US-made M3 Stuart light tanks and M3 Lee medium tank in Soviet service, Stalingrad, Russia, Nov 1942; note soldier with PPSh-41 submachine gun

Historical Information
Caption     US-made M3 Stuart light tanks and M3 Lee medium tank in Soviet service, Stalingrad, Russia, Nov 1942; note soldier with PPSh-41 submachine gun ww2dbase
WW2-Era Location Name Stalingrad, Russia
Date  Nov 1942
Photographer    Unknown
 
Source Information
Source    ww2dbaseWikimedia Commons
Link to Source    Link
 
Related Content
More on...   
M3 Lee/Grant   Main article  Photos  
M3 Stuart   Main article  Photos  
Battle of Stalingrad   Main article  Photos  
PPSh-41   Main article  Photos  
 
Licensing Information
Licensing  This work is believed to be in the public domain.

Please contact us regarding any inaccuracies with the above information. Thank you.
 
Metadata
Added By C. Peter Chen
Photo Size 724 x 340 pixels



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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Gregg Heilman says:
2 Jan 2010 06:00:41 PM

In the book the Siege of Stalingrad it described how men tried to tie themselves to the wings of planes leaving Stalingrad. Others shot themselves, but it this was discovered the soldier was executed.

Rent the 1993 DVD "Stalingrad" it was made by Germans and was not allowed to be shown there for some years. It follows the true stories of many of the surviors and the horrors they experienced.

This is a quote from and another source stating how the men tried to hold on or tie themselves to the wings of the last planes out of Stalingrad.

http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/wwii/stalingrad/annihilation.aspx

“Many others needed no such prompting. With a sense of urgency spurred on by the knowledge that each departing aircraft from Gumrak or Pitomnik might be the last, desperate soldiers overwhelmed the guards and clung to the outside of transports making their take-off run. Many still clung to the wings as the planes gained speed and became airborne, but all eventually lost their grip and fell onto the snowy steppe. Among those departing these final flights were a number of men with self-inflicted wounds who had managed to deceive the triage doctors who were determined to bar such men from evacuation. They had managed to hide the tell-tale marks of gunpowder burns by shooting themselves through thick blankets. Rather than inflicting an obvious wound such as shooting themselves in the hand or foot, many of them shot themselves in the chest or abdomen. Such acts were indicative of the level of desperation that drove many to try and escape the frozen Hell of Stalingrad at any cost.”
2. Nathan Judd says:
5 Apr 2010 08:43:32 AM

There are many accounts in military history of humans struggle. Old photographs capture the reality of war on both sides in a way that few people understand today. http://www.wig-wags.com/

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