I've tried to do a bit of research on this photo, and while I'm not 100% sure, I think this is a photo of an M2 Light Tank, made by the Rock Island Arsenal Company that went into production in 1937. It was equipped with a 37mm M5 gun and machine guns. Mostly, it was used for reconnaissance. It was under armed for serious combat operations.
Friday, July 4, 2025
The M2 Light Tank
Wednesday, July 2, 2025
Cut Down
This slim photo has been cut down from a larger photo. There is some writing on the back, but like the picture itself, some of it has been lost to the scissors. "Dec. 20/4." So, from the 1940s. And, "Taken in Ge." Perhaps Germany and a soldier on occupation duty. Or, then again, maybe Georgia, though there isn't that much snow in Georgia.
Friday, June 21, 2024
The Shadow Soldier
This is another of those throw-in photos that I end up with when I buy an envelope of photos and get a few that I'd never buy individually. Anyway, as a former professional black & white printer it interests me a bit. There's clearly detail in the subject's uniform and face, but whoever printed this didn't expose for what's really important.
Thursday, January 27, 2022
Army Cooks
The pandemic has really cut into my income, so I'm getting out and about far less, and spending less money on everything, including my old photo collections. Despite all of my money problems, I managed to get out to Joshua Tree for New Year and made a stop in some of the antique malls I pass on the way home. Anyway, I found about a dozen or so photos of these gentlemen but limited myself to one, and I chose it because this one had the best shots of the buildings in the background. With their chef's hats, it's pretty clear that they are cooks, but where? The buildings look like they could be barracks on a military base, so I'm guessing these men are military cooks.
Friday, August 6, 2021
Mystery Geography
This is another in the ongoing series (not really) of where the hell is this? There's an army censor's stamp on the back of the print "PASSED BY U S ARMY EXAMINER 20222" My guess is this image is form the World War 2 era and is either a stateside base or something in occupied Europe.
Monday, March 29, 2021
The Indian Occupation
I'm not sure about the uniform, but I think it's British. Throw in people who look like they're Indian, and it's a reasonable bet that this photo was taken during the British occupation of India. Also known as the British Empire.
Thursday, November 29, 2018
Soldiers and Civilians
I think those are American uniforms and I think they're from the World War 1 era. If I were guessing, I'd say that the men in uniform are visiting college classmates. No real reason to think that, it's just a gut feeling.
Friday, November 23, 2018
A Permant Party Man
I've ranted about this before, and at the risk of repeating myself too much, I hate it when antique dealers cut up photo albums and sell off the pictures individually.
The permanent party man in this photo is wearing the shoulder patch of the United States Army Air Force, organized in 1941 and disbanded in 1947 when it became part of the newly formed separate Air Force. I may be wrong, of course, nevertheless, the background has a European feel to it, so I'm guessing that this image is from World War 2, and was taken at an American air base somewhere in Great Britain. As far as I know, all pilots, co-pilots, and navigators were officers. Our Sargent could be ground crew, or perhaps a gunner or bombardier. I can only imagine how fascinating an album depicting life on a World War 2 army air base would have been. Sadly, we won't know from this album.
The photo that was on the opposite side of this page fragment is gone, but the caption is still there. "PEANUT RACE-LOOSER TAKES THE THREE BIGEST NOSES. Well there's one thing we can know. Who ever assembled this album wasn't a great speller.
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
One Big Bottle
Quite a contrast between the two men in this picture. One, a soldier, well dressed, looking like he's enjoying his weekend pass, with his hat askew.. The other, dirty, haggard, cradling a pith helmet in his lap. And that big bottle, and perhaps I'm being too obvious in my judgement, probably containing something alcoholic. I like the idea of a freed prisoner from someplace like the Philippines, sharing a drink with one of the men who helped with his liberation.
Monday, March 19, 2018
Fraternizing With Bicycles
So, if you were an American soldier stationed in England, France, or on occupation duty in Germany, and you needed to meet your girlfriend, you used your bike.
Written on the back, "Myself, Lise, Davidson, Bottoms."
Monday, March 12, 2018
Music On Television
Imagine, if you will, you're a music crazed kid in the 1930's. You've got a stack of big band 78 rpm records that you play all the time. You've got society bands like Larry Carlton, swing bands like Benny Goodman, Glen Miller, and your favorite, Count Basie. Every waking hour you dream of what it would be like to be with one of your favorites, touring the nation to sell out crowds. Even a regional band would be great. So you practice and practice until you're old enough to be a professional musician just like your idols.
