21 Historical Photos Beautifully Brought To Life With Color
The realness of history is best seen through color photographs.
Published 8 years ago in Wow
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General Douglas MacArthur with General Richard Sutherland (left) and Colonel Lloyd Lehrbas (far left) wading ashore at ‘Blue Beach’, Dagupan, on the island of Luzon, following the landing of the US 6th Army in the Lingayen Gulf, Philippines, 9 January 1945. The Battle for Lingayen Gulf had commenced three days earlier on the 6 January, with a ferocious Allied bombardment of suspected Japanese positions along the coast by ships from the US Navy and Royal Australian Navy. Troops quickly secured the coastline following the landing, pushing several miles inland over the following days. Lingayen Gulf would become a major supply depot for Allied forces for the remainder of the Pacific campaign.
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Adolf Hitler, Along with Mussolini’s son-in-law, Count Galeazzo Ciano (to Hitler’s right), and Joachim von Ribbentrop, attend a NSDAP (Nazi Party) 1930s. Count Galeazzo Ciano was, from the very beginning, against the notion of Italy entering a war; he believed Italy was ill prepared for such an undertaking. As his doubts grew, Ciano would take increasingly bold actions; prior to the German invasion of France, for example, he warned the Belgian government of an imminent German invasion of Belgium. In 1942 and 1943, when the situation looked dire, Ciano turned his efforts towards Italy’s withdrawal from the conflict. For this, he was removed from his post as Foreign Minister on February 5th, 1943. He would remain under close watch of his father-in-law, Mussolini. Following Mussolini’s arrest and Italy’s change of heart, Ciano sought refuge in Germany. There he did not find it; Ciano was rebuffed by the Germans and tried by the fsacist Italians, who found him guilty of treason. Count Ciano was executed by firing squad under the order of his father in law, Benito Mussolini, on January 11th, 1944. His last words were “Long Live Italy!”