7. Capa, one of the world's most distinguished war photographers, famously
said: 'If your photographs aren't good enough, you're not close enough.'
And close he certainly was, accompanying US forces to Europe from
1943-1945.
10. Italy. Sicily. Monreale, just outside Palermo, July 1943. Civilians greeting the American troops.
11. Sicily. Palermo. July 1943. In July 1943 the Allies landed in Sicily, starting the liberation of Italy from Fascism. Between 1943 and 1945 they fought against
German troops and Italian fascist troops from the Repubblica di Salo', slowly moving toward the north of Italy.
12. Palermo, July 23rd, 1943.
A member of the American
Medical Corps, just after
the liberation of the city.
13. Italy. Sicily, near Nicosia. July, 1943. German soldier captured by American forces.
21. Italy. Sicily. W.W.II.The Battle of Troina. Near Troina. August 4th-5th, 1943. American soldiers on a reconnaissance mission to capture Troina, a strategically
located hilltown on the road to Messina (Sicily's main port to the mainland). The town was being fiercely defended by the Germans, in an attempt to evacuate all
German troops.
22. Italy. Sicily. "On the Route to Messina.Troina. August 4th-5th, 1943. American soldiers on a reconnaissance mission to capture Troina, a strategically
located hilltown on the road to Messina (Sicily's main port to the mainland). The town was being fiercely defended by the Germans, in an attempt to
evacuate all German troops.
23. Maiori (near Salerno). September 19th, 1943. A British surgical unit works in an operating room set up in a church.
26. Chiunzi Pass, above Maiori (near Salerno), Sept 1943. Fort Schuster, a farmhouse overlooking the road leading to Naples, which was used by American troops
to control the whole area. A soldier informs a British officer located in the nearby villages about the situation.
28. Italy. Near Mount Pantano, northeast of Cassino. December, 1943. On the left: US Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., who was the Liaison
Officer of the 2nd Moroccan Infantry Division, composed mostly of Berber soldiers and French officers.
29. Italy. Radicosa, near Cassino. January 4th, 1944. An Italian civilian guides members of the US/Canadian First Special Service Force (an elite unit trained in
mountain fighting) through a recently liberated town.
30. England. Dorset. Weymouth. June 5, 1944. American troops in landing craft at Weymouth on their way to liberate France.
31. Weymouth harbour in England on
the eve of the D Day. 1-5th of June
1944. Allied troops in landing craft
boarding ships on their way to the
beachlandings of Normandy for the
liberation of France.
32. France. Off the coast of Normandy.
June 6th, 1944. American troops
transfer from troop ships to landing
craft before assaulting Omaha
Beach.
33. Just off Omaha Beach. American
doctors on a US craft during
Operation Overlord. June 6th, 1944
51. France. Paris. 8th arrondissement. Champs-Elysées. August 26th, 1944. Members of the French Resistance and soldiers of the French Army celebrating the
liberation of the city.
52. France. St. Malô. August 9, 1944. A French prostitute follows her former clients, German soldiers, out of town in order to avoid the wrath of the civilians.
53. France. St. Malô. August 9th, 1944. German soldiers captured by American troops.
54. France. Chartres. August 16-18, 1944. Members of the French Resistance shortly after liberation.
55. France. Chartres. August 18th, 1944. French woman, who had had a baby by a Germany soldier, being marched home after being punished by having her
head shaved
56. France. The Advance of the Allied Forces.Chartres. August 18th, 1944. A mother (dark dress) and her daughter (white dress), accused of collaboration, have
their hair shaved, as a sign of humiliation. The daughter is holding a baby conceived with a German soldier.
57. France. Chartres. August 18th, 1944.
Just after the liberation of the town, a
French woman who had had a baby with
a German soldier, has her head shaved
as a sign of humiliation.
58. France. Eure-et-Loir. Chartres. August 18th, 1944. Shortly after the liberation of the city, a French woman who had collaborated with the Germans has her hair
shaved at police headquarters as a sign of humiliation.
59. France. The Advance of the Allied Forces.Chartres. August 18, 1944. American soldiers and French resistance fighters escort a group of German prisoners.
60. France. Paris. August, 1944. After the entry of the French 2nd Armored Division, numerous pockets of German snipers had to be rooted out. Many French
civilians and members of the French Resistance joined the French troops in the fighting.
61. Paris. August 25th, 1944. After the entry of the French 2nd Armored Division, numerous pockets of German snipers had to be rooted out in street fighting.
Many French civilians and members of the Resistance helped the French troops in this fighting. This photograph shows a French civilian who was unable to
contain his wrath against a German soldier who had surrendered.
62. Paris. August 25th, 1944. After the entry of the French 2nd Armored Division, numerous pockets of German snipers had to be rooted out in street fighting. Many
French civilians and members of the Resistance helped the French troops in this fighting.
63. Paris. August 25th, 1944. Members of the French Resistance and soldiers of the French army.
64. France. Paris. August 25th, 1944. Members of the resistance crouching behind a truck during the Liberation.
65. France. Paris. August 25th, 1944.
Members of the French resistance
standingin a doorway during the
Liberation of the city.
66. France. Paris.. Place de l'Hôtel de Ville. August 26th, 1944. German troops started shooting against the parade celebrating the liberation of the city.
67. France. Liberation of France
by the Allied Troops.Paris.
Place de l'Hôtel de Ville.
August 26, 1944. When
snipers in buildings
overlooking the Place de
l'Hotel de Ville opened fire on
the triumphal parade, the
panicked crowd fell to the
pavement.
68. France. Paris. August 26th,
1944. Crowd on the pavement
after snipers in buildings
overlooking the Place de l'Hotel
de Ville opened fire on the
celebrations after the liberation.
70. France. Paris. August 26th, 1944. Members of the French Resistance marching through the liberated city.
71. France. Paris. August 26th, 1944. General Charles de Gaulle leading the parade down the Avenue des Champs-Elysées to celebrate the liberation of the
city.
72. France. Near St. Lô. July 26th-30th, 1944. American soldiers with a group of recently captured German soldiers.
73. France. Saint Lô. July 26th-30th, 1944. American troops arriving in the abandoned town.
74. France. Normandy. Between Granville and Avranche. July 31, 1944. French civilians offering cider to American soldiers.
80. Germany .Allied Troops Move towards the Rhine. Near Wesel. March 24th, 1945. Medics evacuate an injured American paratrooper. In the foreground: the
wreckage of an allied glider.
81. Germany. Wesel. March 24th, 1945. Injured American paratroopers get treatment by members of the Army's medical corps.
82. Germany Allied Troops Move towards the Rhine. Wesel. March 24th, 1945. German soldiers captured by American paratroopers.
83. Germany Allied Troops Move towards the Rhine. Wesel. March 24th, 1945. A soldier receives medical treatment next to a crashed glider.
87. Germany. April 18th, 1945. Immediately after an American soldier had been killed, his comrades went down to the street to capture the snipers who had shot
him.
91. Germany. Nuremberg.
April 20, 1945. Hubert
STRICKLAND, Capa's
driver, in the stadium
where Hitler held his
Nazi rallies.
92. Germany Alexanderplatz.
August, 1945. On the right:
two Soviet soldiers. The
road signs in the back
indicate the way to the
Reichstag and to Potsdam.