Showing posts with label Poster Saturday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poster Saturday. Show all posts

Saturday, March 19, 2022

Poster Saturday. Russo Ukrainian War Poster Art


Wars, traditionally, have made for graphic posters.  However, since 1945, poster art in the west has dramatically declined in quality and importance.

In the East it did not, probably reflecting the lack of visual information systems, television in particular, and it remained strong into the 1970s.  

The Russo Ukrainian War seems to be a reflection of this heritage.  Democratic Ukraine has been producing some really stunning graphic poster art, of which this example is the most graphic I've seen, although last week's was as well.  It's also produced a lot of ad hoc poster art, as in of the handbill type, which we'll also be running.

For those less familiar with the visual elements depicted here, the khaki colored boot is a Ukrainian one.  The vampire teeth skull wears a Russian camouflaged tankers helmet, bedecked with the Russian tricolor flag, and the ribbon for the Cross of St. George, the Russian Federation's highest military honor.

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Sunday September 4, 1921. Replies.


On this day in 1921, Eamon de Valera replied to the British proposals for dominion status, agreeing to it but on the basis co equal to that of other dominions such as Canada, and including full union with Northern Ireland.

The first Italian Grand Prix race was also held on this day.
 


Saturday, August 28, 2021

Thursday,, August 28, 1941. The Office of Price Administration Created, Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Loses Favor, The Soviet Dunkirk, Slaughter at Kamianets-Podilsky



The Office of Price Administration was crated by the Roosevelt Administration to combat inflationary trends caused by the massive boost in employment caused by World War Two and the countries efforts to get ready for it.


Stalin issued  a Decree of Banishment exiling Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic which had previously been an ethnic German Soviet enclave.  


The VGASSR would be officially disestablished on September 7.  It'd been created in the 1920s when the Soviets still attempted o placate local ethnic groups on the hopes that they'd come to like the Communist regime. 

Volga Oblast in yellow at bottom of map.

The fate of Volga Germans, in the country since the time of Catherine the Great, proved to be grim. The war would permanently impact their position in the country and while conditions improved for them after the death of Stalin, many emigrated to Germany under the German Law of Return, a trend that reached near totality in the 1980s and 1990s.  By that time it had reached a state of pathos and irony in that the remaining Volga Germans retained much of their early rustic nature, while also having lost the ability to speak German to a very large degree.  Their retained cultural attributes tended to shock modern Germans, while their inability to speak the language of their ancestors made it difficult for them to fit seamlessly into modern Germany.

While his action is regarded as one of the great atrocities of the Stalin era, and the Soviets have since apologized for it, at least in this instance Stalin's paranoid brutality was not without some reason to fear that they'd become a fifth column during the war given that anti Communist sentiments were strong in various Soviet ethnic groups.  Having said that, large numbers of Volga Germans volunteered for Soviet service in the Red Army during the war, although their services were not always accepted or wanted.



Emigrating to North America, it should be noted, had been a trend in the region for decades, and was accelerated when the Imperial Russian Government in later years rescinded exemption for the population from conscription.  In an interesting development, resistance to conscription, which in some Anabaptist German communities in Imperial Russia lead to North American emigration, did not tend to repeat itself in North America.

Today in World War II History—August 28, 1941

The Soviet Navy suffered a serious disaster when it lost several ships to mines while evacuating Tallinn, Estonia, in what has been called the "Soviet Dunkirk".   The Germans occupied the city on this day.  Meanwhile, the Germans lost a U boat to capture in Iceland. The boat would be returned to service in the Royal Navy as the HMS Graph.

The Germans also slaughtered 23,600 Jews in Kamianets-Podilsky on this day, as their campaign of slaughter reached new regions in the Soviet Union.

Saturday, May 8, 2021

Poster Saturdays: Seabees



Construction battalions exist in every branch of the service, but somehow only the Navy's are really celebrated.

That is in part because of the really serious effort at promoting them that the Navy did during World War Two.  Here's one such example, in a recruiting poster, with a Chief Petty Officer appearing with the accoutrements of war while heavy equipment is in the background.

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Poster Saturday: Join the AIF Now!



Poster for the Second Australian Imperial Force from World War Two. The AIF was made up of Australians who volunteered for service outside of Australia.

During both World War One and World War Two Australian servicemen, for the most part, could not be compelled to serve outside of Australia, although there was a small exception for some regional service in the Pacific that did come about during World War Two.  This mirrored the situation with Canadian servicemen whom, up until late World War Two, could also not be compelled to serve outside of Canada.

That means, for the most part, Australians who served in combat in World War Two were volunteers.

Saturday, February 27, 2021

Poster Saturday: New Jersey Must Fight On


I'm not exactly certain what this 1919 vintage poster actually is seeking to advance.  It's a New Jersey Department of Health poster making reference to children and World War One, but why, exactly, isn't clear.

Saturday, February 20, 2021

February 20, 1941 Coast Guard Reserve comes into existance.

President Roosevelt signed a bill establishing a Coast Guard Reserve.  It technically replaced the Coast Guard Auxiliary, a civilian force that had been in existence for two years.


This is frankly a little confusing, as the military status of the Coast Guard is confusing.  What it did at the time was to add a military reservist component to what had been a civilian auxiliary that supported the Coast Guard.  While not a perfect analogy by any means, the earlier auxiliary might be loosely compared to the the Civil Air Patrol's relationship to the United States Army Air Corps at the time.  The Coast Guard continued to have an auxiliary, but the new military component was added.

When the war came, those entering the Coast Guard were all classified as reservists, following a pattern that's common for the U.S. military but particularly strong in the Navy. Therefore, almost all World War Two Coast Guardsmen were reservists. The auxiliary component, however, continued to exist with volunteers fulfilling non military roles on a part time basis without pay.

214,000 men and women served in the Coast Guard during the war.

The Coast Guard Reserve continued to exist today and now has a more conventional reserve type function.  The New York Naval Militia, by agreement with the Federal Government, is associated with the Coast Guard Reserve in a unique arrangement which allows individuals to be members of both organizations should they wish.

On the same day, British and German patrols made contact with each other for the first time in Libya.  See:

Today in World War II History—February 20, 1941

Day 539 February 20, 1941

The Germans also extended an offer to Greece and Italy to mediate the armed dispute between them.  Failing to appreciate the "offer you can't refuse" nature of the German suggestion, the Greeks turned it down.