Lucky for me, there are plenty of online resources available to increase my historical knowledge, including the Historic Daily Dose Instagram page. Below, we’ve gathered some of our favorite posts from this page that's dedicated to ensuring you don’t become Vitamin-History deficient, so be sure to upvote the ones you find most interesting and feel free to pass them along to your friends and family as well! Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose This is a photograph dating somewhere between the late 1940s and early 1950s of a ‘for sale’ advertisement where four kids were being sold off by their parents. Apparently, the man and woman were in dire poverty and had no other means of making money Image credits: historicdailydose Historic Daily Dose is the perfect place to start if you’re looking to refresh or expand your knowledge of the world’s past. The account has posted over 600 times and has amassed an impressive 11.6k followers. From photos of The Great Depression to heartbreaking pictures from war zones, these images are not always easy to see, but they’re important reminders of past events that should never be forgotten. And if you’re wondering why you’re in need of a daily dose of history in the first place, Making History writes on their site that, “It is not just useful, it is essential.” “Understanding the linkages between past and present is absolutely basic for a good understanding of the condition of being human,” Making History explains. “All living people live in the here-and-now, but it took a long unfolding history to get everything to NOW. And that history is located in time-space, which holds this cosmos together, and which frames both the past and the present.” Without studying history, we would have little to no context for ourselves and everything we experience on this planet. History is a living, breathing subject that we should all be invested in studying. Image credits: historicdailydose The Turks still consider their victory at Gallipoli to be a great, defining moment in the nation's modern history. Eight years later, the Turkish war of independence broke out, led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. Ataturk was a commander at the battle of Gallipoli Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose According to a study conducted by the American Historical Association, some of the top reasons the public cares about studying history are a desire to be more informed about past events, finding learning about past events entertaining, and the belief that experience and knowledge about history are important to share with children. Unfortunately, however, 8% of the survey’s respondents reported not being interested in learning about past events at all. This may have something to do with the fact that the vast majority of Americans’ educational experiences in regards to history have heavily relied on learning names, dates and facts, rather than actually asking questions. 91% of Americans believe that fact-based education discourages students from learning more, which I would wholeheartedly agree with. Nobody, especially kids and teens, wants to be forced to memorize facts without any real understanding of why they’re important. So it’s no wonder that many of us have to make up for the lack of historical knowledge we gained in school as adults. That’s where Historic Daily Dose comes in, dear pandas. We hope you’ll learn something from this list that will inspire you to start asking more questions! Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose As the German passenger airship LZ 129, Hindenburg caught fire and was destroyed during its attempt to dock with its mooring mast at naval air station Lakehurst in Manchester township, New Jersey, United States. Of the 97 people on board (36 passengers and 61 crewmen), there were 35 fatalities (13 passengers and 22 crewmen). One worker on the ground was also killed, raising the final death toll to 36 Image credits: historicdailydose Having a greater curiosity about the past might even mean that you’re more interested in civic engagement as well. The American Historical Association found that there is a link between those who are interested in being more informed about the past and those who want to share that information with children and those who are involved in community problem-solving. There was an even stronger link found between those who value historical knowledge and those who take part in volunteer work. It seems like the more we understand the past, the more we care about taking care of the future of our world, and making it a better place, as well. Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose In a previous Bored Panda article, we got in touch with Susan and Beckett, co-hosts of The History Chicks podcast, to hear why they believe it’s so important to remember our past. Their show shines a light on some of the most fascinating women in history who are often overlooked, so the co-hosts shared how it came to be in the first place. “We launched the show in 2011 after Beckett realized there were not only no podcasts on a subject she wanted to learn about (Gilded Age Heiresses), but there were none about Women's History in general," they previously told Bored Panda. "Uttering, 'How hard could it be?' she contacted Susan. 12 years later, we laugh because we knew the answer to her question was, 'Pretty darn hard, starting with a nearly vertical learning curve'." Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose "Our favorite part of studying history is discovering the interconnectivity of it all," Susan and Beckett shared. "That people in history aren't all that different from us, they just lived in different times and those times (and people) connect all the way through to modern-day in the most interesting ways." Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose An aerospace engineer that was a leading figure in Nazi German rocket technology, and then United States rocket technology, was photographed standing in front of five F-1 rocket engines circa 1969 Image credits: historicdailydose We also previously asked Susan and Beckett if they could share some of the most widely spread historical fallacies that they were taught or have heard. "For starters people who did Big Things, usually didn't do them alone," they noted. "Paul Revere, for example, wasn't the only one traveling with a message that night (and he didn't shout 'the British are coming' because people would have just thought he was coming from a pub since everyone in the Colonies was British.)" "Sybil Ludington did a similar ride in Connecticut, truly alone, all on a horse, and remained uncaptured, and she was only a teenager at the time," Susan and Beckett told Bored Panda. "It's a way cooler story, but history often only remembers the people with the sizzle, or the louder mouths or, like in Paul's case, their names rhyme with enough words for Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to write a poem about him nearly 100 years after the fact." Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose "Sometimes embellished (or truly fake) stories are remembered because they are convenient or romantic, and telling them sweetly and simply allows people to accept the behavior," the co-hosts went on to explain. "It makes the story less messy, and also, less true, like the story of Pocahontas. There was no romance with John Smith. He was a scoundrel, for starters, and she was a kid when their paths crossed. She also was later kidnapped by the British, forced to change her identity, ignore her Powhatan heritage, and marry a white man, but those facts are often omitted." "Sometimes propaganda justifies mistreatment," Susan and Beckett pointed out. "By making someone sound of worse character than they actually were, it lets us think, 'They deserved what they had coming.' Dismissing them with a catchy, oft-repeated, and fabricated phrase like, 'Let them eat cake,' which Marie Antoinette never said, is very effective in reshaping history to fit a purpose." Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose So why is it important to learn history accurately? "It's important so that we don't perpetuate half-truths, misconceptions, and downright lies," the History Chicks told Bored Panda. "To understand history, we have to see the whole story, not just the soundbites of history. If we just repeat an oversimplified version lacking perspective and context, we only think we know the whole story, but we're not even close. And here's a riddle: Can history repeat itself if the history we're repeating is wrong and incomplete?" Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose More than 330,000 soldiers were rescued from Dunkirk in the mission code-named operation Dynamo Image credits: historicdailydose And if you're looking to further your history studies and correct any false tales you've been taught, Susan and Beckett say that, "The greatest resource available to anyone is a library card. It gives you access to passionate advocates for knowledge (commonly known as 'librarians') and to apps like, Libby, which are packed with digital resources you can access from any place you have an internet connection." "We think a great place to start learning history is small: with one person," the co-hosts shared. "Learn about that person, and you will understand their times, their limitations, their societal challenges, their geography... Their world. Learning about that world will always lead you to another." Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose History is a fascinating subject, and we’ll never run out of content to study within it. But for now, it’s nice to see digestible little snippets of the past through pages like Historic Daily Dose. We hope this list has taught you pandas something new and that you’ve enjoyed getting your daily recommended allowance of historical knowledge. Keep upvoting the pics you find most captivating, and then if you’re looking to continue your journey of learning about the past, you can find another Bored Panda article featuring pics from long ago right here! Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Gersnback, an inventor of such innovations as a combination of electric hair brush/comb and a battery-powered handheld illuminated mirror, is best known to science fiction fans as the founder of amazing stories magazine Image credits: historicdailydose Loaded with ammunition explodes after being hit by a bomb from a German plane off Gela, on the southern coast of Sicily, on July 31, 1943 Image credits: historicdailydose From Dresden's Muenzgasse street showing people working on the removal of debris in front of the ruins of the Frauenkirche (church of our lady). The church was reduced to rubble during world war II allied bombings Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose This giant sea creature was caught off the coast of New Jersey in 1933. It allegedly weighed more than 5,000 pounds! Image credits: historicdailydose As it were – because on this day, a man named Edward Llewellyn broke the world record for the biggest sea bass ever caught. He single-handedly caught the Mammoth fish weighing a whopping 425 lbs Image credits: historicdailydose As the story goes, the photographer of the photo was an Irish priest, and instead of the iceberg being the reason that the titanic went down, it was actually because the priest forgot to say a Hail Mary as the Titanic was sailing away Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose The Germans left the town as the Canadians advanced, leaving only nests of snipers to delay the progress Image credits: historicdailydose Eric Sykes, an English comedian, demonstrated the device on an unaired pilot for a TV series about 1800s innovations Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose This bomb is not yet fused, but when it is it will be ready for its deadly work. Photo taken on October 24, 1940 Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose This photo, entitled "Into the jaws of death", on the other hand, brings the event to life by offering the perspective of allied soldiers about to storm the beaches and make history Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose You can see the town's church in the background damaged by shell blasts Image credits: historicdailydose Note the covenanter tank in the background Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Dogs accompanied D-Day troops dropped behind enemy lines, sniffing out mines, traps, and troops. They were given two months’ intensive training, including how to angle themselves in the air — "forepaws up and rear legs down.” On the day of the drop some dogs had to be encouraged out of the plane with the aid of a two-pound chunk of meat Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose The battle of Bzura, the largest of the entire campaign, lasted more than a week, ending with the German forces capturing most of western Poland Image credits: historicdailydose On February 19, 1945, during the initial invasion on the island. In the background are the battleships of the U.S. fleet that made up the invasion task force Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Which had been occupied by Italian forces and fell to the allies on January 5, 1941 after a 20-day siege Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose Image credits: historicdailydose#1 Yes, Believe It Or Not, This Is One Of The Pipes That The Hoover Dam Consists Of
