Silver goblets used by the Doolittle Raiders, on display at Wright-Patterson Air Force Museum, in Dayton, Ohio. The upside-down goblets represent those members of the raid who have passed on.
Ten utwór został udostępniony jako własność publiczna przez jego autora, Flodadolf. Dotyczy to całego świata. W niektórych krajach może nie być to prawnie możliwe, jeśli tak, to: Flodadolf zapewnia każdemu prawo do użycia tej pracy w dowolnym celu, bez żadnych ograniczeń, chyba że te ograniczenia są wymagane przez prawo.
I took this picture more than a half-decade ago. I have no idea of the state of these goblets at this present time, but am planning another trip to Dayton, Ohio soon to visit the museum where they're displayed, and I intend to attempt a similarly-useful photograph (not easy: it is very, very dark, a flash just makes things much worse, and any attempt at real auxiliary lighting will easily disrupt the vibe for other museum-goers).
I will not ever remove or alter this photo, and it will be free and public domain forever, but I may update it with more current shots. I ask in advance that those who link to this image to find the updated version and asymptotically link their articles to it, and in particular that any print effort try to use the latest image. Any newer versions will be linked from this text in some fashion once a newer image is available, and will similarly be released into the public domain.
Attribution to flodadolf (me) would be welcome and appropriate, but it is not in any way required. This image is in the public domain, as I feel it must be: My photographic documentation efforts are absolutely dwarfed by the risk of those who these goblets represent, and it is not anyone's place to profit from their efforts unduly.
Podpisy
Puchary „raidersów”, członków załóg w Rajdzie Doolittle'a (większość z nich ustawiona do góry stopką; symbolizując zmarłych) i butelka koniaku Hennessy rocznik 1896 w ekspozycji w Narodowym Muzeum Sił Powietrznych Stanów Zjednoczonych
{{Information |Description=Silver goblets used by the Doolittle Raiders, on display at USAF museum |Source=self-made |Date=6-23-2007 |Author= Flodadolf }}