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Kilroy Was There A GIs War in Photographs 2004, 96 pp
courtesy of our partner, Atlas Books |
“In 1941 Frank Kessler, a young accountant in Canton, Ohio, was drafted, assigned to an Army Signal Corps unit, and went away to photograph the war in Europe. In 1945, home again with his wife and children, he stored hundreds of those images of blood and battle in his attic. There they stayed until after his death.
“Then Lee Kessler, Frank’s estranged younger brother, sorted through boxes seeking to better know a brother he’d never known very well. A flier who had been shot down and held in a German POW camp, Lee saw Frank’s photographs as images of a different side of war, one he never experienced. He was moved by what he saw and recognized their importance, He preserved them for all of us, carefully ordering them into albums and typing the information Frank had written on the backs of the photos.
“When
I saw Frank Kessler’s photographs I was struck by how different they
were from the movie-camera views I see on television. No public relations
pictures here, intended to glorify battle and rally support. These were up-close
snapshots of the dirty, damp, and disheveled men in the rifle companies and
tank units. It was the war as they endured it, as they struggled through
it from the beaches of France to the streets of Berlin until they finally
won it.
“With
his camera Kessler was out there on the killing fields alongside the rest
of us. . . . Kessler had a remarkable talent for making significant the ordinary
images of war. With a snapshot of a U.S. Army medic lighting a cigarette
for a bloody German soldier, he tells us how opposing troops came to see
one another. . . . He shows us soldiers sitting on the muddy bank of a little
stream trying to take a bath. He shows us Sherman tanks burning, young men
dying, young men dead. Like no other photographs I’ve seen, Kessler’s
capture the ugliness, wreckage, cold, and misery of war.”—from
the Preface
Novelist Tony Hillerman is a WWII combat veteran who served as a mortar gunner in the weapons platoon of C Company, 410th Infantry. He was awarded a unit citation Bronze Star, a Bronze Star with Oak Leaf Cluster, a Silver Star, and a Purple Heart. Hillerman has been a journalist and a professor of journalism at the University of New Mexico, 1965 to 1987. He has written a series of novels, Navajo Mysteries, which have won numerous awards. Several have been made into PBS specials.
Frank Kessler (1915–1990) served with the 1st Army Signal Corps on the Western Front.
Of related interest:
And the Wind Blew Cold by Richard M. Bassett
No Uncle Sam by Anton F. Bilek