#2 This Photo Shows What New York Looked Like Back In 1903
#3 There Are Several Instances Where Moms Have Tried To Sell Their Kids For Cash
#4 A Police Officer On A Harley-Davidson Transports A Prisoner In A Mobile Holding Cell (1921)
#5 These Two Bullets Were Found After The Battle Of Gallipoli Which Started In 1915 And Ended In 1916 During Wwi
#6 Nikola Tesla Sitting In His Laboratory With His "Magnifying Transmitter"
#7 Thought This Was A Pretty Cool Photo. Pictured Above Is An American M3 Lee Going Airborne On An Obstacle Course
#8 Yes, This Is What Halloween Looked Like In The Year 1900. What Are Your Thoughts?
#9 The Hindenburg Disaster Occurred On May 6, 1937
#10 The Painting Of The Eiffel Tower In 1932
#11 I Truly Think This Photo Speaks For Itself. This Was What Job Hunting Was Like In The 1930s
#12 A Lucky British Soldier Smiles As He Shows Off His Damaged Helmet, 1917
#13 Two German Soldiers And Their Mule Wearing Gas Masks In Wwi, 1916. I'm Not Too Sure How That Worked Out For The Mule
#14 Pictured Above Is The Testing Of A New Type Of Bulletproof Vest In 1923
#15 Yes, This Is Also What Kids Used To Do For Fun. This Photo Shows A Young Girl Riding An Alligator In The 1920s
#16 William Harley And Arthur Davidson, 1914
#17 A Shell-Shocked Reindeer Looks On As War Planes Drop Bombs On Russia In 1941
#18 Dr. Wernher Von Braun
#19 Pictured Above Is The U.S. North Carolina Battleship Docked In Brooklyn, New York During 1941
#20 Pictured Above Is Russian Photographer Yevgeny Khaldei (Center) In Berlin With Soviet Forces, Near The Brandenburg Gate In May Of 1945
#21 British Prime Minister Winston Churchill Inspects Britain's Grenadier Guards Standing At Attention In Front Of Light Bren Gun Armored Units In July Of 1940
#22 Nazi Motorcyclists Pass Through A Destroyed Town In France During 1940
#23 Pictured Above Is A British Matilda II During Training Exercises During 1941
#24 African American Soldiers Of The Us Army 41st Engineers During The Color Guard Ceremony At Fort Bragg, North Carolina
#25 Yes, This Is What Ice Delivery Was Like In 1918
#26 There Have Been Several Movies About German Submarines And How They Looked Back In The Day, But Here Is An Actual Photo Taken From 1918
#27 Men Of The British Expeditionary Force Safely Arrive Home After Their Arrival In Flanders On June 6, 1940
#28 The Expanding Fireball And Shockwave Of The Trinity Explosion, Seen .025 Seconds After Detonation On July 16, 1945
#29 This Is Queen Elizabeth During Her Wwi Service
#30 Pictured Above Are Us Army Rangers Awaiting The Invasion Signal Of Northern France, Also Known As Normandy, In A Landing Craft At An English Port During June Of 1944
#31 Seeing How Many People You Could Pack Into A Phone Booth Was What Teens Did Before The Internet, 1959
#32 The Making Of Batman In 1966
#33 A British Cruiser Tank Is Unloaded At A Port In Egypt On November 17, 1940. It Is One Of A Large Number Which Had Just Been Shipped There By British Forces
#34 Belgians Blasted This Bridge Across The Meuse River In The Town Of Dinant, Belgium, But Shortly After, A Wooden Bridge Built By German Sappers Was Standing Next To The Ruins On June 20, 1940
#35 This Photo Depicts Hugo Gernsback Wearing His "Teleyeglasses" In 1963
#36 During The Invasion Of Sicily By Allied Forces, An American Cargo Ship
#37 Photo Taken In January Of 1952
#38 Pictured Aboved Is A Woman Wearing A Gas Mask And Pushing A Gas-Resistant Pram In England During 1938
#39 This Is What Some Of The World Leaders Looked Like As Children
#40 If You Think Something Smells Fishy, It Could Be Because This Epic Historical Photograph Actually Features A Taxidermist’s Preservation Of The Massive Catch
#41 This Grotesque Photograph Of A Fish May Put You Off Just A Little Bit. Taken In 1903, It Marks An Important Day In The History Of Fishing
#42 When You Look Closely, The Last Known Photo Taken Of The Titanic Gives You A Hint As To Why The Ship Eventually Sank