And then it happens. It's not a band that comes calling, it's the draft board. The Japanese have bombed Pearl Harbor, and like every other kid your age, all your dreams are on hold until the war is over. It's not music you dream of, it's survival. Eventually, the war ends, you've come home in one piece, which is not something a lot of your friends can say.
So,you get stateside and marry your sweetheart. She waited for you, and after all the death you've seen, all you want is a normal life. You take a good job at the car plant, have a kid or two and settle in to a nice, comfortable life in the new suburb. But music keeps playing in the back of your head. You can't let it go, so you take a part time job playing in a restaurant. The patrons enjoy their dates, and every once in awhile, one of them drops a dollar in your tip jar and makes a request.
This goes on for a few years, and you're beginning to hate music. Something you thought would never happen. One night you're sitting there going through your set list when this man approaches. "Not Mona Lisa," you think. "Please no, not Mona Lisa. If I have to play Mona Lisa one more time I'll throw up."
But he doesn't ask you to play anything. He hands you his business card and explains his dilemma. He's a program director for this new thing called television. The network provides a few hours of programming every day, mostly radio serials reworked for TV, but the rest of those hours have to filled with local content. He has this idea for a morning talk show, with a couple of hosts who will chat up members of the local women's club, athletes, and whatever famous person who's passing through town, and he wants a musician to play intros, a few songs, maybe even compose a theme song. He asks you to stop by the station the next morning and talk. So, you call in sick, take the street car downtown and meet with the station manager. You talk music, play a few songs, tell him you're confident that you can write that theme song. Of course, the job is a bit more than the morning show. After that, you'll pull the same duty on a cooking show, the ten minute local news broadcast, and then after a three hour lunch, it's background music for the after school cartoon show. And the money they're offering is amazing. Twice what you're making at the car plant.
You go home and tell the wife, but she's not exactly thrilled. "Television? They're so expensive. We don't know anyone who can even afford a television. Why give up a good job for such a fly by night sort of thing." There's a big fight, but you're getting a second chance at your childhood dream, and you're not turning it down. It's bye bye assembly line and hello TV.
At first, it's just as the program director described. You can play what you want, and it was easier to write the theme song than you expected, so while you're not ecstatic, over all you're happy with your new job. And then one day John and Karen, the show's two hosts, say something to you, live on air. It's a little surprising, at first, but you've been shot at by a Panzer tank, so you don't really rattle. Soon you're more of a regular part of the show. People begin recognizing you on the street, as more and more people actually buy a television set. Then one day, you get a call for a local business man. He's built a super market, a first for the new suburb, and he wants you to play at the grand opening. You call up a few guys you know and form a small combo. After that, it's car dealerships, weddings, a prom or two, and a regular Saturday night set at a local supper club. No requests allowed. No Mona Lisa.
And then one day, you read in the paper that Count Basie is in town. No black man has ever appeared on the station before, but you go and beg your boss to have him on the show with John and Karen. He's a little worried, but this isn't the south, so in the end, he relents, and for one wonderful morning you get to play with your idol. After the show is over, the Count turns to you and says, "You got chops, man"
As the years pass by, the station moves more to prerecorded music,and rock and roll becomes the popular music that everyone wants to listen to. But that's alright. You're the station's music director, and you book the acts. Chuck Berry may not be the Count, but he's not bad, and no one really cares if you hire a black musician. You're thinking about retirement when another opportunity comes your way. The dean of a local college asks if you want to teach jazz composition. You tell him you went form high school directly into the army and never went to college. "That's alright," he replies. "We'll give you an honorary degree, and then you can teach a few classes every week. All because the music kept playing in your head.
That's not the story of Larry Ferrari who spent years playing organ on a Philadelphia television station. He was drafted into the army, but it was right after the war ended. He preformed on armed services radio before starting his TV career. But I like my story better.
Sunday, January 8, 2017
Major Medinger
It looks like Major Medinger is moving on, and if the last photo in the column is what it appears to be, the poor Major enjoyed his party a bit too much. I have no idea why Major Medinger is being honored by the 4th Signal Corps, but I suspect he's either being transferred, or more likely, he's leaving the army. If that's so, then we can be sure these photos were taken after World War 2. That one was an in for the duration conflict.
