F2A-1 fighter (BuNo 1393) of the United States Navy, circa 1941.
The F2A-1 was the naval version of the Brewster Buffalo and holds the distinction of being their first monoplane fighter.
( NASM Archives)

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The splendidly named Lieutenant Hiawatha Mohawk was one of the few Native American pilots to fly with the USAAF during WW2.
Lt. Mohawk flew a P-47 Thunderbolt with the 319th FS / 325th FG of the US 12th Air Force during the Italian Campaign in support of the US Fifth Army.
Here we see him being strapped into his P-47 ahead of another sortie.
Lt. Mohawk scored two confirmed aerial victories and remained in the USAF post-war flying the new generation of jet fighters.

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Paratroopers of the 3rd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division in their C-47 aircraft en route to Sicily. July 1943.

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On January 25, 1944, this photo shows a 9-year-old Italian boy, Vicenzo Biscardo, formerly homeless, in the role of junior military policeman. He helped MP Mahlon Smith of Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, direct traffic in San Vittore (near Rome) Italy.
Original photo: U.S. Army Illustrated Services.
Color: Daniele Sallieri GHOST of WW2 Color photos

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GI of the I&R platoon, HQ Co., 44th Infantry Division US Army with freed slave laborers on the back: "A bunch of slave laborers we let loose from a camp we liberated a few days ago. You need French, Italian, Czech, Polish, Russian or German to talk to 'em. We got 'em helping us with KP. Boy, can they eat!"

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Tank Altar, Saipan, 24 June 1944. U.S. Navy Chaplain O. David Herrmann, attached to a Marine unit on Saipan, uses a destroyed Japanese tank for an altar as he holds services for the dead.

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Gunnery Sergeant John Basilone was the only Marine to receive both the Medal of Honor and the Navy Cross during World War II. At the Battle of Guadalcanal, Basilone singlehandedly defended a narrow pass against a force of over 3,000 Japanese. Afterward, he was offered a safer training position. However, he turned it down in favor of going back into action at Iwo Jima, where he gave his life on the battlefield.

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"Pvt. James L. McKinney, Monroe, LA., H Company, digging in a machine gun position on a hill emplacement, after an amphibious operation. Hill overlooking Brolo, Sicily." August 11th 1943.

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Private First Class Carl Gorman during the Battle of Garapan, Saipan, July 1944.
Interestingly at this late stage of the war, PFC Gorman is actually wearing a Hawley helmet liner. These proved to be rather fragile in practice and were rapidly phased out in favour of the more robust impregnated cotton duck type.
( Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian)

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The Superfortress bomber takes flight...
On September 21, 1942, the U.S. B-29 Superfortress makes its debut flight in Seattle, Washington. It was the largest bomber used in the war by any nation.
The B-29 was conceived in 1939 by Gen. Hap Arnold, who was afraid a German victory in Europe would mean the United States would be devoid of bases on the eastern side of the Atlantic from which to counterattack. A plane was needed that would travel faster, farther, and higher than any then available, so Boeing set to creating the four-engine heavy bomber.
The plane was extraordinary, able to carry loads almost equal to its own weight at altitudes of 30,000 to 40,000 feet. It contained a pilot console in the rear of the plane, in the event the front pilot was knocked out of commission. It also sported the first radar bombing system of any U.S. bomber.
The Superfortress made its test run over the continental United States on September 21, but would not make its bombing-run debut until June 5, 1944, against Bangkok, in preparation for the Allied liberation of Burma from Japanese hands. A little more than a week later, the B-29 made its first run against the Japanese mainland. On June 14, 60 B-29s based in Chengtu, China, bombed an iron and steel works factory on Honshu Island. While the raid was less than successful, it proved to be a morale booster to Americans, who were now on the offensive.
Meanwhile, the Marianas Islands in the South Pacific were being recaptured by the United States, primarily to provide air bases for their new B-29s—a perfect position from which to strike the Japanese mainland on a consistent basis. Once the bases were ready, the B-29s were employed in a long series of bombing raids against Tokyo. Although capable of precision bombing at high altitudes, the Superfortresses began dropping incendiary devices from a mere 5,000 feet, firebombing the Japanese capital in an attempt to break the will of the Axis power. One raid, in March 1945, killed more than 80,000 people. But the B-29's most lethal missions would come in August, as it was the only plane capable of delivering a 10,000-pound bomb—the atomic bomb.
The Enola Gay and the Bock’s Car took off from the Marianas, on August 6 and 9, respectively, and flew into history.

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Company "D", 39th Combat Engineer Pfc. Paul R. Umstead of Eagle Grove Iowa, arming anti-tank mines at the Anzio Beachhead, Italy - March 8, 1944
Note that he has a M1903A3 Springfield rifle slung over his shoulder, an M1 Thompson SMG is leaning against the wooden mine transport box

Paul Russell Umstead, born December 3, 1916 in Eagle Grove, Iowa. In 1937, he was listed as working for the Chicago & North Western Railroad as a snow shoveller. In the 1940 census, he was still listed as a ‘snow worker’
Enlisted in the Army April 21, 1942 at Fort Des Moines, Iowa. Departed for overseas January 14, 1943. Returned from foreign service September 29, 1945, honorably discharged October 13, 1945
Married Maxine Sanders in 1948. Paul died and was buried in Eagle Grove in 2001, Maxine died two years later and was buried beside him
From the LIFE Magazine Archives - TimeLIFE

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This is the dorsal-gunner's position within a B-29 Superfortress.
The gunner sat in what was jokingly called "the barber's seat" with 360 degree vision through the low-drag perspex dome.
From this position, using the sophisticated computing gunsight and fire-control system he aimed and fired the .50 cal turrret (which was positioned behind him) remotely, using the twin pistol-grips.
(US Air Force )

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PT-134 crewman adds symbols for "Killed" railway boxcars to the boat's scoreboard, after she raided Japanese transportation. Facilities at Cebu City . Officer may be the boat's c/o, Lt. Edward J. Pope. Note . 50cal machine guns radio antenna and torpedo.

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This Japanese A6M-2 fighter sports US markings.
It was captured during the campaign in the Aleutian Islands and made airworthy by USN aviation specialists, in July 1942.
Subsequently it was flown for the purposes of evaluation, as seen here.
(NASM)

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A fine original colour air > air shot of a flight of Bell P-39 Airacobras.
Note the prominent discolouration midway along the side of their fuselages due to the position of the exhausts of their mid-engined design.
(NASM)

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