General Wend von Wietersheim, surrendered to the US 90th Infantry Division at the Czech town of Vseruby on 4 May 1945
11th Panzer Division Surrender in Neumark, Czechoslovakia, May 1945
Photographer: Lt. Joseph (Joe) M. Zinni 166th Signal Photo Company
Lead German Panzer 4 of the 11th Panzer Division Surrender in Neumark, Czechoslovakia, May 1945
Photographer: Lt. Joseph (Joe) M. Zinni 166th Signal Photo Company
Nibelungenwerke in Austria. This Panzer IV Ausf.J is in standard N-werke camo
German 11th Panzer Division Surrender in Neumark, Czechoslovakia, May 1945
German 11th Panzer Division Surrender in Neumark, Czechoslovakia, May 1945
Dijon France VE Day (Victory in Europe) May 8th 1945
American soldiers standing at the window of Adolf Hitlers Eagles Nest May 1945
Captured German Fighter Plane Bf 109 G-4 « Weiss 12 » 4./JG 27. captured in May 1943 in Tunisia. D.C. USA 1944
Bf 109 G-4 « Weiss 12 » 4./JG 27, captured in May 1943 in Tunisia and shipped to the USA for a
war bond raising tour. It is seen here near Washington D.C.
Dijon France VE Day (Victory in Europe) May 8th 1945
Dijon France VE Day (Victory in Europe) May 8th 1945
Dijon France VE Day (Victory in Europe) May 8th 1945, American Army Camp captured german car
German road sign for blown up bridge over the Rhine May 1945 after Operation Plunder. Max 155 people allowed on bridge
American slide of German war graves near Wesel Germany May 1945. These soldiers were defending the rhine crossing 1945
101st Cavalry Regiment hook up with French 2nd Armoured Division, 4th May 1945, Traun River near Siegsdorf, Autobahn
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
American soldiers listen to radio broadcast declaration of the end of the Second World War in Europe 8 May 1945
101st Cavalry Regiment hook up with French 2nd Armoured Division, 4th May 1945, Traun River near Siegsdorf, Autobahn
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
German soldiers surrendering weapons beside General Albert Kesselrings private train, Saalfelden Austria 1945
Saalfelden, near Salzburg, in Austria on 9 May 1945.
Kesselring then surrendered to an American major at Saalfelden, near Salzburg, in Austria on 9 May 1945. He was taken to see Major General Maxwell D. Taylor, the commander of the 101st Airborne Division, who treated him courteously, allowing him to keep his weapons and field marshal_qt_s baton
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
German soldiers surrendering weapons beside General Albert Kesselrings private train, Saalfelden Austria 1945
Saalfelden, near Salzburg, in Austria on 9 May 1945.
Kesselring then surrendered to an American major at Saalfelden, near Salzburg, in Austria on 9 May 1945. He was taken to see Major General Maxwell D. Taylor, the commander of the 101st Airborne Division, who treated him courteously, allowing him to keep his weapons and field marshal_qt_s baton
Col. Leslie Crozier Wood. Oklahoma City
101st Mechanized Cavalry Reg
View from the window of Adolf Hitlers Eagles Nest May 1945
First American Soldiers Capturing Hitlers Eagles Nest May 1945.
Tomb of the unknown soldier in Paris, France in May 1945