American M3 Grant tanks being unloaded from ships at a British port, 29 June 1942.
American M3 Grant tanks being unloaded from ships at a British port, 29 June 1942.
Newly-delivered Grant and Stuart tanks being spray painted shortly after their arrival in the Middle East, 29 March 1942.
New Grant tanks being loaded from a ship onto a Z craft which will then take them ashore, 13 March 1942.
A Light Tank Mk VI and Bren gun carrier being unloaded from a ship at Southampton during the return of the second British Expeditionary Force from France, 19 June 1940.
Stuart and Grant tanks loaded onto railway flatcars ready to be delivered to the front, 29 March 1942.
A lot of cruise ships at Marseille cruise ship port, France. Sailing from the port.
https://www.laviezine.com/927506/a-lot-of-cruise-ships-at-marseille-cruise-ship-port-france-sailing-from-the-port/
A lot of cruise ships at Marseille cruise ship port, France. Sailing from the port. Marseille …
Covenanter tanks of 28th Armoured Brigade, British 9th Armoured Division on parade at Barton Mills near Newmarket in Suffolk, England, United Kingdom, 17-18 June 1942
Black Sea Fleet, to protect its ships from Ukrainian drones in Novorossiysk, has to position four barges at port entrance - British intelligence
It’s getting worse now, not only for Israeli ships, now American and British ships are banned from crossing!
6 December 1904 | A Pole, Stanisław Bidziński, was born in Nieznanowice. A pastry chef.
In #Auschwitz from 26 March 1942.
No. 27227
He perished in the camp on 29 June 1942.
Specifically: Register of British Ships: Continuation Register, Port of Newcastle. 1850 - 1986
8 January 1914 | Czech Bartoš Zdenek was born in Vysoké Mýto. A tailor.
In #Auschwitz from 29 April 1942.
No. 33918
He died in the camp on 26 June 1942.
British destroyer HMS Icarus, Russian tanker Azerbaijan, and other ships in Hvalfjörður, Iceland, May 1942
A British Grant tank, whose crew has just painted the name 'Atlanta' on its turret, 10 September 1942.
She also forgot that tanks were originally called land ships before the British called them tanks to hide what they were building.
And it’s still a travesty that we don’t call them land ships