Look forward to seeing it.
Look forward to seeing it.
Often they were handed a single Panzerfaust and sent to the front, or they were issued foreign rifles with limited ammunition...Shotguns and hunting rifles were used as well...I've never heard about Muzzle-loaders/Crossbows being used, and I have my doubts...
In March, 1945, after US Forces crossed the Rhein, Ortsgruppenleiter Gruenewald of Lampertheim (my mother's hometown) urged the women to pour boiling water down on the Americans from the upper floors...They wisely ignored that idea!
cheers, Glenn
Yeah, some of those 'Golden Pheasents' were adamant on resistance to the extreme.
Karl Hanke in his capacity of 'Kampfkommandant' of Breslau being one of them.
This of course didnt prevent him from fleeing the city in a Fieseler Storch right just prior to the surrender.
In 1965, a U S Army veteran gave me a sword he took off an elderly Volksturm man. It was a U S Civil War era cavalry saber!
BOB
LIFE'S LOSERS NEVER LEARN FROM THE ERROR OF THEIR WAYS.
If you want to see what desperation looks like, try studying the British LDV/Homeguard in 1940-they were literally taking weapons from museums and drilling with broomsticks and for improvised weapons see the Smith gun and Northover Projector...
..................indeed.
Not to mention the Blacker Bombard.
Very nice photos!
Some crazy stuff, those reminds me the air to ground rockets that were installed on Hawker Typhoon and Tempest.
Thank you for sharing.
Cheers!
Taka
Agreed. Similar to the bulbous design of those.
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