Photos Colour and Colourised Photos of WW2 & earlier conflicts

Uprising in the Warsaw ghetto. The woman on the front left is Yehudit Neyer, who is holding her mother-in-law's hand. The girl is the daughter of Yehudit and Avraham Neyer, shown to her left. Of the four, only Avraham survived the war. The rest died in the German extermination camp. Warsaw 1943 Nowolipie Street.

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Men of the 1/4 Battalion, Gordon Highlanders, 51st Highland Division resting in a hastily dug trench in a ploughed field near Locon, Pas-de-Calais, during the German spring offensive, 10 April 1918.

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(Photo source - © IWM Q 7854)
Brooke, John Warwick (Lieutenant) (Photographer)
 
Two pilots stand next to their Mosquito Fighter-Bomber, F-For-Freddie, on 6th May 1945. Just 4 days later she would crash, killing both pilots
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They died while performing stunts in the Mossie over Calgary, Canada. Clipped the control tower and lost control, then to seal it a wing was shaved clean off by a metal pole. Their bodies, although thrown clear, were burnt beyond recognition.

They did perform excellently both during the war and during their brief stint as stuntmen after it, stopping off in many towns and cities to fly shows. Even in the day they died, they flew low flying passes at buildings and the control tower successfully, so low that people had to look down, not up, to see them. But a tailwind caught them by surprise and they caught the control tower on what was to be their final stunt. I guess they didn't pass.
 
Members of the 20th Battery, Canadian Field Artillery, stand beside their pack horses, loaded with 18-pounder shells.
This photograph was taken before the Battle of Vimy Ridge in April 1917.

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Colourised by Royston Leonard
 
Boulton Paul Defiant Mk I night-fighter of No. 264 Squadron RAF, silhouetted against the clouds during a low-level pass over its base at Biggin Hill, Kent, April 1941.
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Text & Image Source ©IWM
Colour By Richard James Molloy
 
Ground crew servicing a Gloster Meteor of 616 Squadron RAF at Melsbroek, Belgium. January 1945.

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Note the all-white finish used by the four F.3s sent to Belgium, this was to aid recognition by ground troops during familiarisation training before the operational F.3 aircraft arrived.

Judging the Meteor F.3s were ready for combat over Europe, the RAF finally decided to deploy them on the continent. On 20 January 1945, four Meteors from 616 Squadron were moved to Melsbroek in Belgium and attached to the Second Tactical Air Force, just under three weeks after the Luftwaffe's surprise Unternehmen Bodenplatte attack on New Year's Day, in which Melsbroek's RAF base, designated as Allied Advanced Landing Ground "B.58", had been struck by the piston-engined fighters of JG 27 and JG 54. The 616 Squadron Meteor F.3s' initial purpose was to provide air defence for the airfield, but their pilots hoped that their presence might provoke the Luftwaffe into sending Me 262s against them. At this point the Meteor pilots were still forbidden to fly over German-occupied territory, or to go east of Eindhoven, to prevent a downed aircraft being captured by the Germans or the Soviets.

In March, the entire squadron was moved to Gilze-Rijen and then in April, to Nijmegen. The Meteors flew armed reconnaissance and ground attack operations without encountering any German jet fighters. By late April, the squadron was based at Faßberg, Germany and suffered its first losses when two aircraft collided in poor visibility. The war ended with the Meteors having destroyed 46 German aircraft through ground attack. Friendly fire through misidentification as Messerschmitt Me 262s by Allied anti-aircraft gunners was more of a threat than the already-diminished forces of the Luftwaffe; to counter this, continental-based Meteors were given an all-white finish as a recognition aid.

(Colourised by Richard James Molloy from the UK)
 
A Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawk Mk I of No. 112 Squadron RAF taxies through the sand at a landing ground in the Western Desert.
RAF El Adem, Libya, April 2 1942

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A mechanic sitting on the wing is guiding the pilot, whose forward view is obscured by the aircraft's nose.

(Photo source -© IWM CM 2730)
 
A few of the twelve Soviet Yak-9DD fighters that composed the Special Purpose Air Group sit abreast at the US 97th Bomb Group base at Amendola, near Foggia, Southern Italy.

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As part of the 236. Fighter Aviation Division these fighters transferred next to Soten-Orlik, Yugoslavia, from where they flew ground-attack missions in support of Tito’s partisans.

The Yak 9-DD was the extra-long-range version of the Yak 9. These twelve Yak 9-DD flew non-stop from Belzyi in the Ukraine to Amendola in one single non-stop flight of approximately 807 miles (1,300 km). Unlike the western allies, who favoured external drop tanks, Yakovlev opted to install extra internal fuselage tanks which gave the Yak 9-DD a total range of up to 1,367 miles (2,200 km). (Range values may differ depending on the source).

Note the unusually large National markings on the fuselage and tail.

Note: Late-war grey-grey camo scheme, faded.

Original: I. I. Ovcharenko
 
The German Spring Offensive, March-July 1918
Wounded men coming into Mont des Cats during the Battle of the Lys, 20 April 1918.

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(Photo source - © IWM Q 6541)
Brooke, John Warwick (Lieutenant) (Photographer)
 
Japanese photographer T. Iwamoto of the Dōmei News Agency attaches film of the surrender of the Japanese naval base at Yokosuka to a pigeon for flight to Tokyo to be released in a Japanese newspaper. Yokosuka, Japan, (likely 30 August 1945.

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Colour by Jake
@colourisedpieceofjake

Photographer: Wayne Miller
Source: National Museum of the United States Navy
ID Code 80-G-473708
 
The art of camouflage had reached a high degree of perfection since World War I.
Here U.S. Army Ranger Scouts wear the M1942 camouflage suit that features one of the first U.S. military issued camouflage patterns. This pattern was widely issued at the request of General Douglas MacArthur to Marines in the Pacific theater of WWII, sometime after the Battle of Tarawa. The two-sided motif (lighter color camo for spring and darker for fall) also briefly saw action in the European theater, but was scrapped because of its similarity to German camouflage patterns.

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Colour: Colourised PIECE of JAKE
Source: U.S. Army Signal Corps.
United States. Office of War Information.
Overseas Picture Division. Washington Division; 1944.
 
4./Fallschirmjäger in Florence, Italy. Mid August 1944

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Dispositions on the Gothic Line August-September 1944,
Defending the section of the line around Florence was I Fallschirm Korps of the Fourteenth Army. The 356. Infantry Division was positioned on the eastern flank, the 4. Fallschirmjäger Division was in the centre and the 362nd Infantry Division was on the western flank. They faced forces from the British 13th Corps and the US IV Corps.

(Photo source - Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-588-2292-22)
 
Soviet Combat, Marine Infantry medic in Novorossiysk, September 1943
(Санинструктор морской пехоты, 1943)

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Most of the town was occupied by the German Army on September 10, 1942. A small unit of Soviet sailors defended one part of the town, known as Malaya Zemlya, for 225 days beginning on February 4, 1943, and the town was liberated by the Red Army on September 16, 1943. The heroic defense of the port by the sailors allowed the Soviets to retain possession of the city's bay, which prevented the Germans from using the port for supply shipments. Novorossiysk was awarded the title Hero City in 1973.

Novorossiysk is a city in Krasnodar Krai, Russia.
It is the country's main port on the Black Sea and the leading Russian port for exporting grain.

(Colorised by Olga Shirnina from Russia)
 

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