

Early and his crew were combat veterans selected for the "Zebra" Mission. These tanks equipped the 3rd and 9th Armored Divisions of the 1st Army, who issued them one to each of ten companies. In the States, many supporters of the M4 Sherman refused to accept that it was deficient against German tanks because of political pressure, constricted supply lines, and the fast-moving battlefield preventing crew training, only twenty Pershings were made available through Antwerp in January 1945. Publicly ridiculed for the lack of a suitable American tank that could stand up to German armor, the United States Army's Ordinance Department initiated the "Zebra" Mission, which would analyze American tank performance in the European Theatre of Operations and field combat test the T26E3 Pershing, which was armed with a 90mm (3.54 inch) gun. The tank appears to have a bullet or shell hole in the left track guard. This view is a still from a combat camera film. T26A3 (later M26) Pershing of E Company, 32nd Armored Regiment, 3rd Armored Division, attached to 1st Army, 12th Army Group, commanded by Sergeant Robert Early, approaches Koln Domplatz (Cologne Cathedral Square) on Gladbacherstrasse (where Gladbacherstrasse becomes Christophstrasse, as it crosses Kaiser-Wilhelm-Ring).