#43 Pictured Above Is A Destroyed German Leichter Panzerspähwagen (Sd. Kfz. 222)
#44 A German Twin Propelled Messerschmitt BF 110 Bomber Nicknamed "Fliegender Haifisch" (Flying Shark), Over The English Channel In August Of 1940
#45 Experienced In Desert Weather Flying, A British Pilot Lands An American Made Kittyhawk Fighter Plane Of The Sharknose Squadron In A Libyan Sandstorm On April 2, 1942
#46 A 106 Year Old Armenian Woman Shows That She's More Than Capable Of Defending Her Home, 1990
#47 Pictured Above Is A Destroyed German Panzerjäger Tiger (P) Ferdinand On The Eastern Front During 1943
#48 Over The Body Of A Dead Comrade, Canadian Infantrymen Advance Cautiously Up A Narrow Lane In Campochiaro, Italy On November 11, 1943
#49 Invented In The 19th Century, The "Mass Shaving Machine" Can Shave A Dozen Men Simultaneously
#50 An Unidentified American Soldier, Shot And Killed By A German Sniper, Clutches His Rifle And Hand Grenade In March Of 1945 In Coblenz, Germany
#51 German General Erwin Rommel With The 15th Panzer Division Between Tobruk And Sidi Omar. Photo Taken In Libya During 1941
#52 The Final Photograph Taken Of Vladimir Lenin. He Is Seen With His Sister Anna Ilyinichna Yelizarova-Ulyanova And His Doctor A. M. Kozhevnikov In Gorki In May 1923
#53 Soldiers Of The Ss-Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler Division, Resting In A Ditch Alongside A Road On The Way To Pabianice, During The Invasion Of Poland In 1939
#54 This Armorer Of The R.a.f.'s Middle East Command Prepares A Bomb For Its Mission Against The Italian Forces Campaigning In Africa
#55 Pictured Above Is An American M4a3e2 Sherman At Bastogne During The Battle Of The Bulge
#56 Pictured Above Are Kittyhawk Fighters Of The American Volunteer Group Flying Near The Salween River Gorge On The Chinese-Burmese Border During May 28, 1942
#57 German Infantrymen Take Cover In A House In Southern Italy On February 6, 1944 Awaiting The Word To Attack After Stukas Had Done Their Work
#58 Perhaps One Of The Most Popular Photos Of D-Day, This Helps Show The Brutality The Allied Forces Had To Endure
#59 German Parachute Troops Man A Machine Gun Post In The Netherlands On June 2, 1940. This Photo Came From A Camera Found On German Parachute Troops Who Were Taken Prisoner
#60 On September 3rd, 1967, Or “H-Day” As It Was Called, Sweden Planned To Switch From Driving On The Left Side Of The Road To The Right Side. This Is What Happened
#61 Pictured Above Is Brigadier General Donald Brann And Lieutenant General Mark Clark In Italy, Date Unknown
#62 Pictured Above Are Men Working On M3 Lee Tanks At The Detroit Arsenal Plant In Michigan, United States. Date Is Unknown
#63 Pictured Above Is An American Pby-5a Catalina At Rest In The Water, Date Unknown
#64 Pictured Above Is A Us Marine Corps Motor Detachment In New River, North Carolina During May If 1942
#65 Pictured Above Are Multiple Camouflaged German Sturmpanzer Assault Guns In Rome, Italy During 1944
#66 Pictured Above Is A French Ft-17 Light Tank In France During 1940
#67 An American M-10 Tank Destroyer From The 636th Tank Destroyer Battalion Supporting The 143rd Infantry Regiment, 36th Division In Rohrwiller, February 4th 1945
#68 Pictured Above Is General Bernard Paget In A Crusader Tank Of The British 42nd Armored Division During An Exercise Near Yorkshire During September 29, 1942
#69 Pictured Above Is The Children's Khorovod, Also Known As Barmaley Fountain Located In Stalingrad
#70 Venus The Bulldog, Mascot Of The Destroyer Hms Vansittart
#71 Pictured Above Is A Bantam Jeep, Towing A 37mm Gun M3 Piece Getting Some Airtime Near New River, North Carolina During 1941
#72 Britain's General Bernard Montgomery, Commander Of The Eighth Army, Watches Battle In Egypt's Western Desert From The Turret Of An M3 Grant Tank In 1942
#73 Pictured Above Is A Douglas Aircraft Company Employee Working On The Port Engine Of A C-47 Skytrain Aircraft In Long Beach California During October Of 1942
#74 Pictured Above Is An American M4 Sherman That Has Been Knocked Out By A German 88mm Shell Near Blatzheim, Germany
#75 Pictured Above Are German Panzerkampfwagen 39h 735(F) Tanks In A Yugoslavian Forest During 1941
#76 Pictured Above Is The Uss Manta, A Balao-Class Submarine, Near Pearl Harbor, Hawaii During September 10, 1945
#77 Pictured Above Is A Japanese Type 4 Chi-To Captured By American Forces After The Japanese Surrender, Taken In Late 1945
