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Consists of six photographs taken upon the liberation of the Mauthausen concentration camp. Photographs depict groups of survivors receiving food and health care as well as congregating socially.
Consists of photographs taken upon the liberation of the Ohrdruf concentration camp. The photographs were taken by Thaddeus Gutkowski, a member of the 89th Infantry Division, which participated in the liberation. Also contains a CD-ROM of the scanned images.
Consists of photographs taken after the liberation of Ohrdruf by an unknown photographer. Includes images of the burial of corpses, of a damaged building, and of an American military unit.
Consists of seven photographs taken after the liberation of the Buchenwald concentration camp. Includes images of piles of corpses, of bone fragments, and of soldiers and survivors looking at the corpses.
Consists of 24 photographs of taken upon the liberation of the Buchenwald concentration camp. The photographs are from the collection of Andrew F. Tully, Jr., a foreign correspondent with the Boston Herald.
Liberation photographs from Mauthausen. Donor's father was present post-liberation.
CU, pan up to clothed corpses scattered on the ground, group of survivors in BG. MLS, makeshift tent with survivors. CUs, survivors.
Consists of photographs taken upon the liberation of the Mauthausen concentration camp; includes photographs of prisoners standing outside barracks as well as photographs of corpses.
Consists of six photographs taken after the liberation of Dachau on 27 April 1945. The photographs, which are identified on the verso, show corpses on a train, an SS officer beaten to death after liberation, and a photograph of an American soldier holding a Nazi flag in Schwabmunchen, Germany.
The Dachau liberation photographs consists of thirteen photographs taken after the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp in April 1945. Some of the photographs are mass-produced liberation photographs, while others, including photographs of survivors in the camp and of the collection and burial of bodies, are less common images.