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second world war etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
second world war etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

Death of Nancy "White Mouse" Wake

Nancy Wake was Australia’s most decorated servicewoman. She worked for the French Resistance and the British Special Operations Executive and was nicknamed ‘white mouse’ by the Gestapo because she was so elusive. She died in London yesterday, August 7th, 2011, aged 98.

Born in New Zealand in 1912, Nancy Wake’s family then moved to Australia and settled in Sydney. She worked for a period as a nurse, but travelled to Europe when she was in her twenties and trained herself as a journalist. Living and working in France, Wake married the wealthy French businessman Henri Fiocca, in 1939.

The couple were living in Marseille at the time of the German invasion and occupation of France and became active in the French resistance. Working initially as a courier and then as a saboteur and spy, Nancy Wake became the Gestapo’s most wanted person, with a 5 million franc price on her head. She was arrested in 1943, but was released four days later and managed to escape over the Pyrenees to Spain and eventually to England. She then worked for the British Special Operations Executive and was parachuted into France in April 1944 to deliver weapons to French resistance fighters before D-Day. She coordinated resistance activity prior to the D-Day landings, helped to recruit new members and carried out attacks on the Gestapo Headquarters in Montluçon in central France.

Her husband, however, was captured, tortured and executed by the Gestapo, in October 1943, for refusing to give her up. She was not aware of his death until the end of the war. She returned to Australia after the war and stood as a Liberal candidate in the 1949 and 1951 Australian federal elections. When she failed to win a seat in the 1951 election, she returned to England and married the ex RAF pilot John Forward in 1957.

Wake was awarded the French Légion d’Honneur and as well as Britain’s George’s Medal in 1945 and the US Medal of Freedom. In 2004, she was made companion of the Order of Australia. Her autobiography The White Mouse was published in 1985.

Talking about her wartime activities, Nancy Wake stated that: ‘Freedom is the only thing worth living for. While I was doing that work, I used to think it didn't matter if I died, because without freedom there was no point in living.’

In a statement issued, today, the Australian Prime Minster Julia Gillard described her as ‘a woman of exceptional courage and resourcefulness whose daring exploits saved the lives of hundreds of Allied personnel and helped bring the Nazi occupation of France to an end.’

She continued: ‘Today our nation honours a truly remarkable individual whose selfless valour and tenacity will never be forgotten. Nancy Wake will remain an abiding inspiration to generations of Australians’.

Nancy Wake is expected to be cremated and her ashes scattered at Montluçon.

Wehrmacht (German Army): Rare Pictures: Part 21

Arms for the Volksstum. In the later stages of the war. The Volkssturm got very basic and little arms

 APCs from the German 116 Panzer (116.Pz.Div.). In the background - the destroyed remains of an American tank M-10. Area Saint Vith, The Ardennes.


 German soldiers with magnetic mines

A German checks out a captured Russian soldier. In 1941
Men of the Das Reich Division with a captured Soviet banner

Dead German soldiers at Stalingrad

Seems like a massacre occurred here in Stalingrad after the Germans lost the town
Germans examines a French tank. 1940. No wonder France was overrun so easily. I mean the tanks look primitive!

A German ambulance at the Eastern Front in late 1941. A lot of bullet-holes
German propaganda pamphlet in occupied Russia
Hitler visits an armament factory
Arnhem Garrison commander Major-General Kussin was killed by men of the 3rd Parachute Battalion as he sped towards his headquarters. It is alleged that the man was scalped and his decorations torn off by British soldiers
Matthäus Hetzenauer (December 23, 1924 in Tyrol, Austria - October 3, 2004) was a German sniper in the 3rd Mountain Division on the Eastern Front of the World War II, who was credited with 345 kills. His longest confirmed kill was reported at 1100 metres.
Hetzenauer trained as a sniper from March 27 through July 16, 1944, before being assigned to the 3rd Gebirgsjäger Division, issued both a K98 rifle with 6x scope and a Gewehr 43 rifle with 4x scope.
On November 6, 1944, he suffered head trauma from artillery fire, and was awarded the Verwundeten-Abzeichen three days later.
On multiple occasions he served with fellow sniper Josef Allerberger. The two of them killed many Soviet soldiers with speed and ease.
Gefreiter Hetzenauer received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 17 April 1945. Generalleutnant and Divisions commander Paul Klatt had recommended Hetzenauer because of his numerous sniper kills, which in sum defeated two strong enemy companies without fear for his own safety under artillery fire and enemy attacks. This recommendation was approved by General der Gebirgstruppe Karl von Le Suire and General der Panzertruppe Walter Nehring.
Hetzenauer was captured by Soviet troops the following month, and eventually served 5 years of routinely appalling conditions in a Soviet prison camp.
He died on October 3, 2004, after several years of deteriorating health.
A German SS officer with Ukrainian girls
A German assault team prepares to leave for an attack in Stalingrad
Stalingrad again
A shell scooped out a bit of steel from this Tiger tank
A 16 year Volkssturm boy in late 1944
Going to bury a dead comrade

Here is mail!
A car or a boat?
Determined to prepare dinner!
A Russian women gives flowers to German soldiers. Stalin would have foamed at the mouth!
Leningrad is near!
German women give bread to boy soldiers departing for the front
In the last stages of the war a desperate Hitler was sending boys to fight the Soviet army


The industrious Wehramcht used this too for transport!


