African American US Army soldiers T/5 William E. Thomas and Private First Class Joseph Jackson marking artillery shells as Easter presents for Adolf Hitler, 10 Mar 1945

Caption     African American US Army soldiers T/5 William E. Thomas and Private First Class Joseph Jackson marking artillery shells as Easter presents for Adolf Hitler, 10 Mar 1945 ww2dbase
Photographer   
Source    ww2dbaseUnited States National Archives
Identification Code   111-SC-202330
Photo Size 1,368 x 1,121 pixels
Photos on Same Day 10 Mar 1945
Added By C. Peter Chen
Licensing  Public Domain. According to the US National Archives, as of 21 Jul 2010:
The vast majority of the digital images in the Archival Research Catalog (ARC) are in the public domain. Therefore, no written permission is required to use them. We would appreciate your crediting the National Archives and Records Administration as the original source. For the few images that remain copyrighted, please read the instructions noted in the "Access Restrictions" field of each ARC record.... In general, all government records are in the public domain and may be freely used.... Additionally, according to the United States copyright law (United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105), in part, "[c]opyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government".

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Colorized By WW2DB     Colorized with Adobe Photoshop



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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. David Arnett says:
5 Mar 2012 07:02:53 AM

Wonderful photo, but something has me puzzled. Most every instance I find online of this photo dates it as March 10, 1945, and carries a description naming the two GIs and often the photographer as you do here. Most label it as being Easter morning. Problem is that Easter in 1945 fell on April 1, not March 10. Could the date be wrong? Or was the photo staged three weeks early? One online source I found says that this was originally a propaganda picture released in the hopes of recruiting more African-American soldiers to join the 92nd infantry. If so, it could have been taken anywhere, even stateside. Can anyone help me shed better light on this?

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