Thanks for posting this, Bill. What a huge difference it is looking at these shots in color versus B/W.
I feel like B/W is more of an artistic presentation tool nowadays, and when you look at old war photos in B/W it is much easier for the viewer to have a sense of disconnection. Because, although you're seeing a moment in time that did actully happen, the B/W aspect disconnects it a bit from reality because of the missing colors. Somehow, it makes it a bit more bearable to see the nastier side of humanity that way. Well, for me at least....
But, looking at these early color pics I feel much more connected to them and can relate better. I.e. "if I had been there, this is pretty much as I would have seen it." Plus, having lived in Europe for 17 years myself, I have seen many of those "tudor" style wooden frame houses in various states of disrepair myself. Somehow, these pics don't "feel" like they are 100 years old.
As I'm sitting here typing this, I wonder if wars would be fought differently if early newspapers had access to color photos and printing, and didn't hold back and showed the real carnage and human destruction???
Anyway, thanks again for sharing that...