Picture of the day

Goose, you say?

Grumman%20JRF%20Goose%20aircraft%20on%20the%20ground%20at%20the%20Grumman%20Aircraft%20facility%20on%20Long%20Island%20NY%20two%20women%20scooter%20drivers%20and%20a%20pilot%20are%20in%20the%20foreground%20circa%201943..jpg


Kodachrome for the win. :)
 
That's a remarkable bit of footage for a lot of reasons.

They took a handprint for positive confirmation of identity, I assume. And then they sent him and his plane to the bottom. That's an amazingly expensive casket, but I can't imagine anyone would want to fly gunner in that plane again after this. Probably best to send it as well.
 
Today (last night, actually) marks the 75th anniversary of the initial bombing of Hamburg, a.k.a Operation Gomorrah.

The RAF's first use of Window, aluminium chaff that thoroughly disoriented the defensive radar.

bf7feba5a47b9b0ec74ce34b93a9ae57.jpg


Not much to look at, but it worked:

2931708052_6d7d6a7cb1_b.jpg


They made a pretty thorough job of it. Hamburg was hammered very hard, and experienced the now-well-known "firestorm" phenomenon.

Hamburg-1.jpg


csm_14683-Hamburg_Operation_Gomorrha_epd-Bild_01_61decc82cc.jpg
 
Admiral Scheer lays capsized in Kiel, occupied Germany, in May 1945 -

admiralscheerkiel.jpg


After the war, the Allies extended the shoreline and just buried her where she lay.

And her location today - (the big curved outcropping of trees)

scheertoday.jpg


Brookwood
 
Admiral Scheer lays capsized in Kiel, occupied Germany, in May 1945 -

admiralscheerkiel.jpg


After the war, the Allies extended the shoreline and just buried her where she lay.

And her location today - (the big curved outcropping of trees)

scheertoday.jpg


Brookwood

First pic shows the modular construction of German U boats as well, made elimination of production difficult.

Grizz
 
"She was partially broken up for scrap after the end of the war, though part of the hull was left in place and buried with rubble from the attack in the construction of a new quay. The number of casualties from her loss is unknown".....
 
Admiral Scheer lays capsized in Kiel, occupied Germany, in May 1945 -

After the war, the Allies extended the shoreline and just buried her where she lay.

And her location today - (the big curved outcropping of trees)

scheertoday.jpg


Brookwood


Are you sure that this photo is where the remains of the ship are located .... everything I can find suggests that there is a still a canal/waterway where the ships remains were
 
Yup I'm pretty sure, I haven't been there myself, but this is where the Deutsches Marinemuseum says it is. The canal is just out of the frame.

"No ceremony or marking was done for the wreck as it was covered with rubble. In 1978 the Kieler Nachrichten newspaper pinpointed the location, which is inside the new Kiel Naval Arsenal. For many years it was said to be under the parking lot shown above, but with GPS and satellite imagery it’s now thought to be directly under the line of trees and brown grass just slightly to the parking lot’s southeast, in the above image’s center."

Here's a map of the harbour as it is today with the location of the Scheer superimposed over top. You can see how the shoreline has been advanced and the wreck is now well inland.

Scheer.jpg
 
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Yup I'm pretty sure, I haven't been there myself, but this is where the Deutsches Marinemuseum says it is. The canal is just out of the frame.

"No ceremony or marking was done for the wreck as it was covered with rubble. In 1978 the Kieler Nachrichten newspaper pinpointed the location, which is inside the new Kiel Naval Arsenal. For many years it was said to be under the parking lot shown above, but with GPS and satellite imagery it’s now thought to be directly under the line of trees and brown grass just slightly to the parking lot’s southeast, in the above image’s center."

Here's a map of the harbour as it is today with the location of the Scheer superimposed over top. You can see how the shoreline has been advanced and the wreck is now well inland.

Scheer.jpg


Thanks

(Ich verstehe nur "Einbahnstraße")
 
I wonder how long it took to clean up after WW2. There were cubic miles of steel, aluminum, mines, bombs, bodies, and debris to get arranged.

I know there are still addresses in Klaipeda (was Memel) Lithuania that haven't been rebuilt yet. Barring a massive real estate boom, they likely never will. But some substantial effort must have been put in to simply clearing the streets so cities could function...

One wonders how much of that was organized, and if so under what jusridiction, and how much of it was Papa telling the kids "bring me bricks, we're building a house".
 
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