-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Surpmil
they wouldn’t take up too much space or weight in the container,
Well, as a DZ controller, I can tell you that everything in a parachute drop is weight and is considered...needed or not.
-
-
01-24-2017 12:22 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
Is there a No4 rifle with a spike bayonet attached, in either picture in Post 93, because I'm struggling to see one?
-
-
-
Contributing Member
Jim,
Absolutely correct.....its all relative to the chute (s) to be used as well!
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
-
Thank You to Gil Boyd For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
a No4 rifle with a spike bayonet attached, in either picture in Post 93
Almost the center foredge of the table...
-
-
§sending bayonets to the European resistance fighters........ They must have thought someone was playing a joke or taking the pee out of them. Nope. Not even the most dim witted civil servant or ordnance stores packer/dispatcher would be that stupid. They packed what was on the freight manifest Just my view of course
-
-
Legacy Member
Thanks Jim, I can't see it on my Lap top but I take your word that it's there.
I seem to recall hearing or seeing somewhere that bayonets were dropped with the SMLE or P14 rifles (I can't remember which) to the Norwegian
Resistance during WW2 who duly ditched the bayonets.
-
-
Advisory Panel
Nice : Maquisards de Levens posant à Nice devant l'hôtel Scribe le matin du 29 août 1944 ( doc Paniccaci)
Attachment 80007
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
-
Thank You to Surpmil For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Surpmil
Maquisards de Levens
Excellent pic. Looks like bags of battlefield pickups, 1944 would be right for that. Stolen boots and full equipment.
-
-
-
-
Legacy Member
Immediately after any major "contact" after D-Day, the countryside would have been littered with all sorts of "stuff". Not all of it would have been recovered by Allied "post-action battlefield tidiness" units.
By the time the Allies rolled into Paris, the "bag" would have been very mixed, depending on where in the resistance "hierarchy" one stood.
Between stuff stashed in barns during the German
invasion, air-drops, battlefield pickups and outright theft from the Germans, they would have had a VERY motley collection, as per the photo.
As long as it did the job for training or operations, I guess it was "accepted".
-