Rebuilds, maybe? If they were new production, they would have painted everything before applying markings.
Perhaps upgrades from Mk.II to Mk. IVC?
Cool pic! Helllllooooo, Doggy!Not sure if this one has come up before, but thought it was pretty neat ....
![]()
A Marine on Iwo Jima, with the 7th War Dog Platoon, 25th Marine Regiment, takes a nap while Butch, his war dog, stands guard.
![]()
Reddit - Destruction#### - HMS Boxer (F92) after being hit with two Harpoon missiles during a SINKEX [834 x 1280]
The more I read history the more I wonder how the US "wins" any wars.
The US lost 3 heavy cruisers to Japanese gunnery in the initial one-sided engagement and suffered from shortcomings in the area of communications, poor intelligence, inferior tactical handling and damage control/fire fighting, plus the old mistake of underestimating one's enemy.
The more I read history the more I wonder how the US "wins" any wars.
The US lost 3 heavy cruisers to Japanese gunnery in the initial one-sided engagement and suffered from shortcomings in the area of communications, poor intelligence, inferior tactical handling and damage control/fire fighting, plus the old mistake of underestimating one's enemy.
The more I read history the more I wonder how the US "wins" any wars.
Once again I come to kneel at ‘The Font of Wisdom’ for some trivial ( but to me… vexing ) information, that has me stumped.
Milsurp section? Well, I suppose he might qualify as one... and I figured Picture of the Day might be just the place for some info!
This is my Great-Uncle and although he survived Vimy Ridge he wasn’t so lucky and was killed by an errant AA shell that just happened to fall and strike the trail of the 6” gun he and his crew were repositioning at Lievin. Interesting story how it all came to my attention…
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/kitch...great-uncle-dog-tags-100-years-vimy-1.4073051
But what I cannot decipher is where he was before ending up in the 2nd Siege Battery, Royal Canadian Garrison Artillery.
According to his Attestation, we see the notes that he had previous Militia service…
View attachment 155552
Question 1: I think Cookshire, QC was a bit small at the time to support a full Militia unit… so I think he may have travelled into Sherbrooke a couple of miles away to parade with the “7th Hussars” for 3 years.
However, the notation calls it “7 Hrs.G.M” … and I have no idea what the GM means. Any guesses at this? Certainly not “General Militia”… because we all know the “Reserves” back then were actually called the NPAM… “Non Permanent Active Militia” . A small detail, but I would love to know….
Question 2: He spent 3 months in what they seem to call the "Active Militia" … R.?.G. but then crossed that out and moved the note down to the other line…like it belonged with NPAM service. What was "Active Militia"... like Reservists today on Call-Out? So then it looks like 3 months in the Royal Canadian Garrison Artillery… but WHERE in Quebec would this be?
I would like to reconstruct his movements from leaving the farm at Cookshire and into France… but that may be a bit ambitious.
Any help with that would be greatly appreciated. Also… whatever follows that is gibberish to me… “ to JGH Rem??? “ Any guesses at that acronym? And if we find out, where, pray tell, would they be located?
Ahhhh…questions, questions. Good to be retired and finally have the time to persue some of this family stuff. It gets pretty interesting once you get into it!
Thanks in advance for any light you might shed on all this.
"Winning" has both a military and a political dimension. I don't think the US has won much politically since Korea, and that basically maintained the status quo ante bellum.
In a military sense US forces did well on the battlefield in all of WW1, WW2, and subsequent wars, although they suffered from initial unpreparedness in
WW1, WW2 and Korea and went through some steep and painful learning curves and tactical setbacks on the battlefield as they ramped up their forces and refined their operational concepts.
Numbers matter, and the US has always enjoyed the advantages of industrialized firepower and a large manpower reservoir. Given competent and determined political leadership these advantages have allowed them to prevail in all of their conflicts, even after suffering initial setbacks. Massed firepower and big numbers have been a feature of US military doctrine since the US Civil War. I wouldn't volunteer to be their enemy.
Jet fuel can't melt steel beams. JET FUEL CAN'T MELT STEEL BEAMS! More people should have attended that class.
Winter diesel is a damn poor cutting fuel. Jet fuel sounds so much ###ier though![]()
I would think that the fuel doesn't melt the steel it is the heat of it and what ever else that ignites that takes the temper out of the steel which then cannot support the weight and it just collapses. thats how you bend steel heat and bend.
Huh? And the World Trade Center on 911 never happened...
However, the notation calls it “7 Hrs.G.M” … and I have no idea what the GM means. Any guesses at this? Certainly not “General Militia”… because we all know the “Reserves” back then were actually called the NPAM… “Non Permanent Active Militia” . A small detail, but I would love to know….
Question 2: He spent 3 months in what they seem to call the "Active Militia" … R.?.G. but then crossed that out and moved the note down to the other line…like it belonged with NPAM service. What was "Active Militia"... like Reservists today on Call-Out? So then it looks like 3 months in the Royal Canadian Garrison Artillery… but WHERE in Quebec would this be?