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#1
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I believe I’ve found definitive proof that the Canadians painted their stars on straight…
All Canadians, whether they have been aware of it or not, are personally acquainted with this man of many moods and misfortunes. For Herbie IS the Canadian Army. He is the ambassador-at-large who almost missed the troop train for Halifax, was less one crown and anchor board on arrival overseas, got lost in the London Underground, drunk in the Queens’s at Aldershot, failed to salute the flag car at Leatherhead, holed up with a simply delightful English family on Exercise Spartan and was unholed by the provost. He was first in the bully beef barter queue in Sicily, thrown for a loss by vino rosso, midwife at a Bambi OS birth in Italy, stubbed his toe on the Normandy beach and became D-Day’s first casualty thereby. He fought and franc’d his way through France and Belgium, fell into an Amsterdam canal, thought V2 fluid was hopped-up Calvados, was brought back to life, cautioned the postal corps to strike him off strength and came home… Call it fact. Call it fiction. Call it Herbie Now since Herbie’s truck had a straight painted star, there surely was no conspiracy to paint them crooked, otherwise Herbie would most definitely have been in on it. The above was inspired by an individual on Facebook who was adamant that the Canadians always painted their star’s crooked. 8C4EFD9A-84FC-425E-8E3A-AA9D32F8B836.jpg
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Jordan Baker RHLI Museum, Otter LRC C15A-Wire3, 1944 Willys MB, 1942 10cwt Canadian trailer |
#2
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My Uncle served in NW Europe during the war, and apparently no-one told his unit that the stars had to be crooked or the same size!
156-26 Howard Storey copy.jpg 157-26 Howard Storey copy.jpg |
#3
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Just my two cents useless input - Czechs apparently were also members of this crooked star gang
![]() As you can see on the original photo star is also slightly misaligned, so I kept them in this way too. Maybe just a way how some soldiers behave in all these uniformity?
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UCw Mk.III |
#4
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Chevrolet C8 cab 11 FFW BSA Folding Bicycle |
#5
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Brilliant, Jordan!
Here’s an official press photo released shortly before Herbie “stubbed his toe on the Normandy beach”: “First View of "Liberation Star" Insignia For D-Day Invasion | May 1944 Dated | Official Signal Corps News Period Photograph. This photo shows the white star, designated as the identification marking of the liberation forces to be deployed to the ETO at Normandy. The star was used on all Allied ground forces during the rest of WWII. Note the truck is Canadian. The location is England, just before the invasion. The unit marking is censored for deletion, indicating the truck was assigned to the Canadian Postal Corps.” 11C1BEB6-9AAD-44A2-BB4E-0D1E81D7AD9F.jpeg
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
#6
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![]() "Soldiers of B. Coy i.e. Company Argyll Regiment*) advancing into Chong-ju, South Korea, accompanied by U.S. tanks from 89th U.S. Tank Regiment. Korean telephone exchange blazing in the background." FL16329535.jpg Source: http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/121604 *) (British Army) 1st Battalion, The Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
#7
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Chevrolet C8 cab 11 FFW BSA Folding Bicycle |
#8
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Hanno, isn't that a firefly?
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Jordan Baker RHLI Museum, Otter LRC C15A-Wire3, 1944 Willys MB, 1942 10cwt Canadian trailer |
#9
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No, it is an M4A3(76)W HVSS in US Army service - with a crooked white star
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
#10
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Herbie?
"Unidentified Canadian soldier From the Donald Carson fonds, PR2011.0001/16." 12002053275_279dd0265b_o (1).jpg Source: https://flic.kr/p/jhzEi2
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
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