노르망디 상륙작전 전후의 희귀한 사진
fabiano
Military
0
2328
2012.12.08 08:33
Before and After D-Day: Rare Color Photos
"There were flowers blooming everywhere, and everywhere the people waited for the news from England. It was as though the whole nation stood on tiptoe, straining to hear the thunder of guns." — LIFE magazine on the mood in America in the run-up to Operation Overlord, codename for the historic assault.
American combat engineers eat a meal atop boxes of ammunition stockpiled for the impending D-Day invasion, May 1944.
Troops and civilians pass the time on the River Thames in the spring of 1944.
An American corporal stacks cans of gasoline in preparation for the upcoming invasion of France,
Stratford-upon-Avon, England, May 1944.
A small town in England in the spring of 1944, shortly before D-Day.
An American Army chaplain kneels next to a wounded soldier in order to administer the Eucharist and Last Rites, France, 1944.
An abandoned German machine gun, France, June 1944.
Magazines scattered among the rubble of the heavily bombed town of Saint-Lô, Normandy, France, summer 1944.
An American tank crew takes a breather on the way through the town of Avranches, Normandy, summer 1944.
"We thought it was going to be murder but it wasn't. To show you how easy it was, I ate my bar of chocolate. In every other operational trip, I sweated so much the chocolate they gave us melted in my breast pocket." — Frank Scherschel describing his experiences photographing the Normandy invasion from the air, before he joined Allied troops heading inland.
Above: GIs search ruined homes in western France after D-Day.
Above: GIs search ruined homes in western France after D-Day.
View of the ruins of the Palais de Justice in the town of St. Lo, France, summer 1944.
The red
"All the civilized world loves France and Paris. Americans share this love with a special intimacy born in the kinship of our revolutions, our ideas and our alliances in two great wars." —
LIFE on the relationship between the U.S. and its longtime European ally.
Along the coast of France, June 1944.
From D-Day until Christmas 1944, German prisoners of war were shipped off to American detention facilities at a rate of 30,000 per month. Above: Captured German troops, June 1944.
Maintenance work on an American P-47 Thunderbolt in a makeshift airfield in the French countryside, summer 1944.
A French couple shares cognac with an American tank crew, northern France, summer 1944.
A P-38 fighter plane sits in the background as the pilot arrives in a captured German vehicle, France, 1944.
Church services in dappled sunlight, France, 1944.
American Army trucks (note cyclist hitching a ride) parade down the Champs-Elysées the day after the liberation of Paris
by French and Allied troops, August 1944.
Frenchmen transport painted British and American flags for use in a parade, summer 1944.
"Paris is like a magic sword in a fairy tale — a shining power in those hands to which it rightly belongs, in other hands tinsel and lead. Whenever the City of Light changes hands, Western Civilization shifts its political balance. So it has been for seven centuries; so it was in 1940; so it was last week." — LIFE after the French capital was liberated in August 1944.
Free French General and military governor of the French capital Pierre Koenig, left, pictured during
ceremonies held the day after the liberation of Paris, August 1944.
Celebrations in Paris after the liberation of the city, August 1944.
American troops stand beside a World War 1 monument bedecked with French flags after the town
(exact location unknown) was liberated from German occupying forces, summer 1944.