Maneuvers of the U.S. submarines off the coast of California. Large group of submarines underway. USS Nautilus (SS-168) underway. The crash diving of USS Nautilus. Point of view shot from conning tower as submarine dives, with water covering deck and front gun as it goes under water. Periscopes and conning towers of submarines underway. Conning tower of the submarine as it submerges. Mountains and coastline in the background. Aerial view of the submarines underway.
Maneuvers of the U.S. submarines off the coast of California. Interior of a submarine. Men at the controls of the submarine. A periscope rising out of the periscope well. Captain of the submarine looking through periscope.
Maneuvers of the U.S. submarines off the coast of California. USS Nautilus surfacing. Bow of the submarine breaking through water.
Training film 'Combat firing by the individual tank' depicts operations and uses of tanks during World War II. Tanks being parked on a field. A tank commander aboard a tank. Guns being fired from the tank. Wrecked Nazi German armored vehicles on a battlefield. A wrecked Japanese machine gun nest in the Pacific theater. Wrecked Axis equipment and vehicles following an Allied attack. A U.S. Army M4 Sherman tank commander aboard a tank watches through binoculars. Views of soldiers inside M4 Sherman tank operating controls and firing tank guns. Guns and other equipment mounted on the tank. The tanks advancing on the field.
A training film depicts operations and uses of U.S. Army tanks during World War II. Animated combat course of a tank. A training for combat, maneuvering and taking cover. M4 Sherman tank moving on a field. It is loaded with live ammunition. A periscope is adjusted. A sign reads: 'Start'. The tank enters an area. A man watches the tank through the periscope. It fires at the enemy positions. Animation shows the course of the tank and firing at the enemy positions. The tank taking a cover to escape enemy gun fire. Smoke arises from the firing.
A still photograph of a U.S. Navy Curtiss NC-4 Aircraft. It was the first aircraft to fly across the Atlantic Ocean in a 1919 flight to Lisbon spanning 19 days with multiple stops. Civilian men and women standing near the airplane on an airfield.
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