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Copyrights: All pictures were taken by amateur photographer Bruce Guthrie (me!) who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the [Creative Commons] definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. (Commercial use folks can of course contact me.) Feel free to use in publications and pages with attribution but you don't have permission to sell the photos themselves. A free copy of any printed publication using any photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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NEWSFP_110619_092.JPG: East German soldiers let mason Peter Fechter die slowly before carrying away his body.
Fifty-seven East Germans, the eldest suffering from a heart ailment, escaped to West Berlin through a 145-yard-long tunnel.
NEWSFP_110619_101.JPG: West Berlin children peeked over the wall into no man's land
NEWSFP_110619_108.JPG: Before the Berlin Wall:
The story of the Berlin Wall begins with the end of World War II.
In 1945, Berlin was a ruined city. When the Nazis surrendered, the war's victors -- the United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union -- divided the conquered capital into four zones.
By 1948, disagreements arose between the capitalist Allies and the communist Soviet Union over how to govern Berlin. On April 1, the Soviet Union blocked routes in and out of East Germany, trapping 2 million West Berliners without food or duel. The Western Allies countered with the Berlin airlift. Hundreds of twin-engine planes kept the city alive, delivering supplies every day for 462 days. The Soviets lifted their foiled blockade in 1949.
In the 1950s, the chasm widened between life in West and East Berlin. In the West, the Allies poured in money for rebuilding; in the East, basics like food and housing were scarce. People began "voting with their feet" fleeing to the West. "I no longer had any reason to stay on in what I had considered my homeland," said Walter Kocher, whose family business had been seized.
After World War II, more than 3 million people left East Germany for a better life in the West. By 1961, the communist government knew it had to stop the exodus.
Building the Wall:
At 2am on Aug 13, 1961, while the city slept, a low barbed-wired barrier was strung between East and West Berlin.
The Iron Curtain has descended on Berlin. Within days, workers cemented concrete blocks into a low wall through the city.
Moscow called it a barrier to Western imperialism. "It pleases me tremendously," said Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. "The working class of Germany has erected a wall so that no wolf can break into the German Democratic Republic again."
The West Germans called it Schandmauer, the "Wall of Shame."
There were four generations of the Berlin Wall, each one bigger, stronger and more repressive.
Hand-mortared bricks gave way to pre-cast concrete blocks, then finally to concrete slabs so heavy only large cranes could move them. Towers, guards and dogs stood watch over a barren no man's land. A large pipe, too thick for a climber to hrip, ran along the top of the wall. "Forbidden zones," some miles wide, were created behind the wall.
The East German government saw the Berlin Wall as a symbol of its superior technology. But as strong as the wall was, it would never be strong enough.
Trying to Escape:
The Berlin Wall didn't stop all East Germans. An estimated 10,000 tried to escape to the West: 5,000 made it.
Some escapes were ingenuous. One woman hid under the hood of a car. Two families floated over the border in a hot-air balloon as big as a four-story house.
Other escapes were just plain hard work. One group took six months in 1964 to dig a 145-yard tunnel, from the cellar of a former West Berlin bakery to an outhouse on the eastern side. They freed 57 East Berliners. The escape ended when East German soldiers sprayed the tunnel with machine-gun fire.
Even soldiers escaped. On Aug 15, 1961, the first member of the People's Army leaped to freedom. After him, about 2,000 soldiers fled to the West.
Of all those who died at the wall, perhaps the best known was 18-year-old bricklayer Peter Fechter. On Aug 17, 1962, he tried to jump the barbed wire near Checkpoint Charlie, a key border crossing between the American and Soviet sectors of Berlin. East German soldiers fired. Fechter fell at the foot of the wall. The East Germans would not allow anyone to help him. He bled to death.
"Murderers," shouted West Berliners.
Fechter, the wall's 50th casualty, became a symbol of all those slain at the Berlin Wall, his death memorialized with wreaths and crosses.
Living with the Wall:
"The wall must go," said West Berlin Willy Brandt. "But until it goes, the city must live."
And so it did.
West Germans held their babies up over the wall for relatives to see. They painted scenes and slogans on the wall, staged political rallies and concerts in front of it, walked hand in hand through its shadow.
Despite the wall, East Germans learned about the West by listening to newscasts from Radio Free Europe, Radio In the American Sector, the British Broadcasting Corporation and West German stations.
There were cracks in the Iron Curtain, tacit signs that Soviet-style society was not working in East Germany.
"As schoolchildren, and later as young adults, we were taught that capitalism exploits," said Thassilo Borchart, a journalist whose work was banned during the communist years. "But the truth is... communism is a religion that glorifies its goals, promising the unpromisable."
Fighting the Wall:
By the 1980s, communism was bankrupt.
In East Germany, wages were low. Homes bombed out during World War II were still unrepaired. Many citizens lived in squalor while communist leaders lived in luxury. Industrial pollution poisoned the air, water and soil.
The Berlin Wall, said East German General Secretary Erich Honecker, "will still exist in 50 and in 100 years, unless the reasons for its existence are eliminated."
