordered on 15 May 1937, in violation of the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, and laid down on 9 March 1938, at the yards of Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft AG in Kiel as yard number 587. Launched on 21 December 1938, she was commissioned on 4 February 1939, under the command of Kapitänleutnant (Kptlt.) Wolfgang Barten.
U-52 was attacked by an American warship, USS Niblack (DD-424), on 10 April 1941. She undertook eight war patrols in the Battle of the Atlantic, she sank thirteen ships before being sunk at Danzig in 1945 and broken up in 1946 / 1947.

First patrol
U-52's first patrol began with her departure from Kiel on 19 August 1939, well before the outbreak of war. She crossed the North Sea and headed for the Atlantic Ocean via the 'gap' between Iceland and the Faroe Islands. The most southerly point of the patrol was reached on 1 September, the same day that Germany began the invasion of Poland.
Second patrol

After a series of short trips from Kiel to the German-administered island of Helgoland, (also known as Heligoland) and then Wilhelmshaven, the boat left Helgoland on 27 February 1940 and arrived at Wilhelmshaven on 4 April.
Third patrol

Three days later, U-52 began her third sortie. It was very similar to her second; but success continued to elude her. She crossed the North Sea and swept the area between the Faroes and Shetland Islands.
Fourth patrol

Having sailed in a southerly direction to the west of Ireland, the boat sank The Monarch 60 nautical miles (110 km; 69 mi) west of Belle Ile in the Bay of Biscay on 19 June 1940. Moving further into the Bay, U-52 came across the Ville de Namur. At first the Germans were under the impression that large wooden structures on deck were for weapons, when they were stables for horses. Nevertheless, the vessel was sunk; she went down in five minutes.

She also sank the Hilda on 21 June and the Thetis A. on 14 July. The latter vessel had already been attacked, but the torpedo used malfunctioned, (a common occurrence in the early months of the war).

Fifth patrol
Foray number five was in terms of tonnage sunk, her most successful; she destroyed the Gogovale on 4 August 1940 about 300 nautical miles (560 km; 350 mi) west southwest of Bloody Foreland (County Donegal in Ireland). On about the same day the submarine was badly damaged by British escorts; repairs took four months to implement.
Sixth patrol

Her tally rose steadily with the demise of the Tasso and the Goodleigh on the same day (2 December 1940). Both ships went to the bottom about 360 nautical miles (670 km; 410 mi) west of Bloody Foreland.
Seventh patrol

Continuing her hunting in mid-Atlantic, U-52 sank the Ringhorn on 4 February 1941 and the Canford Chine about 165 nautical miles (306 km; 190 mi) southwest of Rockall, (a tiny outcrop), on the tenth. There were no survivors from the second ship.
Eighth patrol

She sank the Saleier on 10 April 1941. The ship sank in 15 seconds but the whole crew of 63 survived.

Her last recorded victim was the Ville de Liège, a Belgian-registered vessel which was successfully attacked about 700 nautical miles (1,300 km; 810 mi) east of Cape Farewell, (southern Greenland) on 14 April.

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American soldiers of the 89th Infantry Division duck and huddle under enemy fire while attempting to cross the Rhine River Oberwesel Germany March 26th 1945


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On 18 January 1943, somewhere in North Africa, a highly equipped patrol from Detachment 'L' of the British Special Air Service (SAS) Brigade was returning from a three-month deployment.

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Brigadier General James Gavin, commanding officer of the 82nd Airborne Division, checks his equipment before boarding his C-47 bound for his 4th combat jump of the war in Operation Market Garden…September of 1944

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