Official Australian Commonwealth photo, 1943,
"Natives aid Allied drive in New Guinea jungles. Without the aid of the New Guinea natives, many a wounded Allied soldier might have died in the trackless jungles. Native carriers 'Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels' are shown bringing wounded troops into an advanced American dressing station in the Buna area."
U.S. Army Signal Corps, between 1942 and 1945,
"
Medical officer, Captain John Branson, of Concord, New Hampshire, giving attention to wounded American soldiers."
Office of War Information, between 1942 and 1945,
"Administering blood plasma to a wounded soldier at the portable hospital in New Guinea. Clayton Mitchell of Wyandotte, Michigan, and Major William Garlick of Baltimore, Maryland, are administering."
Office of War Information, 1942 and 1945,
"An operation on wounded American soldier is performed by Major George Marks. The soldier has been wounded in the arms and shoulders by shrapnel from a Jap mortar as he was storming a pillbox in New Guinea."
U. S. Army Signal Corps, 1943,
"In an underground surgery room, behind the front lines on Bougainville, an American Army doctor operates on a U.S. soldier wounded by a Japanese sniper."
U.S. Army Signal Corps, between 1942 and 1945,
"Unloading wounded soldier from an assault boat. Soldiers wounded at the front are moved to the hospital in this manner. New Guinea."