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| Signal photographic companies included technicians for the maintenance and repair of cameras. |
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| Camera equipment laid out for inspection. |
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| Cameras were used to photograph everything from the home front to combat. Here a cameraman takes the picture of some service troops in North Africa. |
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| Combat camera teams of the 163rd Signal Photographic Company stand for inspection with their still and motion picture cameras set up. |
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| Signal Corps photographer Sgt. George O. Miehle takes a photo of Sgt. Carl T. Delbridge of the 66th Division in his foxhole. |
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| Navy photographer William Barr snapped this dramatic moment as a kamikaze exploded on the flight deck of the USS Enterprise, May 14, 1945. |
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| Barr also took this shot after a TBM Avenger missed the arresting wire during landing and crashed into parked planes onboard the Enterprise, April 11, 1945. |
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| Corporal Hugh McHugh, shown with his 4×5 Speed Graphic PH-104, was killed by a sniper January 15, 1945 in Belgium. |
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| A German newsreel cameraman focuses on an armored column moving into the Soviet Union. Like their American and British counterparts, German cameramen superbly documented the war. |
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| Emil Edgren shot this image of an American GI with a Browning Automatic Rifle looking at a B-17 that crash-landed in a Belgian field. |
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| A helmetless American paratrooper from the 82nd Airborne Division carrying a tommygun in full gallop across a Belgian field was captured by the lens of Emil Edgren. |
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| A dead German soldier photographed by Emil Edgren. |
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| This photo of General Douglas MacArthur at the microphone was taken by Charles Restifo during the Japanese surrender ceremony aboard the USS Missouri. |
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| Charles Restifo behind his 4×5 PH-104 camera. Although big and bulky, the PH-104 used large-format sheet film that resulted in crisp, detailed photos. |
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| Charles Restifo’s photograph of the desolation at Hiroshima. He was one of the first photographers allowed into the destroyed, radioactive city. |
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| William Wilson’s color photograph of a temporary U.S. war cemetery on the northern coast of Sicily, 1944. |
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| One of Tony Vaccaro’s photos. |
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| Also by Tony Vaccaro. |
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| Corporal Robert Borrell, a camera technician and aerial photographer in Marine Photographic Squadron 254 (VMD-254). |
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| Robert Borrell mans his camera in a PB4Y Liberator of VMD-254. |
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| Staff Sargeant Brush poses with his Fairchild K-20 aerial camera at the waist window of a B-17 Flying Fortress bomber. |
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| An RAF airman in full flying kit carrying a hand-held version of the F24 aerial camera, France. (Imperial War Museum photo C 128) |
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| Bomb-aimer holding an F24 aerial camera in the nose of a Blenheim (possibly of No 139 Squadron RAF) during an unescorted aerial photography mission over France. (Imperial War Museum photo C 1314) |
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| Circa 1941. Side view of an F24 aerial camera, probably used for training RAAF photographers during courses held at Fairbairn RAAF Base, Canberra, ACT. (Australian War Memorial photo P01439.007) |
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| Airmen photographers inspect developed reconnaissance film from a Type F.24 aerial camera outside a photographic trailer at a landing ground in Egypt. 1941. (Imperial War Museum photo ME(RAF) 2402) |
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| Corporal Lorne Matson of Toronto, Canada, cleans the pressure glass of a F.24 aerial camera in an equipment trailer of No. 39 (PR) Wing at B8/Sommervieu, Normandy. (Imperial War Museum photo CL 821) |
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| A member of the ground crew hands a Type F.24 aerial camera to the observer of a Bristol Blenheim Mark IV of No. 139 Squadron RAF at Betheniville, prior to a sortie. (Imperial War Museum photo C 116) |
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| A forward-facing oblique installation of an F.24 aerial camera, with an 8-inch focal-length lens, in a blister under the port wing of a Supermarine Spitfire. (Imperial War Museum photo C 5473) |





























































































