Photos Colour and Colourised Photos of WW2 & earlier conflicts

A Lewis machine gun post of the Tank Corps near Robecq, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, 17 April 1918.

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Soldiers cooking their food during a quiet spell.
Near the limit of the British retreat during the German Spring Offensive, which lasted from March to April. They are far to the South East of Ypres.
(Photo source - © IWM Q 8722)
(Photographer - Second Lieutenan David McLellan)
(Colourised by Royston Leonard from the UK)
 
Maria Barr, was the daughter of a Polish colonel and widow of RAF pilot (of Polish origin) Philip Rex Barr, commander of No107 Squadron RAF, who was lost over Holland in 1942.
Maria was 20 years old at the time this photo was taken. On that day, 8 June 1943, she was receiving a decoration for her fallen husband from King George VI.

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Maria came from Grodno and her father was a colonel in Polish Army. She started her studies in Vilnius. Unfortunately the outbreak of war prevented her from continuing her studies. In exile she married Philip Barr in 1941, who died a year later as an airman.
Maria remarried a few years later also to an airman, this time a Polish one. From 1943 she worked for the Polish Red Cross in Edinburgh.
 
Squadron Leader DB Collie and Flying Officer O'Currin in the cockpit of an RNZAF No. 2 Squadron Ventura. Green Islands, 1945.

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The New Zealand 3rd Division landed on Nissan Island on 15 February 1944 as part of the Solomon Islands campaign. U.S. Navy Seebees from the 33rd, 37th and 93rd Naval Construction Battalions landed with the New Zealanders and began building support facilities.
Work on a fighter airstrip began on 20 February and by 5 March a coral-surfaced 5,000 feet (1,500 m) by 150 feet (46 m) fighter runway known as Lagoon Airfield was ready for use and aircraft carried out the first attack on Kavieng.
In late March a parallel 6,000 feet (1,800 m) by 150 feet (46 m) bomber runway known as Ocean Airfield was ready for use, it was later lengthened to 7,300 feet (2,200 m). Additional airfield facilities such as road and taxiways and a tank farm were also constructed.
Construction had been extremely difficult with dense foliage and large trees needing to be removed, rock blasting was necessary, and all coral used for filling had to be quarried at distant locations. Today's air port exists on the site of the "Ocean airfield".
 
Jewish Brigade soldier Joseph Wald, holding an artillery shell bearing the inscription “Gift for Hitler”. Italy, 1944/1945.

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Formation of the Jewish Brigade
After early reports of the Nazi atrocities of the Holocaust were made public by the Allied powers, the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill sent a personal telegram to the US President Franklin D. Roosevelt suggesting that "the Jews... of all races have the right to strike at the Germans as a recognizable body." The president replied five days later saying: "I perceive no objection..."
After much hesitation, on July 3, 1944, the British government consented to the establishment of a Jewish Brigade with hand-picked Jewish and also non-Jewish senior officers. On 20 September 1944 an official communique by the War Office announced the formation of the Jewish Brigade Group of the British Army and the Jewish Brigade Group headquarters was established in Egypt at the end of September 1944 (the formation was styled a brigade group because of the inclusion under command of an artillery regiment).
The Zionist flag was officially approved as its standard. It included more than 5,000 Jewish volunteers from Mandatory Palestine organised into three infantry battalions of the Palestine Regiment and several supporting units.
In October 1944, under the leadership of Brigadier Ernest F. Benjamin, the brigade group was shipped to Italy and joined British Eighth Army in November which was engaged in the Italian Campaign under 15th Army Group.
The brigade group took part in the Spring Offensive of 1945. It took positions on the front line in the Alfonsine sector, and was soon engaged in combat. On March 19–20, 1945, it initiated two attacks. The brigade then moved to the Senio River sector, where it fought against the German 4th Parachute Division commanded by Generalleutnant Heinrich Trettner. On April 9, the brigade crossed the river and established a bridgehead, widening it the following day. In addition, they were represented among the liberating Allied units at a Papal audience.
The Jewish Brigade was then stationed in Tarvisio, near the border triangle of Italy, Yugoslavia, and Austria. They searched for Holocaust survivors, provided survivors with aid, and assisted in their immigration to Palestine.
They played a key role in the Berihah's efforts to help Jews escape Europe for British Mandatory Palestine, a role many of its members were to continue after the Brigade disbanded.
Among its projects was the education and care of the Selvino children.
In July 1945, the Brigade moved to Belgium and the Netherlands.
Overall, in the course of World War II, the Jewish Brigade's casualties were 83 killed in action or died of wounds and 200 wounded. Another 78 of the brigade's soldiers were mentioned in dispatches, and 20 received military decorations (7 Military Medals, 7 Order of the British Empire medals, 4 Military Crosses, and 2 US awards).
(Colourised by Refael Ben Zikri from Israel)
 
