Crews are working to recover a World War II Stuka dive bomber from the bottom of the Baltic Sea that will join the only other two known models to survive. Known as the ‘Stuka’ a shorthand version of ...
CHICAGO (WLS) -- A big part of World War II history landed at the Museum of Science and Industry Wednesday morning. The German Stuka dive bomber, one of only two in the world still intact, has been at ...
Its distinctive sirens would have been heard moments before it dropped the bombs over Poland that set the Second World War in motion. But despite its important role in history, very few German Stuka ...
In the war’s darkest hours, Germany breathed new life into its fading dive bomber. The Ju-87 “Stuka” was reborn as a tank killer — redesigned with twin 37 mm cannons, and retooled for lethal strikes ...
In this picture taken Saturday June 9, 2012 workers unload the motor of a German 'Junkers Ju 87' war plane from a salvage vessel in Sassnitz at Baltic Sea, eastern Germany. German military museum is ...
The Junkers JU-87, better known by its nickname "Stuka," was one of World War II's most iconic combat aircraft. Its distinctive inverted "gull" wings and fixed undercarriage make it unmistakable, and ...
The German army is lifting a Junkers 87 'Stuka' divebomber from the Baltic Sea floor just off the coast. Berlin's military museum is eager to exhibit the feared plane, known for its ear-piercing siren ...
The Stuka was as much a psychological warfare weapon as it was an actual weapon of war. Before hostilities fully commenced, the decade preceding the outbreak of the Second World War, saw a flowering ...