Item #21454 American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina. WWII U. S. Army Paratrooper.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.
American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.

American Paratrooper Training in World War II Photo Album of Airborne Jump Exercise and Troop Carrier Operations in North Carolina.

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United States Army airborne training operations documented in photographs created during World War II at Laurinburg Maxton Army Air Base in North Carolina. The images record the preparation and execution of paratrooper training jumps carried out as part of the rapid expansion of American airborne forces during the war. Photographs show soldiers receiving equipment checks, boarding transport aircraft, deploying from the air, and regrouping on the ground after landing, illustrating the coordinated logistical and training processes required to prepare airborne infantry units for combat operations. Airborne training facilities such as Laurinburg Maxton served as major preparation sites where paratroopers and troop carrier crews rehearsed the procedures that would later be used in large scale combat operations across multiple theaters of the war.

Photograph album consisting of 45 black and white photographs mounted on eight unbound album pages. The images depict paratroopers wearing standard issue M1 steel helmets, jump boots, and M42 paratrooper jump uniforms equipped with web gear. Several photographs show soldiers conducting pre flight checks and assembling near transport aircraft before boarding. Aircraft visible in the photographs include a Douglas C-47 Skytrain bearing markings associated with the 317th Troop Carrier, a transport unit that trained at Laurinburg Maxton before deployment overseas during the war. Multiple photographs capture the moment of airborne deployment, with paratroopers descending beneath round canopy parachutes consistent with the T-5 parachute used by U.S. airborne forces during most of the war. Ground level images document soldiers gathering after landing and coordinating recovery operations, providing visual evidence of the training routines that prepared airborne units for operational deployment.

During World War II the United States military rapidly expanded its airborne capabilities, developing specialized training programs that combined parachute infantry units with troop carrier aviation groups responsible for delivering soldiers and equipment by air. Troop carrier units such as the 317th Troop Carrier Group later played an important role in Allied airlift and airborne operations in the Pacific theater, transporting troops and supplies and participating in airborne missions during campaigns in New Guinea and the Philippines. Photographs documenting airborne training exercises therefore provide important evidence of the preparatory phase that preceded combat deployment of these units. Album pages remain unbound with photographs mounted to paper leaves. Minor edge wear and light handling marks visible on several prints; overall very good condition. The album preserves detailed visual documentation of American airborne training procedures during the Second World War.

Item #21454

Price: $2,000.00