Ground crew remove a Type F.24 camera from Westland Lysander Mark IIIA, V9437 'AR-V', of No. 309 Polish Fighter-Reconnaissance Squadron (part of the RAF Army Cooperation Command), at Dunino, Fife, following a photo reconnaissance sortie. 12 March 1942

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(Photo source - © IWM (H 17778)
Lockeyear, W. T. (Captain) (Photographer)
 
A member of the First Special Service Force a.k.a. the 'Black Devil’s' with a BAR outside of Rome - June 4, 1944.

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He's carrying an M1918 BAR instead of the M1918A2. Commando type units preferred the older version as they were lighter and not as maintenance intense.
The 1st Special Service Force was an elite American–Canadian commando unit in World War II. Many of the Canadians were First Nation Indians.
It was at Anzio that the Germans dubbed the 1st Special Service Force the "Black Devils’ because the brigade's members smeared their faces with black boot polish for their covert operations in the dark of the night.
During Anzio, the 1st SSF fought for 99 days without relief. It was also at Anzio that the 1st SSF used their trademark stickers; during night patrols soldiers would carry stickers depicting the unit patch and a slogan written in German: "Das dicke Ende kommt noch," said to translate colloquially to "The worst is yet to come".
It's literal translation is actually "The thick end is coming soon", implying that a larger force was on its way imminently, placing these stickers on German corpses and fortifications. Canadian and American members of the Special Force who lost their lives are buried near the beach in the Commonwealth Anzio War Cemetery and the American Cemetery in Nettuno, just east of Anzio.
When the U.S. Fifth Army's breakout offensive began on 25 May 1944, the 1st SSF was sent against Monte Arrestino, and attacked Rocca Massima on 27 May.
The 1st SSF was given the assignment of capturing seven bridges in the city to prevent their demolition by the withdrawing Wehrmacht. During the night of 4 June, members of the 1st SSF entered Rome, one of the first Allied units to do so. After they secured the bridges, they quickly moved north in pursuit of the retreating Germans.

LIFE Magazine Archives - Carl Mydans Photographer
 
Crews of No 137 Squadron RAF pose with a mascot in front of their Whirlwind Mk I fighter bombers at RAF Manston, Kent.
March 5 1943.


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Left to right: P/O Robert Leslie Smith, DFC/DFM; F/O Edward Lancelot Musgrave RAAF (KIA 18/5/43); P/O Desmond Roberts RNZAF; F/S John McGowan Barclay (KIA 31/7/43); W/O Arthur Gaston Brunet RCAF; F/L John Michael Bryan (KIA 10/6/44); F/O Joseph Laurier DeHoux RCAF (KIA 2/9/43); Sgt. Aubrey Cartwright Smith; F/O John Edward McClure RCAF; Sgt. Norbury Dugdale; Sgt. Thomas Arthur Sutherland; Sgt. Ernest Alfred Bolster; F/O John Maude Hadow; S/L Humphrey St John Coghlan, DFC; and Sgt. Robert Woodhouse. The dog's name was Lynn and belonged to Mike Bryan.
(Text - Courtesy of Robert Bowater - RAF Southend)
 
A P-40F Warhawk is launched via catapult from the USS Chenango during 'Operation Torch' on the morning of 10th, November 1942.

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Operation Torch (8 November 1942 – 13 May 1943) was an Allied invasion of French North Africa during the Second World War. While the French colonies formally aligned with Germany via Vichy France, the loyalties of the population were mixed. Reports indicated that they might support the Allies.
77 Warhawks from the 33rd Pursuit Group were launched from the Chenango but 2 of them were lost to a crash and vanishing in fog. 17 were damaged while landing on the bombed out runway at Port Lyautey airfield, no planes from the 33rd ended up seeing any action.
 
USS Nevada's forward gun turrets and superstructure show the bomb damage from the Japanese attack on 12 December, 1941 Pearl Harbor.

