German army staff car belonging to the 4th Panzer Division. Dusseldorf Germany 1940. Deich Strasse
Spanish Wehrmacht General Agustin Munoz Grandes in Grafenwohr Bavaria Germany 1942. Blue Division Azul
Generaloberst Friedrich Fromm
American infantry GIs unloaded from landing craft. Omaha Beach Normandy France. D-Day plus 4 1944
Blown up German train on its side. Under new Bridge transporting American GIs into Worms Germany 1945
Pied Piper of Hamelin / Der Rattenfanger. Braunschweigisches Staatstheater Mittwoch 10.03. 1943
Dr. Alexander Schum
Fotograf: Dr. Jaeger
American Servicemen / GIs returning home from Europe after World War Two. New York harbor June 1946
On board the Ocean liner SS George Washington
Madame Butterfly. BRAUNSCHWEIGISCHES STAATSTHEATER 01.10.1943 18:30
Dr. Alexander Schum
Fotograf: Dr. Jaeger
GIs of the 101st Cavalry Regiment in Ruhpolding Bavaria 1945 with captured sand camo Stoewer Typ 40
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
American GIs waiting for Invasion of Europe, D-Day. Kent England 1944.
American officers of the 101st Cavalry Regiment in Heidelberg Germany 1945. Heiliggeistkirche Church in background.
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
GIs of the 101st Cavalry Regiment in Ruhpolding Bavaria 1945 smoking, standing beside German Wehrmacht officers.
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
German Flak Luftwaffe officer surrender with girlfriend to American GIs in Schloss Heiligenberg near Darmstadt 1945.
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
Gypsies freed from a German transport train, collect bed material from American GIs. Bischofshofen Austria 1945.
101st Cavalry Regiment.
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
Little Bavarian Girl welcomes American GIs of the 101st Cavalry Regiment in Ruhpolding Bavaria 1945
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
Makeshift Combat Hospital in Ruhpolding Bavaria 1945 for German POWs and American Gis
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
two GIs at the Vaughan Rd. in Cleobury, England ~1944
two GIs at the Church Street in Cleobury, England ~1944
Head of Medicine in the German Army, Doctor Siegfried Adolf Handloser, 9th Panzer Division. Ukraine 1941.
Generaloberstabsarzt Prof.Dr.med. Siegfried Adolf Handloser (25 March 1885 – 3 July 1954),
Chefs des Wehrmachtsanitätswesens (Chief of the Medical Services of the Wehrmacht).
It was the most important medical position in the entire German Armed Forces and the Waffen-SS.
The medal below the 1914 Eisernes Kreuz II.Klasse is Grossherzoglich Oldenburgisches Friedrich August-Kreuz I.Klasse