American 105mm Howitzer M3 shelling German forces near Carentan, France, 11 Jul 1944

Caption     American 105mm Howitzer M3 shelling German forces near Carentan, France, 11 Jul 1944 ww2dbase
Photographer    Unknown
Source    ww2dbaseUnited States National Archives
Identification Code   111-SC-191933
More on...   
Normandy Campaign, Phase 1   Main article  Photos  Maps  
105 mm Howitzer M3   Main article  Photos  
Photo Size 1,280 x 1,015 pixels
Photos on Same Day 11 Jul 1944
Added By C. Peter Chen
Licensing  Public Domain. According to the US National Archives, as of 21 Jul 2010:
The vast majority of the digital images in the Archival Research Catalog (ARC) are in the public domain. Therefore, no written permission is required to use them. We would appreciate your crediting the National Archives and Records Administration as the original source. For the few images that remain copyrighted, please read the instructions noted in the "Access Restrictions" field of each ARC record.... In general, all government records are in the public domain and may be freely used.... Additionally, according to the United States copyright law (United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105), in part, "[c]opyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government".

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Colorized By WW2DB     Colorized with Adobe Photoshop



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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Commenter identity confirmed Bill says:
7 Feb 2015 05:41:26 PM

ARTILLERY, KING OF BATTLE: BATTERY FIRE!

Battery is a 105mm M-3 Howitzer firing at retreating German formations, Carentan, France
2,500 A-3's were built and introduced into service 1943.

A GI REMEMBERS:

During the Vietnam War we were rushed in training
learning the trade of artillerymen, while at Fort Sill, Ok trained on 105mm, 155mm, 175mm & 8 inch Howitzer's.
Sent to Germany 1966/67 assigned to a M109, 155mm Self-Propelled Howitzer Battalion. Arrived in Vietnam 1967/68 assigned to a M-114, 155mm Towed Howitzer Battalion, Mekong Delta, that was rough during the Monsoon Season it was rough period.

Returned to Vietnam 1969/70 sent up North Central Highlands assigned to a M-108, 105mm Self-Propelled Howitzer Battalion. Had my hands into a lot of different weapons, but that was when I was younger, much younger. I served with the bravest group of men, that I'll ever see again in my lifetime....

I THANK THE EDITOR/WW2DB FOR ALLOWING ME TO LEAVE MY COMMENTS, AND MY PERSONAL EXPERIENCES DURING THE VIETNAM WAR.

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