D-day vets sitting across their younger selves in the same plane before dropping into Normandy 1944.

Image from preview.redd.it and submitted by SquiddlyB
image showing D-day vets sitting across their younger selves in the same plane before dropping into Normandy 1944.

-Daetrax- on November 11st, 2021 at 17:15 UTC »

Statistically speaking, shouldn't one or two be missing?

JDog780 on November 11st, 2021 at 18:10 UTC »

These guys knew how to deal with Fascism in their day,,, do you?

Spartan2470 on November 11st, 2021 at 18:17 UTC »

Snopes confirms this is miscaptioned.

Although these two images are somewhat related, they don’t quite bear as close a relationship as the caption that accompanies them states.

The first photograph [you can see the full image here] shows paratroops of 1st (British) Airborne Division inside a C-47 transport aircraft on their way to drop into Holland to take part in Operation Market Garden in September 1944, three months after D-Day (although some of pictured men may also have taken part in the earlier operation in France).

The color photograph [which you can see here] captures 25 veterans from the East Anglia branch of the Parachute Regimental Association taking a tour of a restored World War II airplane while visiting Colchester’s Merville Barracks in 2011.

Paratroopers past and present were given a tour of a restored Second World War plane which holds a special place in the hearts of all airborne forces.

The Dakota has been given pride of place by the front gate at Colchester Garrison.

Some 25 veterans from the East Anglia branch of the Parachute Regimental Association visited Colchester’s Merville Barracks to look around the Dakota, which is the type most paratroopers jumped from during the D-Day and Arnhem operations in the Second World War.

Although some of the men in this second photograph may indeed have parachuted into France on D-Day, they’re not the very same group captured in the first picture above. They hailed from a variety of different units, and at least some of them served in the Pacific rather than the European theater during World War II. And although the same type of airplane is shown in these two photographs (the C-47 Skytrain, also known as the Dakota), it is extremely unlikely that the very same aircraft is pictured in both photos.

David Mikkelson Published 15 June 2021

Hee is the source for the image on the left.

Here is the source for the image on the right.