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USS Nevada (BB-36), the second United States Navy ship to be named after the 36th state, was the lead ship of the two Nevada-class battleships. Launched in 1914, Nevada was a leap forward in dreadnought technology; four of her new features would be included on almost every subsequent US battleship: triple gun turrets, oil in place of coal for fuel, geared steam turbines for greater range, and the "all or nothing" armor principle. These features made Nevada, alongside its sister ship Oklahoma, the first US Navy "standard-type" battleships.
Nevada served in both World Wars. During the last few months of World War I, Nevada was based in Bantry Bay, Ireland, to protect supply convoys that were sailing to and from Great Britain. In World War II, she was one of the battleships trapped when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Nevada was the only battleship to get underway during the attack, making the ship "the only bright spot in an otherwise dismal and depressing morning" for the United States. Still, the ship was hit by one torpedo and at least six bombs while steaming away from Battleship Row, forcing the crew to beach the stricken ship on a coral ledge. The ship continued to flood and eventually slid off the ledge and sank to the harbor floor. Nevada was subsequently salvaged and modernized at Puget Sound Navy Yard, allowing her to serve as a convoy escort in the Atlantic and as a fire-support ship in five amphibious assaults (the invasions of Attu, Normandy, Southern France, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa).
At the end of World War II, the Navy decided that, due to age, Nevada would not be retained as part of the active fleet and she was instead assigned as a target ship for the atomic experiments at Bikini Atoll in July 1946 (Operation Crossroads). The ship was hit by the blast from atomic bomb Able, and was left heavily damaged and radioactive. Unfit for further service, Nevada was decommissioned on 29 August 1946 and sunk for naval gunfire practice on 31 July 1948.
 
A Catalina (A24-65) of 43 Squadron RAAF (Black Cats) undergoes engine tests whilst taxiing on Darwin Harbour in 1945. Note the two LAC's working on the port engine. Note also exhaust flame dampers for night ops.
NB: The LACs are naked apart from toolbelts, in croc infested Darwin Harbour
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A US infantryman examines a Pz.39H 735(f) Hotchkiss 1935 H modified 39 with a canon SA 38, which was abandoned in Ostheim, France. 31 January 1945

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Colour by Doug
Photo credit - Nara III-SC 199865
 
M-10 Tank Destroyer of the US 899th Tank Destroyer Battalion during the battle at El Guettar, Tunisia. ca. March 23 1943.

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The battalion supported the 601st TD Battalion during the attack by about fifty tanks of 10.Panzer Division. The attack was beaten off and about 30 German tanks detroyed. However, the 601st lost 20 of its 28 M3 75mm SPMs and the 899th lost seven out of 10 M10 3-inch GMCs engaged.
The fighting at El Guettar in late March was the sole example of the tank destroyer battalions being used according to doctrine as a concentrated force to repulse a massed tank attack.
(Colorised by Paul Kerestes from Romania)
 
23 March 1918.
A wounded soldier of the British 66th Division helped through the streets of Peronne, after returning from the Battle of St Quentin, part of the Battle of the Somme during the German Spring Offensive.

