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These are mostly high resolution photos and graphics (300 DPI) with descriptions.
Poster of from the film honoring Detroit and Michigan's Polar Bear soldiers.
These soldiers in the picture had just returned from patrol as they spent 10 months
away from civilization sent to fight on the arctic fronts of Northern Russia.
| Type | File | Size | Posted |
| POSTER LETTER SIZE - Voices of a Never Ending Dawn.jpg (7.1" x 10.6") | 2.48 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
| POSTER MEDIUM LARGE - Voices of a Never Ending Dawn.jpg (3.5" x 5.25") | 912 KB | 5/15/2009 | |
| POSTER MEDIUM - Voices of a Never Ending Dawn.jpg (1.3" x 2") 400 pixels wide | 193 KB | 5/15/2009 | |
| POSTER SMALL - Voices of a Never Ending Dawn.jpg (1.2" x 1.7") 350 pixels wide | 162 KB | 5/15/2009 | |
| POSTER SMALLEST - Voices of a Never Ending Dawn.jpg (1" x 1.5") 300 pixels wide | 127 KB | 5/15/2009 |
Photos of the film shoot near Traverse City, Michigan, in sub-zero blizzard weather.
| Type | File and Description | Size | Posted |
| Ben Topping Detroit actor.jpg | 2.68 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
National and MI scholar/actor Ben Topping plays young Cprl. John Toornman who loses two close friends in this tragic battlescene re-enactment from The Battle of Pinega. |
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| Boloshevik fighters in snow re-enactment.jpg | 2.25 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
The documentary takes us right to Russia with Detroit's men. Here well-known Detroit area physician Dr. Peter Karpawhich plays a Bolshevik Lieutenant fighting Detroit's soldiers in wasit deep snow and sub zero temperature. |
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| Bolshevik actors 2.jpg | 6.03 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
Here well-known Detroit area physician Dr. Peter Karpawhich plays a Bolshevik Lieutenant firing a pistol in waist deep snow and sub zero temperature. |
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| Bolshevik actors.jpg | 5.08 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
| Bolshevik actors and reenactors standing and kneeling in snow and sub zero temperature on a small hillcrest. | |||
| Dramatic N MI video shoot.jpg | 5.52 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
While all of Michigan was hunkering down to brace themselves against the large Alberta Clipper snowstorm that hit Michigan on January 15, 2009, award-winning documentary filmmaker Pamela Peak and her MI based crew were heading into the storm to shoot dramatic battlescene re-enactments just north of Traverse City, MI |
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| prod director Pamela Peak.jpg | 3.63 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
| Producer/director Pamela Peak on location in the deep Michigan snow. | |||
| RedArmyLivesAgain_e-mail.jpg | 184 KB | 5/15/2009 | |
All re-enactors are from the Detroit area and Bill Munday head of this group is the military and firearm advisor making the documentary very authentic from a military point of view. |
Historic photos used in the film.
| Type | File and Description | Size | Posted |
| soldier on watch deep snow.jpg | 10.3 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
Detroit and Michigan soldiers were on watch in Northern Russia fighting in 60 degree below zero weather in the winter of 1918/1919 |
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| soldiers on railroad front.jpg | 9.69 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
Detroit soldiers being sent down the railroad front soon after being shipped to Northern Russia to fight the first Communistis known as Bolshekviks |
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| the lonely railroad front.jpg | 7.45 MB | 5/15/2009 | |
| The lonely railroad front that stretched some 400 south of the main Russian City of Archangel Russia. Our Detroit area soldiers were shipped down the railroad front for 10 months fighting the savage Boshevik forces that grew in skill and numbers as the spring of 1919 neared. |