Picture of the day

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Soldiers of the US 3rd Infantry on maneuvers in 1942 on Newfoundland, a northeastern island in Canada. The Willys/Ford Jeep has a M3 37mm (1.46 inch) anti-tank gun on a pedestal mount and beside it is a Browning 1917A1 .30 Cal water-cooled machine gun. Note the small flag on the front.
 
https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/battle-of-the-gothic-line

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The glory of accepting the Axis surrender fell to the Brazilians, as the Canadian fire brigade was sent to Walcheren in early 1945. It seems the strategic Axis priority was to keep an escape route into Austria open until the very end.

Its just as well. Can you imagine the further cost if Allied forces had to fight uphill along the Po River Valley and into the Alps?
Gotta love this pic!

Believe it or not, it's used on the front cover of Herbert McBride's book "A Rifleman Went To War".........a book about his service in the Great War!

Obviously, the printer wasn't too knowledgeable.....
:D :D
 

Aircraft Elevator from the Hangar Deck of an unidentified US Aircraft Carrier in the Pacific, probably the USS Enterprise [CV-6]. Unpublished photo for LIFE magazine by Peter Stackpole, 1941.​

 
Gotta love this pic!

Believe it or not, it's used on the front cover of Herbert McBride's book "A Rifleman Went To War".........a book about his service in the Great War!

Obviously, the printer wasn't too knowledgeable.....
:D :D

https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/battle-of-the-gothic-line

4ef14c98-88c1-442e-9488-5af0e3125d86.jpg







The glory of accepting the Axis surrender fell to the Brazilians, as the Canadian fire brigade was sent to Walcheren in early 1945. It seems the strategic Axis priority was to keep an escape route into Austria open until the very end.

Its just as well. Can you imagine the further cost if Allied forces had to fight uphill along the Po River Valley and into the Alps?

https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/battle-of-the-gothic-line

4ef14c98-88c1-442e-9488-5af0e3125d86.jpg







The glory of accepting the Axis surrender fell to the Brazilians, as the Canadian fire brigade was sent to Walcheren in early 1945. It seems the strategic Axis priority was to keep an escape route into Austria open until the very end.

Its just as well. Can you imagine the further cost if Allied forces had to fight uphill along the Po River Valley and into the Alps?
I hadnt noticed this before but the reference to “fire brigade” is curious. If it meant 5th (fifth) Cdn Infantry Brigade — they were not in Italy but they were in Walcheren … if it refers to 1st (first) Cdn Infantry Brigade … they were in Italy and at Gothic line .. in fact the whole works from Pachino… but they were not at Walcheren … 1st Cdn Inf Bde did end up in Holland though via Livorno and Marseilles etc
 
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I hadnt noticed this before but the reference to “fire brigade” is curious. If it meant 5th (fifth) Cdn Infantry Brigade — they were not in Italy but they were in Walcheren … if it refers to 1st (first) Cdn Infantry Brigade … they were in Italy and at Gothic line .. in fact the whole works from Pachino… but they were not at Walcheren … 1st Cdn Inf Bde did end up in Holland though via Livorno and Marseilles etc
Thank you.
 
The Marder III, or Sd.Kfz 139:

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A classic example of making due with what you have at hand.

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Here's one stuck in the squoosh for which Russia is famous:

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A German tank hunter, bult on a Czech chassis, sporting a Russian gun. Here's one captured by the British, thus completing the grand slam:

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All it needs is an Irish mechanic, fueled by Italian vino rosso.
 
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Latvian servicemen with the flags of Ukraine and Latvia. Photo credits: Cabinet of Ministers of Latvia

I wasn't aware that Latvia used the No 4 as their parade rifle.
 
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Hauptmann (Captain) Friedrich Konrad Winkler was the Kompanieführer (Company Commander) of the 6. Kompanie/Grenadier-Regiment 577 during the battles at Barrikady Gun Factory in Stalingrad. In January 1943, his regiment was destroyed and Winkler was captured in February and he died shortly after his capture, at the age of 34 in POW camp Beketowka. Good shot of him showing his field glasses (only NCOs and officiers were issued with these), his Eisernes Kreuz I (EK I/Iron Cross first class), his Verwundetenabzeichen (Wound badge) underneath, and to the left, his Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen (Infantry Assault Badge). You can clearly see that he was wearing a broken Infantry Assault Badge. Breaking the assault badge was commonly done by the Stalingrad veterans as an indication that earning the assault badge in Stalingrad was a different level of achievement than earning it somewhere else
 
I wasn't aware that Latvia used the No 4 as their parade rifle.

Donated by Canada in 2019 on the centenary of the establishment of the Latvian Army following WWI, which at the time was equipped with British equipment, including Enfields.
 
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