Garand Picture of the day #116 Dachau Concentration Camp
Moments after American soldiers executed SS troops in the coalyard at Dachau.
U.S. soldiers, shocked at what they discovered in the concentration camp, shot and killed a number of German SS guards as they attempted to surrender, including the crew of the Tower B. A group of four SS soldiers who having already surrendered to Lt. William P. Walsh were shot by him, and a soldier under his command, in a railway box car Walsh was outraged and shocked after seeing hundreds of dead bodies stuffed into a railway car. In another incident about twelve German POWs were shot and killed with another three or four wounded in a coal storage area. The officers and soldiers involved pleaded that the prisoners were trying to escape, but the United States official investigation into the incident cast serious doubt on this defence.
More here:
Dachau massacre - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dachau "Today" (well, at least circa 1997)
Here are some pictures that I have scanned from visiting Dachau some years ago. I have a lot more, but they are film based images and not scanned.
Danny
Dachau City Sign:
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...4/r9hmpj-1.jpg
Buliding containing offices and housing for the camp. In front of the building there is a memorial to the victims of the camp added post war:
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...4/zxog8w-1.jpg
The "new" and final crematorium:
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...4/2ijguw-1.jpg
2 Attachment(s)
WWII Aerial Photos of Auschwitz
Auschwitz - Here is a recently discovered picture (left) of the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz. The smoke on the left-hand side of the picture is being produced by the mass burning of bodies in funeral pits. During the war's closing stages the camp's crematoriums were unable to burn all the people murdered by the Nazis.
Roll call - This is another picture of Auschwitz (right). Prisoners lining up for roll call can be seen in the photograph's center.
On missions to Germany, my father in-law's B-24 flew over some of the concentration camps and wanted desperately to bomb the camps so that the prisoners could have a chance to escape and survive. But, alas the AAF prohibited it.