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Old 08-01-18, 21:13
David Dunlop David Dunlop is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Winnipeg, MB
Posts: 3,384
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Hanno.

What are the odds the truck in the two town photos posted is one and the same truck?

In the second photo, the gentleman looks to be waving a helmet, and wearing gloves. In the first photo, the gentleman on the left is wearing gloves and has a helmet.

Whatever this American unit was doing in Holland at that point in time, it would be highly unlikely that organization would have sent a bunch of teams to Holland to do the work. How do these two towns lay out on a map of Holland? Is there a main road, direct connection between them, or would one have to drive about a bit to get from ‘A’ to ‘B’?

Would this American unit have had free access to move about Holland at that time, or would they have had to coordinate access with appropriate Canadian authorities, becoming embedded or attached to some Canadian unit?

Perhaps, the two towns noted line up in some way with the general flow of the liberation of Holland and this truck and it’s crew were following along. If so, they might have also been photographed in other towns ahead of, and behind these two.

Haven’t a clue what the OWI did, but if the information they were gathering related to what the German forces had been up to in Holland during the war, then what would have been significant about the two towns noted, to attract OWI attention. Then again, the crew might just have been sight seeing. I hear Holland is pretty at that time of year.

One last thing. The first photo shows a plate above the bumper on the left side with what appears to be ‘U.S.A.’ on top and maybe a number below. Can that number be read with a higher res image and help ID the vehicle? It is there on the second photo but not at a useful angle or distance.

For better or worse, Hanno, that’s all I can come up with at the moment.

Cheers,

David
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