MORE WEHRMACHT IMAGES

Wehrmacht (German Soldiers): Part 18

Comrade and allies. A German soldier with a Bulgarian soldier
Italian reconnaissance vehicles AS42 Sahariana.

NOTES

In the 1930s the Italian Army in East and North Africa had used some high mobility vehicles armed with heavy machine guns, but the beginning of military operations in Libya against British forces in autumn of 1940 revealed the good performance of enemy wheeled weapon carriers, some of which were captured and utilized during the Italian counter attacks of 1941. The Italian Army captured a large number of British light trucks, some of which were later armed with Italian-made machine-guns and light guns. The Italians were so impressed with these that in 1942 several AS 37 Autocarro Sahariano (Sahara trucks) were modified for use as weapons carriers. These mainly unarmoured vehicles were used to support the armoured cars (available in insufficient quantity) for patrolling and scouting, especially against the British Long Range Desert Group.

Source: msvn

German special forces soldier in Africa.
Hungarian soldiers
Italian pilots on the Eastern Front.

Italians from the parachute division "Folgore".

THE FOLGORE DIVISION


The Folgore Parachute Brigade is the largest unit of paratroopers (paracadutisti) of the Italian Army; a second smaller unit is the 4th Alpini Regiment Monte Cervino . The name Folgore is Italian for lightning.

The Folgore (Thunderbolt) operates as Light Infantry, capable of both air-landing and parachute operations, and has a marginal mechanized role. It is part of the Projection Forces under the 1° Commando FOD.

In 1941, a Parachutist division was completed and was designated the 185th Airborne Division Folgore. It was trained by German officers for the planned assault on Malta in Operation Hercules. During course of the North African Campaign, it was engaged in ground combat operations.

During the Second battle of El Alamein the Folgore Division resisted the attack of the British 131st (Queen's) Infantry Brigade, the 44th Infantry Division, the 7th Armoured Division (Desert Rats) and the Free French Brigade . The remnants of the Folgore Division were withdrawn from El Alamein on 3 November 1942, without water and carrying their anti-tank guns by hand in pieces. The survivors were reorganized into the 185th Folgore Parachute Battalion. At 2:35 pm on November 6, after having exhausted all its ammunition, the remainder of the Division finally surrendered to the British forces. In honour of their bravery, the British commander allowed them to surrender without having to show a white flag or raise their hands.

Italian soldiers stand in rapt attention
Italian soldiers in action
Normandy beaches. June 1944. The song would soon be over
This SS car has met with an accident

Street fight in Smolensk. July 1941
Frightened glum Volkssturm men  in March 1945. The end was near.
A soldier from the unit "Great Germany" throws a grenade
He seems to be carrying a grenade launcher. German technology was advanced

A German patrol

German with a 7.92 self-loading rifle of Walter G-43 (W)

The Gewehr 43 or Karabiner 43 (G43, K43, Gew 43, Kar 43) is a 7.92x57mm Mauser caliber semi-automatic rifle developed by Nazi Germany during World War II. It was a modification of the G41(W) using an improved gas system similar to that of the Soviet Tokarev SVT40.

Germany's quest for a semi-automatic infantry rifle resulted in two designs - the G41(M) and G41(W), from Mauser and Walther arms respectively. The Mauser design proved unreliable in combat when introduced in 1941 and at least 12,755 were made. The Walther design fared better in combat but still suffered from reliability problems. In 1943 Walther introduced a new modified gas system with aspects of the G41(W) providing greatly improved performance. It was accepted and entered into service as the Gewehr 43, renamed Karabiner 43 in 1944, with production amounting to just over 400,000 with production only lasting from 1943 to 1945.

The Gewehr 43 was never mass produced and was never general issue, the official list of issued units was to be 1 in every platoon, and those were to be issued to a select specialist (designated marksman/engineer). Despite the Gewehr being a good improvement over the problematic Gewehr 41, and being a more effective combat rifle over slower bolt-action rifles, the Gewehr 43 was never as reliable or as robust and simple as the Allied rifles like the American M-1 rifle and Russian SVT-40 rifle, nor was the Gewehr 43 a common rifle to see in combat, for every 1 Gewehr 43 produced by the Germans, the Americans produced 50 M-1 rifles and the Soviets produced 20 SVT-40 rifles.

Though the Gewehr 43 was generally considered to be a good semi-automatic rifle, had good accuracy, and did fairly well in combat (better than the G41), it was more complicated to produce than Allied rifles, and was not as mechanically reliable as American and Russian semi-automatic rifles, the Germans were fighting against the tide of war, and the Gewehr rifles were produced much more crudely and primitively than the Allied weapon factories. Since it was never generally issued, or mass produced, the Gewehr 43 was never a big contender among Nations with general issue semi-automatic rifles like the U.S. and the USSR.

Defending the coast
The last desperate defence. The outer perimeter of forts Koenigsberg. 1945.

SS soldiers with machine gun ZB-53 (MG 37 (t)

The ZB-53 was a machine gun used by the Czechoslovak army designated TK vz. 37 ("TK" means "těžký kulomet", heavy machine gun. "vz" means "vzor", Model) and later used by German forces during World War II as the MG 37(t).

It was an belt-fed, air-cooled weapon that served both the infantry support and vehicle weapons roles. The British adopted a version of the ZB-53 as the Besa machine gun for their armoured forces.
Allies. German and Hungarian soldiers




MORE WEHRMACHT IMAGES