Posted by Alumni from The Atlantic
March 13, 2025
In the last weeks of World War II, Harold W. Clover, a combat photographer in the S-2 Section of the U.S. Army's 31st Combat Engineer Battalion, documented the scenes and events around him as his unit pushed from the French Alsace into Nazi Germany, then into Austria, where they served occupation duty, in 1945. Clover donated many of his film negatives to the U.S. National Archives'where I recently visited, digitizing most of these prints below for the first time. Clover's striking photographs capture the lives of war-weary civilians as well as soldiers'sometimes in a playful light'while still depicting the ugly reality of war. Three U.S. Army soldiers sit together in Dossenheim, France, in February of 1945, as their units prepare to move east, into Germany. From left: Private David Taub, T/5 Shigeo Takayama, and an unidentified soldier. The original caption reads: "GIs David Taub, Berlin refugee; Shigeo Takayama, Nisei; and Iowa farm boy with sniper rifle (42nd'Rainbow Division).... learn more

WE USE COOKIES TO ENHANCE YOUR EXPERIENCE
Unicircles uses cookies to personalize content, provide certain advanced features, and to analyze traffic. Per our privacy policy, we WILL NOT share information about your use of our site with social media, advertising, or analytics companies. If you continue using Unicircles by clicking below link, you agree to our use of Cookies while using Unicircles.
I AGREELearn more
x