drakegoodman
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Everything posted by drakegoodman
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Thanks for the compliment mate, but please don't underestimate your photos, they're as every bit as good as my material, the difference being I tweak mine with some digital enhancements. The originals are more often than not faded, smoke stained, coffee cup stamped, torn and drawn on. Sometimes when my "care packages" arrive from the Fatherland, I have to air out my study afterwards on account of the smell of 90-something year old cigarette smoke emanating from the cards.
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Tony, you're a better man than me if you can find anything decent in Melbourne by way of postcards. My main sources are Ebay Germany (Australian Ebay is rubbish) and a small network of dealers with whom I deal direct, but before you go making room in those shelves, you should know that prices for decent cards have skyrocketed of late. Take the first card in my post for example, a photo from the same studio depicting three artillerymen with holstered C96 semi-automatic pistols went for around $240 on Ebay last week. I suspect it was the presence of the C96s that pushed the price up, but we're not talking flamethrower troops' sleeve insignia here, pictures of C96s are still quite common. I'm still scratching my head over that one. Brett
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Gentlemen, I believe I have the correct location, but cannot find any information relating to a two-day ceasefire at Verdun commencing 17 October 1916. There has been truckloads written about this particular battle and I was hoping that someone might being able to add some background to the following photos.
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"Dear wife, Today I am sending you another postcard of our platoon. Wherever I made a +, these men have been wounded. 2 men are dead, 1 missing, 5 wounded, and 5 men are still playing along, but they are now in reserve. The company has only 60 men left. Many regards, Hermann". > >1 missing, 2 dead and 5 wounded / Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 202 by drakegoodman, on Flickr
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Gentlemen, I believe this apparatus to be a battery powered signal lamp fitted to a periscope, but I'm not a hundred percent. Has anyone got any alternative ideas? Better still, can anyone positively identify it. I assume the Germans gave it at least a five syllable name. > >w. Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 248 by drakegoodman, on Flickr A larger, more potent version > >A Flieger-Bataillon NCO and enlisted man form the two-man crew of the Kaiser's new secret weapon / KS98 bayonet by drakegoodman, on Flickr
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Thanks. I uploaded 6 (oops) images to a gallery, thinking I was uploading to the competition section, but it looks as if I missed the mark. Is there anyway a mod / admin chappy could slide the galley minus 1, into the appropriate area of the competition, or do I have to do it manually this end? Cheers, Brett
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Trench armour near Bullecourt 1917
drakegoodman posted a gallery image in Category 1: Personal Collections
Nothing on reverse. Quite a remarkable photograph taken near Bullecourt circa 1918. The knocked out British tank ('586') in the background is actually being used as a German dugout. Not visible in this photo, but in others I have seen of the same tank, a small flag is located about where the two officers are standing, near the front of the tank. This flag denotes the dugout as a command post. Larger versions available here:© Brett Butterworth Collection (drakegoodman)
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"Flieger-Abwehr-Kanone (Flak) in Stellung 1917"
drakegoodman posted a gallery image in Category 1: Personal Collections