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16-011 Garand Picture of the Day - 83 Inf Div

A U.S. Army soldier of the 83rd Infantry Division lies dead in the outskirts of the town of Gey during the Battle of Hürtgen Forest. The battle was the longest battle on German ground during war and is the longest single battle the U.S. Army has ever fought. The battles took place from 19 September 1944 to 16 December 1944, over barely 50 square miles (130 km), east of the Belgian-German border. On 10 December 1944, the fight for the town of Gey began. Gey was a strategic town situated in a valley through which all roads leading from the Hürtgen forest intersect. It was a lynchpin in the German’s network of defenses and was fortified to protect the vital approaches to the town of Düren. It would take U.S. troops three days of intense house-to-house combat to seize the town. The Battle of Hürtgen Forest would cost the Americans 33,000 casualties and losses, and the Germans 28,000. Near Gey, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
. December 1944.
Image taken by Tony Vaccaro - In 1943, with the Allied invasion of Europe imminent, a newly drafted 21-year old Tony Vaccaro applied to the US Army Signal Corps. He had developed a passion for photography and knew he wanted to photograph the war. “They said I was too young to do this,” Tony says, holding his finger as if taking a photo, “but not too young to do this,” turning his finger forward, pulling a gun trigger. Not one to be denied, Tony went out and purchased a $47.00 Argus C3 and carried the camera into the war with him. He would fight with the 83rd Infantry Division for the next 272 days, playing two roles – a combat infantryman on the front lines and a photographer who would take roughly 8,000 photographs of the war.

Tony is now 92 and lives in Long Island City, NY.
Tony Vaccaro | Underfire
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Last edited by Mark in Rochester; 01-11-2016 at 12:44 PM.
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The pictures on the Vaccaro site are haunting. I think I need to get a CD of the movie. thanks for posting.
Jerry Liles
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Regular combat photos in the ETO rarely showed dead GIs, only Germans. IIRC, the first time US KIAs were shown was Iwo?
Real men measure once and cut.
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The above photo, therefore, was unusual: it was the first time an image of dead American troops appeared in media during World War II without their bodies being draped, in coffins, or otherwise covered up. ...
Taken by George Strock in February 1943, it was not published until [Life's] September 20th 1943 issue. In that September, this photo and other equally gruesome and graphic pictures of WWII were finally OK’d by the Office of War Information’s censors, in part because President Roosevelt feared that the American public might be growing complacent about the war and its horrific toll. Even than, in the picture, the Americans’ faces were not shown–a practice continued until Korean War to preserve soldiers’ privacy in death.
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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Originally Posted by
Mark in Rochester
the Americans’ faces were not shown–a practice continued until Korean War to preserve soldiers’ privacy in death.
I remember the faces looked grossly altered...their attempt at the time to photoshop I guess. And it makes sense.
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