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WWII Photos - Taken / Collected by Family Members

PADDY

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One of my Uncles in the RAF during WWII (in the centre).

UNCLE JOE 003.jpg
secretmap-Holy-Land.jpg
 

PADDY

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UncleJoe.jpg A few more during wartime.

XmasIreland2004 004.jpg
He's on the left with the dog. SOE on Crete.

10sqleeming42a.jpg
At RAF Leeming prior to redeployment to Scotland for bombing the Tirpitz in Norway.

advance-base.jpg
Middle East. Targetting Crete.
 

PADDY

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Flight Log book 003.jpg

Not sure if you can read this log book page. I tracked down a member of the crew in the Halifax Bomber that was behind my Uncle Joe's plane as they approached Crete to bomb various targets.
This is 'his' log book noting what happened during that raid which had consequences for my Uncle.
Note that this gentleman saw FIVE ME109's (single pilot fighter planes) attack. He told me in person that he saw my Uncle's plane get hit by the 109's and it catching fire then starting to bank. He visually saw 'two' parachutes deploy (only two crew got out of the burning plane). One was Joe, the other was a chap called McFarlane. They both subsequently worked for SOE in German Occupied Crete once the resistance picked them up.

Strange how one incident can have a knock on effect you weren't expecting that changes your life course. Post War, instead of becoming an Accountant (he was chartered), he took up the offer of staying in the RAF. Having discovered a flair for languages and other skills (from his surpise excursion on Crete) he later worked in the postwar 'Cold War' in other aspects of Intelligence.
 
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PADDY

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image.jpg

His brother Frank (my uncle) as a Petty Officer on board HMS Edinburgh . She was sunk in the Baltic near Murmansk in 42. He was picked up 'very' quickly and surived. Survival time in that cold water was 'minutes' so he was 'very' lucky to live through it.

hms_edinburgh.jpg
 
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Smithy

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Wonderful photos Paddy! You must be terribly proud of them.

I'll try and dig out some photos of some of my rellies for the thread.
 

ingineer

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Clifton NJ
My brother found a photo never seen before in his effects.
My father on the right a Petty Officer on Saipan, WWII 121seabees, 20th'Marines, presidential unit citation for combat work with the 4th marine division.


Richard
 

Good Ol' Days

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I don't know too much about the history of my granddad (maternal) and g/grandpa (paternal) during WW2. I do know that my maternal grandpa joined the South African Navy at 16 years of age, and that he was fighting up in North Africa (so I'm told). He never mentioned anything about his time in the navy, and I didn't ask (which I now regret as he's passed away!).
ww2 pic 3.jpg This is one taken by my grandpa, but I don't know the story behind it.

ww2 pic 1.jpg This is one of my paternal g/grandpa, and all I know is that he was in Italy, in Lake Como. He is in the middle.

ww2 pic 4.jpg here he is on the far right (bottom picture).

ww2 pic 2.jpg this I believe is a postcard of Mussolini's death. I found this picture interesting.
 

Frk.W

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Stockholm, Sweden
Bit different:

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My grandfather with his air defense regiment, Lv5 in Sundsvall, Sweden, sometime in the early 1940's. Grandpa at in the back, at the very top of the group. Mixed bag of Swedish uniforms; most of them are in m/1939, but there are a couple of m/1923 too, easy to spot at the bottom right corner.

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Grandpa as a lieutenant in m/1939. I think this is one of the portraits taken at his and grandma's wedding, 1942 or 1943, off the top of my head. He ended up a captain.

1053491_10201568559954686_1884417984_o.jpg

...and grandma, second from right, in the Swedish Women's Voluntary Defense m/1931 organisational dress. The Lotta Corps had a lot of members during the war years and performed a variety of civil defense duties in cooperation with the Swedish military. I think grandma probably just did some entry-level basic training or a few months on duty with them, which was common; she didn't really remember much about it. This dress was issued by the organisation to all members and worn as a dress uniform as well as on duty. Staff members and members on active duty with the military wore either bits and pieces of men's uniforms, especially in the early years, and from 1942 on a female uniform issued by the military. This photo was probably taken before her marriage to grandpa above.
 
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Frk.W

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Thank you! He did, and I'm very fond of those WWII era Swedish uniforms. I should scan a few more, pretty sure there's a full-figure one in dress uniform from the wedding, and one taken in the field during the winter, too, with a snow blouse of some sort.
 

MikeKardec

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Los Angeles
My Uncle Parker, Mexico then WWI with the North Dakota National Guard then WWII.

Parker LaMoore in uniform, arms crossed, Co H WWI - F24.jpg

Parker in military uniform - E31.jpg

He was briefly head of security at the port of New Orleans then somehow got out or on detached duty and covered all the Four Power conferences for Scripts-Howard (his old employer, he'd been their foreign desk editor) and wound up as the Secretary to Pat Hurley when he was Ambassador to Chang Kai Shek's Government just prior to their retreat to Taiwan. A crazy military career.

Here's what they thought a tank destroyer was when my Dad graduated from OCS, before long they had the M-10 but ... well, pretty pitiful!

Soldiers n convoy of jeeps - D225.jpg
 
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MikeKardec

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1,157
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Los Angeles
FFF167 A sepia colored proof of a studio photo of LDL in his Army uniform - FFF167.jpg

One more. Dad, just after getting his black panther (Tank Destroyer) Patch, Camp Hood, TX. Amazing to think that not too much earlier they hadn't wanted him because he didn't have enough teeth ... the regs on teeth must have been fairly strict but I guess they didn't want to pay for dental work during the depression.
 
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MisterCairo

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Gads Hill, Ontario
I have both photos below printed off and taped up in my cabin. A young sailor came by for some legal advice, noticed the top photo and asked "who's that in the Civil War uniform?".

I laughed....



Two more from the collection:

Sgt. Raleigh, Royal Fusiliers seconded to the RAF Levies, Iraq:


5852884743_7071638647_m.jpg



Lance Corporal Raleigh, Royal Fusiliers, on leave London, with his step aunt, mother, step father (WO Hearnden, RAF) and little brother George (who is now 75!):


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