The fifth photo in the column is the only one with any labeling, "Capt Wilson, Mr Vandiver, Capt Stevens"
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Waiting to go Overseas
This one has "42" written on the back. I don't know if that's the year or not, but it's more than probable. Anyway, this couple look more middle aged than not, so here's the question, is the soldier career army, or was he one of the many aging men who volunteered after Pearl Harbor. Too old for the peace time military but more than welcome in war time.
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
The Green Album 3
Well, I did write that I was going to break up publication of this album.
The first two posts gave us a probable location, somewhere along the California coast. This one gives us a general time frame, probably World War 2. It looks like one son was in the army, and the other in the navy. Take a close look at the sailor and you can tell that the photo wasn't taken on a ship, but in a photo studio.
Click on The Green Album in labels to bring up the other posts.
Monday, August 8, 2016
Lost 10-Won 1
Well, it says soccer, rather than football on the front, so I'm going out on a limb and say that a team of American soldiers got beat big time by locals who had been playing the game for most of their lives. I also suspect that that one win might have been thrown to make the Yanks feel a bit better about themselves.
Thursday, May 5, 2016
The Civilian Army
This one has a processors stamp on the back dating this print from the "Week of August 29, 1955", putting it somewhere in between Korea and Vietnam. Since it's almost impossible to put a date on the beginning of the Vietnam War-did it start before U.S. involvement, the arrival of trainers, the first troops in the field, the Gulf of Tonkin incident-we'll just say a lot closer to Korea.
So, here's a fun fact about the U.S. Army in the 1950's. After the end of World War 2, it was assumed by many Americans that the draft would come to an end, and everyone could go on with their lives with no fear of being called up. But that wasn't to be. Fear of Soviet aggression, the perceived need to keep an occupying force in Europe and Japan, kept the military in need of fresh troops, so the draft continued apace. Never popular, it didn't take long for the whole issue of deferments to come up. In 1950, with the backing of many in the academic community, the army decided that college students, based on their grade point average, could avoid conscription. Needless to say, the A students could stay at home, while those with a sold C risked a quick trip to basic training.
One of the few academics to argue against a deferment system of any kind was Harvard President James B. Conant. He thought universal service for all 18 year olds was preferable. In his writings he made a whole host of points, but what it all got down to was that if we were to have a military and if it was necessary to defend the country, than it was undemocratic that that burden should fall on some, and not on everyone. Conant lost the argument. By the time Vietnam came along, there were so many deferments that we had effectively divided the country into two categories: those who were worth saving and those who were disposable.
I was from a small coal mining town in western Pennsylvania, and I was in the disposable pool of Americans. I got lucky. January 23, 1973, my 18th birthday, the Paris Peace Accords were signed, ending American involvement in Vietnam. (There were no Americans in combat when Saigon fell in 1975.) The draft ended not long after that, and my assumption that I'd get swept up and sent to southeast Asia was proved wrong.
This is the last of the photographs from the military memorabilia envelope. Sort of. I do have a couple of press clippings, one with a picture, but if I decide to post it, it will be on my Fair Use blog. I've already published a couple of documents from this collection, but I haven't felt the obligation to put them all on line. Maybe they'll show up some day, maybe not.
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
At Attention
This one's an 8x10, and I suspect it's an official photograph for release to the press. I had hoped that I'd be able to get an ID from the patch on the sleeve, but that was a no go.
Saturday, April 30, 2016
On Maneuvers
I had hoped that I could get a date range on the uniforms and old style campaign hats, but no luck. The clothing is too generic, and in fact isn't all that different than that which is used today. The truck, however, at least from what little I can see of it, looks like it's from the late thirties through mid forties. In other words, it looks like the two Sargents in these photos are training men for World War 2. Even if the United States was still a year or two from the fighting when these photos were taken, it didn't take a lot of insight to know that we were going to get pulled in to the conflict.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Camp Blanding 3
I know, I know. The Greetings from Camp Blanding card probably should have gone first, but it's on the back side of the one with the address from the first post in this series, and I wanted to start with that one. The white line that goes through the hospital area card is where the flap goes to close up the folder.
Saturday, April 23, 2016
Camp Blanding 1
Too many parts to this long strip of linen postcards to post all at once, so I'm breaking it up in to four sections. It's clear that the majority of these images started out as photographs, but there are a few I'm not so sure of, and all but one are in this first section. The flag, I suspect is pure illustration, and the cover image too. Still, I'm sure Emma S. Brown in Slatington, PA didn't care. It was sent to her by "Pvt. Wilton E. Christman" and he wrote her that "Everything is fine here, in good health." Not much of a message, but at least she heard from him.