Fort Benning has put it's photo archive online here http://www.fortbenningphotos.com/Fort-Benning-Past-Present/Historic-Armor/Historic-Armor-Photos/ (if link doesn't work I added it to the text too)
There's a large number of WW1 images covering France, UK, and USA from about the 300 mark onwards many of which may be unqiue as I recognised only a few common images, postcard images etc.
I wasn't going to try and reproduce them all on here but I thought I'd put a selection here as the majority are unidentified in the comments section for each image.
Gary Bell? - EDIT - this is BABY DOLL Cant make this index number out sorry
I'm sure I misread some but as far as I could tell name and index number wise we have images here of:
AGONY [the N is backwards]
B28
B32
BLARNEY CASTLE
HENGIST
HYENA
H [?] 952 [this is the one behind I-16]
I-16
J2 JACOB
YPAH [hard to read]
516
528
598 [location given as Vimy]
2064
4687 HOTSPUR II [location named as Beaumetz]
8043 location named as Peronne]
9015 GARY BELL ? [featured above] - EDIT - this is 'BABY DOLL'
9136
9142
9603 [location given as USA]
9907
9941
Hopefully some of these are new
-- Edited by vollketten on Tuesday 10th of May 2016 10:13:07 PM
Could you post the Schneider and St. Chamond photos? I went to the Ft. Benning site, but such photos are not easy to find on the site. Maybe I recognize their origins.
Those two photos from Fort Benning are new to me. They may be from a Fort Benning infantry photo album rather than the Fort Knox Armor Center stuff (that I am more familiar with)
The Fort Knox collections from the Patton Museum and Armor Center are now at Fort Benning. Howver, they have not been re-opened for research as far as I know as they don't have a museum building yet.
What is the source of this image of Baby Doll? The Minnesota Historical Society owns an identical print. If there is more info about the photo (it was made in Minnesota in 1919), I believe the His. Soc. would appreciate adding it their notes.
Here's another view of "Baby Doll." This one is in my own collection.
John
-- Edited by jagjetta on Tuesday 9th of May 2017 06:08:23 PM
I'm sorry but I do not have a record of the origin or background comment for the 9015 Baby Doll US Mark V Male photos. If I find archive reference numbers I normally keep them but not if they were posted on social media with no information. There is no information on a Google image search
If it is 1919 then it is obviously a war bond exhibition to try and raise money to pay for the expenses of WW1. These happened in the USA and Europe after the war fro a few years. There are many photographs of similar events. It would be interesting to do searches on US newspaper archives for 1919 and 1920 on tank 9015, War Bonds and Baby Doll as keywords to see what comes up.