An aerial view of trenches of the Western Front during World War I. Hill of Combres, St. Mihiel Sector, north of Hattonchatel and Vigneulles; Ca 1919.
An aerial view of the Hellish moonscape of the Western Front during World War I. Hill of Combres, St. Mihiel Sector, north of Hattonchatel and Vigneulles. Note the criss-cross patterns of multiple generations of trenches, and the thousands of craters left by mortars, artillery, and the detonation of underground mines. (San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive)
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This entry was posted on April 29, 2014 by Miep. It was filed under History, Images of History, Military History, Modern Warfare, Photography, The Drama Of It All, The Politics of Cultural Destruction, Trench Warfare, World War One and was tagged with aerial view, AMERICA, black and white photography, Combres, Europe, Germany, Hattonchatel, History, Military, Military history, Photo, Photography, Politics, San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive, Society, St. Mihiel Sector, the Western Front, Trench Warfare, War, Warfare, World War One, WW1.
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