A different sort of stash

the insanely brave photographer who took it.
Yes.
We can point at the heavy censoring of wartime reporting, the propaganda leverage it was often used for.
But those guys behind the lens, hauling their typewriters, scrawling short dispatches under fire to the folks back home, telling the stories best they knew how... blows my mind.
 
So many horses. Google it, and estimates range between 2 and 5 million horses died in WW2.

...not the impression I got from Hollywood movies in the 60s.

Poland, Aug 1939

17369801443386867155539969091046.jpg

Germany, September 1939 (bonus planes!)

1736978911938174973119502653929.jpg
 
Last edited:
Horses are remarkably fragile creatures, far more fragile than their human riders (contrary to what you saw in the movies in the 60s. Their advantage in a relatively modern (WWI & WWII) is that they don't run on a petroleum product. But they don't do well when used against machine guns or effective massed fire. (Agincourt, Crecy—apparently the Poles never got the memo.):(
 

Latest posts

Back
Top