#78 Pictured Above Are American Troops Belonging To The 29th Infantry Regiment Advancing With An M4 Sherman During March 16th, 1944 On The Island Of Bougainville
#79 Salvo The “Paradog” Completing A Parachute Jump During Training
#80 Pictured Above Is An American M10 Wolverine In Percy, France During 1944
#81 Pictured Above Are American Trucks And Jeeps Belonging To The 1st Army In The Town Of Isigny, France During 1944
#82 Pictured Above Is A Portrait Of German Luftwaffe Oberstleutnant Werner Mölders, Taken On November 27, 1940
#83 Pictured Above Is A Japanese Soldier Posing With A Type 26 Revolver And A Type 11 Machine Gun, Date Unknown
#84 Two Tanks Of The Ss-Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler Division Cross The Bzura River During The German Invasion Of Poland In September Of 1939
#85 Pictured Above Is A U.S. Marine Killed By Japanese Sniper Fire, Still Holding His Weapon As He Lies In The Black Volcanic Sand Of Iwo Jima
#86 With His Hands In The Air, The First Of 20 Japanese Emerges From A Cave On Iwo Jima On April 5, 1945. The Group Had Been Hiding For Several Days
#87 Pictured Above Are Chinese Soldiers Manning A Sound Detector Which Directs The Firing Of 3-Inch Anti-Aircraft Guns Around The City Of Chongqing, China, On May 2, 1941
#88 Pictured Above Are German Soldiers Crossing A Russian River On Their Tank On August 3, 1942
#89 Pictured Above Are British Infantrymen In Position In A Shallow Trench Near Bardia, A Libyan Port
#90 Pictured Above Is A Captured Lorraine 37l Spg
#91 Pictured Above Is A German Hummel Spg On The Eastern Front During 1943
#92 Low Flying C-47 Transport Planes Roar Overhead As They Carry Supplies To The Besieged American Forces Battling The Germans At Bastogne, During The Enemy Breakthrough On January 6, 1945 In Belgium. In The Distance, Smoke Rises From Wrecked German Equipment, While In The Foreground, American Tanks Move Up To Support The Infantry In The Fighting
#93 This Photograph, Taken In 1942 By Life Magazine Photographer Gabriel Benzur, Shows Cadets In Training For The U.S. Army Air Corps, Who Would Later Become The Famous Tuskegee Airmen. The Tuskegee Airmen Were The First Black Military Aviators And Helped Encourage The Eventual Integration Of The U.S. Armed Forces
#94 Pictured Above Is A Russian Zis-30 Anti Tank Weapon
#95 German Soldiers Supported By Armored Personnel Carriers, Move Into A Burning Russian Village At An Unknown Location During The German Invasion Of The Soviet Union On June 26, 1941
#96 A Member Of The State Militia Faces Off Against An African-American Veteran During The 1919 Chicago Race Riot. July 27, 1919
#97 Pictured Above Is An American B-24d Liberator Of Maxwell Field, Alabama In Flight During August Of 1943
#98 Pictured Above Are Covenanter And Crusader Tanks Of The Polish 1st Armored Division In Britain During 1944
#99 American Soldiers Aboard An Assault Boat Huddle Together As They Cross The Rhine River At St. Goar, Germany, While Under Heavy Fire From The German Forces In March Of 1945
#100 Pictured Above Is An American B-17e Flying Fortress Bomber In Flight During 1942
#101 The Royal Irish Fusiliers Of The British Expeditionary Forces Come To The Aid Of French Farmers Whose Horses Have Been Commandeered By The French Army. A Tank Is Hitched To A Plow To Help With The Spring Tilling Of The Soil On March 27, 1940
#102 Pictured Above Is A Knocked Out Russian Kv-2 Heavy Tank Mounted With The M-10 152mm Howitzer
#103 Pictured Above Is A German Panzerkampfwagen Tiger Ausf. B In Hungary During 1944
#104 A Large Russian Gun On Tracks, Likely A 203 Mm Howitzer M1931, Is Manned By Its Crew In A Well-Concealed Position On The Russian Front On September 15, 1941
#105 Pictured Above Is A Close Up Photo Of The Tail End Turret Of A B-24 Liberator
#106 Pictured Above Are Captured Soviet Tanks And Cars Along A Road In A Snow Covered Forest On January 17, 1940. Finnish Troops Had Just Overpowered An Entire Soviet Division
#107 Pictured Above Is A German Soldier Equipped With A Flamethrower In Russia During 1941
#108 German Panzerkampfwagen Iv On The Eastern Front
#109 Pictured Above Is A German Panzerjäger I Mounted With A 4.7cm Pak(T) Cannon
#110 A German Soldier Operates His Antiaircraft Gun At An Unknown Location In Support Of The German Troops As They March Into Danish Territory On April 9, 1940