The first US WAAC’s (Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps) arrive in Gourock, Inverclyde, Scotland - 11th May 1943. On the 1st July 1943 it was given active duty status and became the WAC (Women’s Army Corp) #wac #waac #ww2 #worldwar2 #gourock #inverclyde #scotland #womensarmycorps #history
#worldwar2
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Photo of the Day
In 1943, a large manor house near Portsmouth, England, became the headquarters of Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay, the Allied naval commander for D-Day.
Ramsay’s job was to plan for and direct all of the vessels which would transport men and materials to the Normandy beaches.
It was a huge assignment.
Seven thousand ships and landing craft would be used on June 6, 1944, for the initial invasion.
Photo of the Day
Reading the paper on Nov. 2, 1944.
British and Canadian forces attacked Walcheren Island, in the Antwerp harbor, yesterday to eliminate German coastal batteries blocking Allied use of the North Sea port.
During the day, American heavy bombers targeted the Ruhr industrial area in Germany, along with rail hubs.
The Army Air Forces announced it now has 74,500 aircraft of all types.
https://open.substack.com/pub/look/p/photo-of-the-day-e3c?r=12u3ju&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
Photo of the Day
Reading the paper on Oct. 19, 1944.
American, British, Canadian and French forces advanced east towards Germany yesterday, establishing positions which could serve as ‘springboards for a winter advance into Germany once the ground freezes,’ the Supreme Allied headquarters said.
https://open.substack.com/pub/look/p/photo-of-the-day-ca4?r=12u3ju&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
The wreck of the USS Stewart, a U.S. Navy destroyer known as the “Ghost Ship of the Pacific,” has been rediscovered nearly 80 years after it was intentionally sunk during a post-World War II naval exercise. The ship, which served both the U.S. and Japanese navies during the war, was located 3,500 feet below the ocean’s surface...
More info: https://archaeologymag.com/2024/10/wwii-uss-stewart-rediscovered-off-california-coast/
Follow @archaeology
#archaeology #worldwar2 #WorldWarII #worldwartwo #shipwreck #maritimearchaeology #underwaterarchaeology
Very early #OnThisDay, 18 Sept 1943, Yolande Beekman arrives in Nazi-occupied France to work as a radio operator for the Special Operations Executive.
The British SOE supported the French Resistance. Wireless was one of the more dangerous roles as German forces could triangulate the position when the operator was signalling.
Beekman was captured in January 1944, and was shot at Dachau concentration camp in September 1944.
#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WorldWar2 #Histodons
#OnThisDay, 7 Jun 1944, Ginette Jullian parachutes into occupied France with the Special Operations Executive. The British SOE supported the French resistance.
She works as a wireless operator for three months until the Allied forces overtake her unit.
#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WorldWar2 #Histodons
#OnThisDay, 28 May 1944, Sonia Butt parachutes into occupied France as an explosives expert for the British Special Operations Executive. She had turned 20 two weeks earlier.
She trained the maquis and coordinated sabotage operations. She was never captured.
#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WorldWar2 #Histodons
#OnThisDay, 14 May 1943, Vera Leigh returns to France to work as a courier for the British Special Operations Executive.
A fashion designer, Leigh had fled France in 1942 after running escape lines for Allied airmen.
After her return, Leigh carried documents and equipment such as guns and explosives around her network's area. Arrested by the Gestapo in 1944, she was executed at Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp.
#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WorldWar2 #Histodons
Very early #OnThisDay, 6 May 1944, Marguerite 'Peggy' Knight parachutes into occupied France to be a courier for the Special Operations Executive. The British SOE supported the French resistance.
Knight fought her way out of an attempted capture, and returned to the UK in September 1944.
#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WorldWar2 #Histodons
New flats filling in a gap between old sandstone tenements on Peel Street in the Partick area of Glasgow. The gap was created when a German parachute mine exploded at 11:25pm on 13th of March 1941, killing 50 people and destroying much of the street. As with other similar sites in the city, there's nothing to mark its history.
#glasgow #architecture #worldwar2
#clydebankblitz #partick #glasgowhistory
Very early #OnThisDay, 30 April 1944, New Zealander Nancy Wake parachutes into occupied France to be a courier for the Special Operations Executive. The British SOE supported French Resistance to Nazi occupation.
Nick-named 'the white mouse' by the Gestapo, she is never captured. She died in 2011.
#WomenInHistory #OTD #History #WomensHistory #WorldWar2 #Histodons
The trees have green shoulders:
her hair is flowers and fruit,
a dome inverts her chin;
her fingers form the angle of a roof,
assurance in the geometry of her arms…
—John Purser, “J.D. Fergusson, Glasgow Spring, 1942”, via the Hunterian Gallery poems
#Scottish #literature #poem #spring #art #painting #20thcentury #WorldWar2
Very early #OnThisDay, 6 Apr 1944, Lillian Rolfe and Violette Szabo separately arrive in occupied France to work for the British Special Operations Executive (SEO). Rolfe is a wireless operator, Szabo a courier.
Szabo returns to the UK at the end of April but goes back to France in June 1944 and is captured. Rolfe is captured in July 1944.
They are executed together, by shooting, in Ravensbrück concentration camp in Feb 1945.
#WomenInHistory #WorldWar2 #History #Histodons #EuropeanHistory
#OnThisDay, 25 Mar 1941, the first WRNS arrive at Bletchley Park in the UK. They operate the Bombe machines used for decoding German Enigma machine messages. Their work helps shorten World War 2.