Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

WWII Photos - Taken / Collected by Family Members

Atticus Finch

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,718
Location
Coastal North Carolina, USA
Two photos of my father in flight school and his uniform that I found in his and Mom's closet after he passed away. No, that's not his A-1. That's my Goodwear and I put it there just so it could be near some originals.

Picture033-1.jpg


Dscn0048-1.jpg


0318121824a-1.jpg


AF
 

Captain Nemo

Familiar Face
Messages
60
Location
Texas
^^True, although you need to be in for a couple of years to get a Good Conduct medal, and it's the only one he's got.

True, although the time for eligibility to receive a GCM was waived down to one year during WWII. It is possible that blackjack's father was in one of the many divisions that spent over a year training before headin overseas. Or, his father could have been stationed in the CONUS permanently. We can't tell what rank blackjack's father is or what unit patch he wears, snce his grandparents are in the right position to block that view.
 

Widebrim

I'll Lock Up
True, although the time for eligibility to receive a GCM was waived down to one year during WWII. It is possible that blackjack's father was in one of the many divisions that spent over a year training before headin overseas. Or, his father could have been stationed in the CONUS permanently. We can't tell what rank blackjack's father is or what unit patch he wears, snce his grandparents are in the right position to block that view.

You are correct. I was just trying to show that the photo could not have been taken just after Basic Training, as blackjack was speculating.
 

Captain Nemo

Familiar Face
Messages
60
Location
Texas
You are correct. I was just trying to show that the photo could not have been taken just after Basic Training, as blackjack was speculating.

Ah, yes-- thanks for the clarification! I fully agree with you on that. It would solve a lot of the mystery if blackjack had access to his father's service record so that we could piece together a probable timeframe for that picture.
 

A Bomber General

New in Town
Messages
29
Location
Whitehouse, Ohio
Joseph F. Carter 1942.jpg
My great grandfather Joseph F. Carter upon his enlistment in the Army Air Force at age 39 in 1943. He served in the Pacific theater for the remainder of the war then remained in the Air Force until his retirement in 1963.
 

A Bomber General

New in Town
Messages
29
Location
Whitehouse, Ohio
A couple of photos of my step-grandfather Arnold Watterson. He served as a crew chief with the 546th Squadron, 384th Bomb Group, 8th AF at Grafton Underwood, England from 1943-1945.
Watterson's ground crew 1944.jpg
Sad Sack with Ground Crew.jpg
Anold and the Challenger.jpg
 

Widebrim

I'll Lock Up
View attachment 7543
My great grandfather Joseph F. Carter upon his enlistment in the Army Air Force at age 39 in 1943. He served in the Pacific theater for the remainder of the war then remained in the Air Force until his retirement in 1963.

39! Yes, older men were accepted as the war progressed. Your great-grandfather looks like one tough jake.
 

rjb1

Practically Family
Messages
561
Location
Nashville
They did get older as it progressed. I have seen a photo album which has pictures of the father in the Army and of his son in the Navy, both during the war.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
At a recent funeral, a relative gave me a stack of family photos, many of which were taken during WW2. My father, and his younger brother, were academically talented, they both won a paid bursary to attend a private school. Despite that, and despite their leadership ability, they were of working class stock, so neither earned a commission. My father was captured on the Island of Crete, in 1941 I think, he spent the remainder of the war, in a Dresden POW camp. At the end of hostilities, he wasn't demobilised, speaking the four languages that the Nuremberg Trials were conducted in, he was retained as a translater.
His brother, passed out as a pilot, also in 1941. He was immediately promoted to: Flight Sergeant. He paid the ultimate price, when shot down over The North Sea in 1944. He lies in a military cemetery in Northern France. Before my father died, my sister took him to the cemetery. I have the details, and want to make my own pilgrimage to that grave.
I never met my uncle of course, but I carry his name and I really should go, if only once, to offer a prayer of thanks.


My father after attending his passing out parade sometime in 1940.


My uncle, receiving his pilot wings, early 1941.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,793
Location
New Forest
Thank you for your kind remarks. I had the strangest sense of connection looking at those old photos, family from whom I have descended, yet most of them I have never met, being born after they had died.
Surreal, yet so close. How weird.
 

Atticus Finch

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,718
Location
Coastal North Carolina, USA
By this time exactly seventy years ago, he had ridden to shore in a half-swamped landing craft and had sprinted across the beach at Normandy. He was a corpsman, and as such, he wore a big red cross on his helmet and carried only his supplies and a sidearm. His officers had convinced him that his red cross would protect him from direct fire because his mission was humanitarian. His officers were wrong. Years later, in a conversation on his front porch, he told me that when he stepped off of the landing craft, he felt like every German in France was shooting at him, personally.

Rest in peace, Uncle Jule, and thank you again for your service to our country. Every June 6th I think of all that you did for us. I pray that I always will.

IMG_32406802849280_zps0395d103.jpg


AF
 

Classydame

One of the Regulars
Messages
265
Location
Bellflower, CA
^Thank you for posting! I thank your uncle, my grandfather and all others for their service, especially those of D-Day! My grandpa, 92, doesn't talk about the war but I did find out he went in on H hour (second day) and he said it was still terrible, especially the hedgerows that the Germans had fortified. God bless them all!
 

EmergencyIan

Practically Family
Messages
918
Location
New York, NY
My grandfather. He was with the 5th Army during WWII.

32646d1139806342-some-u-s-5th-army-wwii-info-needed-custom-1-6-family-021.jpg


33001d1140561731-some-u-s-5th-army-wwii-info-needed-custom-1-6-family-014.jpg


33002d1140561731-some-u-s-5th-army-wwii-info-needed-custom-1-6-family-015.jpg


33000d1140561731-some-u-s-5th-army-wwii-info-needed-custom-1-6-family-013.jpg


He said that this was done by an artist in Italy. I don't know if this artist had always done this type of work or was just doing it as a result of the war.

33003d1140562743-some-u-s-5th-army-wwii-info-needed-custom-1-6-v-mail.jpg


- Ian
 

MikeKardec

One Too Many
Messages
1,157
Location
Los Angeles
1000250_172106929644153_695551958_n.jpg

Dad, stateside Fall of '43, on the way to the Upper Peninsula to test winter gear ... he's smiling because it's not cold yet!

1489117_205343946320451_884629194_n.jpg

Just after the Battle of the Bulge, hauling gas into Holland and Germany.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,265
Messages
3,077,599
Members
54,221
Latest member
magyara
Top