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In March 1918, the 66th Division was assigned to XIX Corps in the Fifth Army, holding an area north of Saint-Quentin, bordering the 24th Division of XIX Corps on the right and 16th (Irish) Division of VII Corps on the left. The corps sector was between the River Cologne in the north and the Omicron in the south.Under a new defence in depth scheme, small strong points in a “forward zone” was to delay and disrupt an attack, harassing it with machine-gun fire. The main body of the division remained in a “battle zone” further back, to make local counterattacks into the forward zone or in reserve in a third “rear zone”. The British were used to deliberate attacks in trench warfare conditions, not the rapid counterattacks on the defensive that the German army had perfected since early 1915 and felt vulnerable in what they saw as exposed positions. Combat units were still kept too close to the front line (across the front, 84 percent of battalions were in the two forward zones), leaving them vulnerable to an attack and a lack of manpower meant that very few of the defensive positions necessary for the scheme to work had been prepared in the rear zone of the Fifth Army.
On the morning of 21 March, the German spring offensive began at the Battle of St. Quentin. Elements of the German 25th Division and 208th Division attacked through a thick fog at dawn, overrunning the two battalions (4th East Lancashires and 2/8th Lancashire Fusiliers) which held positions in the forward zone. By 10.30 am, they had reached the “battle zone”, where the fighting intensified. On the right flank, near the boundary with 24th Division, a reserve company of 2/7th Manchesters held a defensive position from 11:00 am to 7:00 pm, when they surrendered, having lost 70 percent casualties and run out of ammunition. To their left, the 2/6th Manchesters held out until the early afternoon, when the 160 survivors were forced to retreat further into the battle zone. The northern element of the division’s defensive plan was a fortified quarry outside the village of Templeux-le-Guérard, held by the 2/7th Lancashire Fusiliers and 1/5th Border Regiment but this had been quickly surrounded and bypassed by the attackers, to be mopped up later in the day, with only a few men escaping. The village was defended by the 2/6th Lancashire Fusiliers and an artillery battery; in the course of the day, the battery was destroyed while the fusiliers were pushed back towards the edge of the village, clinging on to their positions as night fell. During the day, 711 men of 66th Division had been killed; while detailed figures are not available this would suggest around 1,000 men were wounded and another 2,000 captured.British casualties for the day were 7,500 killed, 10,000 wounded and 21,000 captured; 66th Division is known to have lost 711 men killed.
On the morning of 22 March, German attacks continued to push back the remaining units of the 66th Division, now supported by the 1st Cavalry Division and a handful of tanks. The composite force managed a fighting retreat, with most units avoiding encirclement. Shortly after noon the remnants of the division were ordered to retreat behind the 50th (Northumbrian) Division, which were preparing fresh defences on the original Green Line along the edge of the rear zone. The 66th Division retreated through the new defensive line by 4:00 pm, with the aid of the 5th Durham Light Infantry (DLI), which had been temporarily transferred to support them and the 50th Division took over the front line.Over the following days, the divisions of XIX Corps fell back towards the line of the River Somme, where the 66th Division (plus the 5th DLI) took up positions on the west bank of the river around Barleux and Foucaucourt-en-Santerre, west of Peronne. On 24 March, the German army crossed the Somme and the 2/8th Lancashire Fusiliers counterattacked the bridgeheads without success but continued to hold a line close to the river.Expecting a follow-up attack the next day, 149th Brigade was temporarily attached to 66th Division and both units were slowly pushed back from the banks of the Somme, withdrawing to Assevillers as night fell on 25 March.
The remnants of the 66th Division were holding a position south of the Somme, with the 50th Division to the right and troops from the Third Army over the river to the left. An attack on the morning of 26 March, opening the Battle of Rosières, pushed back the units on the north bank and the 66th Division retired, losing contact with the 50th Division, which fell back on Rosières-en-Santerre to avoid being flanked. “Little’s Composite Battalion” with the remaining troops of the 198th Brigade, moved from reserve to Foucaucourt and defended the village until the early afternoon, retired to Framercourt and then filled a 3,000-yard (2,700 m) gap between the 66th and 39th divisions.The battalion had been formed from stragglers and reinforcement drafts by Lieutenant-Colonel W. B. Little, commander of 1/5th Borders, who had been on leave when the German offensive began and moved up towards the front line during 25 March.Other British troops were north of the 66th Division around Vauvilliers and by that night, the line south of the Somme was held by 16th, 39th, 66th and 50th divisions. The battle continued on 27 March, with the 66th Division pushed back to Harbonniers.That night, the division took up positions between Wiencourt and Guillaucourt, facing north on a line of about 1 mile (1.6 km)] The three brigade headquarters had moved forward to reinforce the front line; until the 66th Division was reorganised later in the year, casualties were so numerous that the brigade structure was not reformed and the brigadiers took turns to command the infantry. On the morning of 28 March, a German attack broke through at Guillaucourt and the 66th Division retreated south to Cayeux-en-Santerre, with the 39th Division on the left. By nightfall, the line had been pushed back to Ignaucourt, a few miles from Amiens.
Elements of the division remained in the fighting line as late as 30 March, when they fought in a counter-attack near Aubercourt under the command of one of the 66th Division brigadiers.The division was relieved by part of the 18th Division on the night of 30/31 March. After ten days’ fighting, only 2,500 men remained in the division and it had almost ceased to function as an organised unit. (David Martin - 'Death of a Division')
(Photo source - © IWM Q 10779)
Aitken, Thomas Keith (Second Lieutenant) (Photographer)
 

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