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My WW-2 Posters Collection Part 3 (0601-0900) It was a crazy work bit I have spent almost 6 hours to convert this huge PDF file into Images (JPG) to allow anyone who would be interested to get some of the Posters (free of use). Should you want to...

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Lt Ray F. Fletcher MIA 1944 is now back Home Airman Missing In Action From WW II Identified – 1st Lt. Ray F. Fletcher. More than 66 years after his plane went down, 1st Lt. Ray F. Fletcher is coming home and will be laid to rest on American soil...

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My WW-2 Posters Collection Part 2 (0301-0600) It was a crazy work bit I have spent almost 6 hours to convert this huge PDF file into Images (JPG) to allow anyone who would be interested to get some of the Posters (free of use). Should you want to...

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My WW-2 Posters Collection Part 1 (0001-0300) It was a crazy work bit I have spent almost 6 hours to convert this huge PDF file into Images (JPG) to allow anyone who would be interested to get some of the Posters (free of use). Should you want to...

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C Bat Book, 306th Field Arty, 77th Div, 1917-1919 (Chap 6)

Category : 77th Division

Chapter 6
The Argonne and Meuse Offensive

On the morning of Sept 24th we awoke to find ourselves in the so-called impregnable Arogonne, just north of the Florent. We had a short rest after placing the guns in position. Everything seemed quiet and secretive, officers going up to reconnoiter wore French uniforms and no American was allowed to walk on the roads or in the open where an aeroplane might spot him. Artillery was moving up hourly and it seemed as if the guns of all calibers were hub to hub. We all knew that a big offensive was to take place and we were bitter because we had had no rest. Zero hour for the history-making barrage was fixed, and all were in suspense. Finally at 2300-H on the 25th we heard the roar of artillery in the distance. At 0555-H on the 26th we opened up fire and added the noise of our guns to the ever-increasing roar of shot and shell.

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The US Army Air Force

Category : Army Air Forces

p-51-usaaf-01

At the peak of its strength in World War II, the United States Army Air Forces (AAF) had more than 2.400.000 men and women in uniform. There were pilots, navigators, bombardiers, gunners, and radio operators, clerks and typists, artists and flautists, teachers, mechanics, statisticians, and engineers-for it took many talents and skills to conduct and support the war in the air. All these persons, from privates to generals, had to be welded into an organization capable of giving direction and coordination to their diverse activities. For combat the men were formed into squadrons, and squadrons into groups. Above the groups were wings, and wings were organized into commands, and commands into the 16 air forces of the AAF. The upper part of the structure had to be built while the war was on, but the foundation WAS old. Some of the squadrons, two of the groups, and one wing had combat records from the First World War. One squadron, the oldest in the Air Force, could trace its history back to 1913.
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