Historical images compared with
the current situations in the exact
locations.
Click on the pictures to
enlarge. |
Holland(1)
Holland(2)
Normandy
Worldwide
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La Gleize, Late December 1944
American jeeps and trailers in front
of the town square after it was
liberated again on December 24th
1944. The trailer in the near front
of the photo carries a soldier,
unsure if it was an Allied or German
combatant, killed in action during
the Battle of the Bulge. Note that
his arm is in an upright position
due to frost or rigor mortis. |
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La Gleize, Late December 1944
American soldiers and an M4
Sherman tank in front of the town
square after it was liberated again
on December 24th 1944. |
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La Roche-en-Ardenne, 1945
Color photo taken on Rue de
Beausaint shortly after the Battle
of the Bulge. It shows a German
Panzerkampfwagen IV tank with its
tracks missing. In the background
are the castle and the belltower of
the Saint Nicolas church in the
center of La Roche. |
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Bastogne,
December 19, 1944
Paratroopers of 506th move north on
the Bastogne-Houffalize road.
"Now-photo" taken by Reg Jans from
Belgium.
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Bastogne,
December 1944
Troops
of 1st Batallion of the 506th move
North from Bastogne to Noville on
Route de LaRoche. In the
"Now-"picture in the middle,
Battledetective Tom poses under the
street sign. |
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Bastogne,
December 1944
This
chapel was originally the Regimental
Aid Station of the 501st Parachute
Infantry Regiment. Later it became
the Divisional Hospital for the
101st. It is now a multi-functional
building for a Bastogne high school. |
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Bastogne,
December 1944
The
center square of the Bastogne
Seminary, covered with a huge glass
dome, was used for religious
ceremonies during the siege. |
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Bastogne, Christmas Day 1944
General
MacAulliffe and his staff at
Christmas dinner. This comparison is
not made with the historic location
in the Heinz Caserne but with the
101st Division's Christmas dinner in
Iraq in 2005. |
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Bastogne, Christmas Day 1944
Another
comparison in detail with CSM
Michael R. Wagoner of the 506th RCT
in 2005 in Iraq and Colonel W.L.
Roberts commanding CCB, 10th Armored
Division in 1944. |
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Bastogne,
December 18th 1944
The
326th Airborne Medical Company set
up the 101st Divisional Hospital in
this field where it was overrun and
captured by German troops. |
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"UNDER
INVESTIGATION"
Bizory, December 1944
The location of this
well-published picture is still
'under investigation' but is
believed to have been taken in a
chapel in Bizory near Bastogne. |
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Savy, December, 24th 1944
German
Panzer IV, nicknamed "Lustmolch" or
"Lust Lizard", abandoned in Savy
near the town pump house.
"Now-photo" submitted by Battle
Detective Raphael Giot from Belgium. |
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Bastogne, December 26th, 1944
Rue de
Clerveaux in Bastogne after the
siege was lifted by tank units of
General Patton's Third Army.
"Now-photo" taken by Reg Jans from
Belgium. |
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Bastogne, December 1944
After
General Patton's armored troops
reached the besieged town of
Bastogne, its main drag -Grand Rue-
was jammed with ambulances and
supply trucks. |
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Champs, December 30th, 1944
Colonel
Steve Chappuis (left) on the steps
of the Rolley Castle after he and
General McAuliffe (far right) had
been decorated by General Patton. |
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Champs, November 21st, 1991
Colonel
Steve A. Chappuis visited the Castle
again in 1991. In the picture at the
right he can be seen talking to the
lady of the castle: Madame Jacques
Maus de Rolley. In the image at
left, the lady talks to attendants
of the 2007 Trigger Time European
Convention. |
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Bastogne, December 24th, 1944
the Kessler farm where a group
of German soldiers delivered a
surrender ultimatum, upon which the
commanding officer of the 101st
Airborne Division, Brigadier General
Anthony McAuliffe famously replied
"Nuts".
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Bastogne, December 27th, 1944
General Tony McAuliffe (right),
the deputy commander of the 101st
Airborne Division, receives
congratulations from General Maxwell
Taylor. Taylor, divisional
commander, was in the US during the
siege of Bastogne and arrived in
town one day after the 4th Armored
Division broke through the
encirclement. The
location is the Heinz Barracks in Bastogne |
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La Roche-en Ardennes, January
1945
A staged photograph of American
soldiers of the 84th "Railsplitter"
Infantry Division at right, meeting
up with Scottish soldiers of the
Black Watch Royal Highland
Regiment.
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Recht, December 18th, 1944
Men of the 3rd
Kompanie SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung
(Reconnaissance Unit), Kampfgruppe
(Battle Group) Knittel at the Kaiserbaracke Crossroads
in Belgium.
Nearly nothing reminds of
the location today and we therefore
brought our
own sign showing the way to
Saint Vith. |
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Poteau, December 16th, 1944
On 8DEC1944, the US Army’s 14th
Cavalry Group was ambushed by SS
Kampfgruppe Hansen on the Post to
Recht road in the Belgian Ardennes.
Propaganda photos and films were
made by the Germans shortly after
the fighting and many of the images
shot that day are used as iconic
illustrations of the Battle of the
Bulge.
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Poteau, December 16th, 1944
Nazi officers inspect the
results of the ambush by Kampfgruppe
Hansen |
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Poteau, December 16th, 1944
Nazi infantry moves passed an
abandoned American armored car.
The shed in the background is still
there, hidden under a huge tree. |
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Bastogne, Christmas Day 1944
The best comparison ever of the
Christmas dinner photo of the
Divisional Headquarters staff of the
encircled 101st Airborne Division in
Bastogne in 1944! This is the actual
room with mannequins dressed as the
persons in the photo in the Heinz
Barracks which is now a military
museum. |
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Bastogne X-Mass Dinner Photo
Tradition
In November 2012 we took this
shot inside the regimental
headquarters of the 327th Infantry
in Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The
regiment, now known as First Brigade
of the 101st Airborne Division (Air
Assault), is fully aware of its
traditions and during several
deployments in its rich history
photos similar to the 1944 image
have been made to decorate the
commander's wall. Note the encased
regimental colors for the deployment
to Afghanistan.
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Baugnez, 1946
An American flag and a cross are
places on the crossroads near the
location of the Malmedy Massacre
incident. For more details about
this incident, see our
Battle
Study #11.
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Bastogne, 1947
"The spoils of war".
A market salesman helps a local
resident try on an American M43
jacket ob Rue de Vivier. Behind him
is a market stand with "Stock
Americain", US Army surplus
uniforms. Then photo by David
Seymour for Magnum Photos.
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