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Warning Sign for Knocked Out Panther Tank

Image Information
“Original caption: “Cologne, Germany – Cpl. Luther E. [“Bobo”] Boger [(August 21, 1923 – October 2, 2009)], Concord, North Carolina, skytrooper, reads a warning sign in the street. This street leads to the Rhine River and is under observation of the Germans who occupy a stronghold there. Cpl. Boger is with the Eight-Second Airborne Infantry Division. The German tank is burnt out and the torsion-bars have been destroyed by the immense heat of the fire.” Allied troops captured the western part of Cologne on March 6-7 1945. The German army still held the eastern shore of the Rhine and attacked the Allies with artillery. The rest of Cologne was captured April 12-15, 1945. Until April 16, a strip of about 500 meters (550 yards) along the shore had been declared as a restricted area and the cathedral was just within this zone. The Heer “(Nazu German Army”) Panther Panzerkampfwagen Mark 5 tank was famously destroyed by a United States Army 3rd Armored Division T26 Pershing tank, in an engagement that was caught on film. See https://worldwar2database.com/t26e3-pershing-tank-ofthird-armored-division-in-cologne/” Photographed by Private 1st Class Frank P. Smaluch (April 18, 1914 – May 27, 2002), of the 198th Signal Photo Company. He later was assigned to Korea in November 1945.
Image Filename wwii1839.jpg
Image Size 654.95 KB
Image Dimensions 2119 x 1649
Photographer Frank Smaluch
Photographer Title United States Army Signal Corps
Caption Author Written or Adapted by Jason McDonald
Date Photographed April 4, 1945
Location
City Cologne
State or Province North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
Archive National Archives and Records Administration
Record Number ETO-FQ-45-30714
Status Caption ©2026 MFA Productions LLC Please Do Not Duplicate or Distribute Without Permission; Image in the Public Domain

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