
Since the very earliest days of this project, our team has sought more information about Major Clarence L. Benjamin, a pivotal figure in the saga. It was he who said, to the tankers under his command in the 743rd Tank Battalion, “Let’s check out the weird reports of something on the tracks over there.” It was he who lifted his camera when he saw the people at the train — resulting in the photograph all the world now knows.
But bizarrely, since we associate him so strongly with a powerful photograph, what we haven’t been able to find was a picture of him.
But leave it to the alert folks in the 743rd Battalion Facebook group to produce several, after we’ve believed for years there were none!
And our researcher Barbara Walsh is finding more and more facts and images. We’ll keep sharing them here as they come in.
So, our thanks to Barbara and so everyone else who has come to our aid. Now at last we know what this handsome fella looked like. And in our film, we’ll be able to show his face when we talk about him!
From Barbara Walsh:
He married a second time, in February 1948, to Jean Enright of San Francisco; she was nineteen, and he was 35.
And we have recently learned that he may have taken MORE PHOTOS at the liberation site. More on this when we learn more!