Captured Nazi officers and crew are marched to barracks in Charleston, South Carolina. They were captured by the Coast Guard cutter U.S.S. Icarus off the Atlantic coast. From: Sidney W. Souers Papers.
A U-Boat Commander and an officer captured by the U.S.S. Icarus served an officer mess in confinement. These are the surviving officers of the contingent of 33 captives, the first prisoners to be taken in the submarine warfare on the Atlantic Coast.
Adm. Sidney W. Souers and other officers question a captured Nazi officer on the U.S.S. Icarus. Adm. Souers is at the far right and the Nazi officer at far left.
Admiral Sidney W. Souers (right) with officers and two captured Nazi officers aboard the Coast Guard cutter U.S.S. Icarus off the coast of Charleston, South Carolina.
The crew of the Coast Guard cutter, U.S.S. Icarus, on the deck of their ship, is credited with forcing an enemy submarine to the surface with depth charges and then taking prisoners of the Nazi crew.
Big Three with staffs around the Conference table. President Harry S. Truman, Prime Minister Clement Attlee and Premier Joseph Stalin. Stalin is in white uniform; Truman and Attlee are seated in chairs with decorative carvings on the corners of the back. Others: Vyacheslav Molotov to the left of Stalin. Andrei Gromyko, James Byrnes, and Admiral William D. Leahy to Truman's right. Ernest Bevin in front foreground, back turned. Same as 63-1457-21.
President Harry S. Truman (right) and Secretary of State James F. Byrnes (left) standing at bow of the USS Augusta. The Philadelphia, Augusta's escort, appears in the distance steaming ahead of the Augusta. From: Potsdam Album (no.1).