Photograph from the Stroop Report. Original German caption: "Commander of a great operation". SS General Jürgen Stroop stands in the middle and looks up; first from the right is Josef Blösche. Photo by Franz Konrad or Propaganda Kompanie photographers No. 689.[1][2]) - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public domain, Wikimedia
Photo from the Stroop Report. Tenements set on fire by the Germans at the intersection of Zamenhofa and Wolynska Streets. Photo by Franz Konrad or Propaganda Kompanie photographers No. 689 - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public domain, Wikimedia
Muranowski Square, site of the fierce battles of the ŻZW during the ghetto uprising. On 27 April, the largest battle of the uprising took place here, as well as the display of the red-white and blue-white banners. Photo Virtual Shtetl ID 20530, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Public domain, Wikimedia
Photograph from the Stroop Report. Original German caption: "Jewish Rabbis". Photo by Franz Konrad or photographers from Propaganda Kompanie No. 689. - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public Domain, Wikimedia
Photograph from the Stroop Report. Original German caption: "Bandits killed in battle". Photo by Franz Konrad or photographers from Propaganda Kompanie No. 689 - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public domain, Wikimedia
Photograph from the Stroop Report. Original German caption: " Storm Team. German soldiers on a street in the Warsaw Ghetto, in the background, tenements set on fire. Photo by Franz Konrad or by the photographers of Propaganda Kompanie No. 689 - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public domain, Wikimedia
Ghetto fire seen from Żoliborz district, in the foreground the buildings of Gdanski Railway Station. 30 April 1943. photo: Tomasz Pawłowski, Jarosław Zieliński "Żoliborz. A Historical Guide", Rosner i Wspólnicy, Warsaw 2008, p. 293, Public domain, Wikimedia.
Photograph from the Stroop Report. Original German caption: "Forcibly extracted from the bunkers". Photo by Franz Konrad or Propaganda Kompanie photographers No. 689 - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public domain, Wikimedia
Captured Jews on Zamenhofa Street on their way to the Umschlagplatz. Photo by Franz Konrad or Propaganda Kompanie photographers No. 689 - https://research.archives.gov/description/6003996, Public domain, Wikimedia
Decree of 23 April 1943 signed by Jürgen Stroop forbidding Poles under penalty of death to enter the "former Jewish residential area". Photo: General Government - Ludwik Landau "Chronicle of the years of war and occupation. Volume II". December 1942-June 1943, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, Warsaw 1962 - Public domain, Wikimedia
Commemorating Home Army soldiers - Eugeniusz Morawski a.k.a. "Mlodek" and Jozef Wilk a.k.a. "Orlik" - killed during the Ghetto Operation. Plaque on the wall of the John of God Church at 12 Bonifraterska Street in Warsaw. Photo: Mateusz Opasiński - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia
The ghetto area after the end of the war. Gęsia Street, view towards the west. The burnt-out building of the former Wolyn Barracks is visible in the distance. Photo by Stanisław Poznański (compiled./edit.), " Fight. Death. Memory 1939-1945. In the twentieth anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising 1943-1963", Council for the Protection of Monuments to Struggle and Martyrdom, Warsaw 1963, Public domain, Wikimedia
After the fall of the uprising, the Germans razed the Warsaw Ghetto to the ground. On Adolf Hitler's orders, all the houses in the combat zone were burnt down and blown up. One of the few buildings that survived was St Augustine's Church, used as a warehouse. Photo from around 1945. Photo by Zbyszko Siemaszko, CAF - "Warsaw 1945-1970", Wydawnictwo Sport i Turystyka, Warsaw, 1970, Public domain, Wikimedia.
Ghetto resistance eradicated. From a report by SS-Gruppenführer Jürgen Stroop