But the end was near. The Soviet Union could no longer afford the Cold War -- decades of military, political and economic rivalry with the United States. US resolve was reflected in the remarks of two presidents who visited the wall. In 1963, John F Kennedy delcared: "Ich bin ein Berliner (I am a Berliner)." In 1987, Ronald Reagan demanded: "Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall!"
Earlier in the 1980s, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev had introduced glasnost (openness) and perestroika (democratic reform).
Slowly, Eastern Europeans began to test their new freedoms. By the end of the decade, mass protests in Dresden, Leipzig, Potsdam and other East German cities demanded freedom of expression, freedom of the press, freedom to travel, and the fall of the wall.
"We are the people," they proclaimed.
On Friday, Nov 9, 1989, the people won. That weekend, the East German government opened its borders, allowing its citizens to visit the West. The world watched the euphoria on television.
After 28 years, the Berlin Wall had fallen.
NEWSFP_110619_117.JPG: The tower on the right used to be in this location. It's now in the Newseum in downtown DC. It was donated by Checkpoint Charlie Museum.
How East Germans stopped escapes:
For a year after the Berlin Wall was built, escape to the West was as simple as jumping out a second-story window.
Then it got dangerous.
East Germans bricked up the windows. They demolished houses and apartment buildings to make a no man's land of barren earth and barbed wire. They called it the Todesstreifen -- the death strip.
Guards watched from 300 watchtowers, including this one, which was located near the East-West crossing called Checkpoint Charlie. Two guards watched the 110-yard-wide death strip day and night through large windows three stories above the ground.
Their orders: Shoot on sight.
Searchlights scanned no man's land. Anti-tank barriers, including the one here, blocked it. Dogs guarded the fences.
The wall did not discourage Dieter Wohlfahrt. On Dec 9 1961, he decided to help his fiancee's mother make it to the West. The 20-year-old had to cut through three barbed-wire barriers. Wohlfahrt cut easily through the first. Then the guards fired. He never made it to the second.
In all, 246 people died trying to escape from East Germany by crossing the Berlin Wall.
NEWSFP_110619_128.JPG: The landmark Brandenburg Gate, a centuries-old symbol of Berlin, lights up on New Year's Eve. The mural image was digitally enhanced by artist Christ Clor to produce this 31 foot by 36 foot enlargement from a 35 mm slide.
"Free, for the first time in my life":
At 7pm, on Nov 9 1989, Politburo member Gunther Schabowski shocked Germany and the world. Starting at midnight, he said, East Germans would be free to leave the country and travel to the West. They could stay for a few hours, or forever.
Within minutes, the news spread to people on both sides of the Berlin Wall.
After a generation of being locked up in their own country, East Germans were reunited with their western neighbors. Crowds flowed through the wall near the Brandenburg Gate. Champagne flowed, too. Easterners crowded onto the Kurfurstendamm, Berlin's man shopping and dining street.
Jubilant Germans literally chipped away at one of the world's largest symbols of tyranny. Within a week, the wall and the German Democratic Republic had crumbled.
"When we came home at dawn," said Kristina Matschat, an East German homemaker and former chemist, "I felt free, for the first time in my life."
AAA "Gem": AAA considers this location to be a "must see" point of interest. To see pictures of other areas that AAA considers to be Gems, click here.
Wikipedia Description: Freedom Park
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Freedom Park is an outdoor museum in Arlington, Virginia. It was founded in 1996 to celebrate the spirit of freedom and the struggle to preserve it. The Freedom Park is a joint-venture with the Newseum and Freedom Forum Journalists Memorial, both operated by the Freedom Forum.
Exhibits include stones from the Warsaw Ghetto, a headless statue of Vladimir Lenin (one of many that were beheaded when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991), and a bronze cast of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Birmingham jail-cell door. In addition, the park features a bronze casting of a boat used by Cuban refugees, as well as a casting of a South African ballot box from the apartheid era. The park includes pieces of the Berlin Wall — the largest display of the wall outside of Germany. A reproduction of "Freedom," the statue that caps the dome of the United States Capitol, is also on display.
Bigger photos? To save server space, the full-sized versions of these images have either not been loaded to the server or have been removed from the server. (Only some pages are loaded with full-sized images and those usually get removed after three months.)
I still have them though. If you want me to email them to you, please send an email to guthrie.bruce@gmail.com
and I can email them to you, or, depending on the number of images, just repost the page again will the full-sized images.
Directly Related Pages: Other pages with content (VA -- Rosslyn -- Newseum's Freedom Park) directly related to this one:
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2011 photos: Equipment this year: I mostly used the Fuji S100fs camera as well as two Nikon models -- the D90 and the new D7000. Mostly a toy, I also purchased a Fuji Real 3-D W3 camera, to try out 3-D photographs. I found it interesting although I don't see any real use for 3-D stills now. Given that many of the photos from the 1860s were in 3-D (including some of the more famous Civil War shots), it's odd to see it coming back.
Trips this year:
Civil War Trust conferences (Savannah, GA, Chattanooga, TN),
New Jersey over Memorial Day for my birthday (people never seem to visit New Jersey -- it's always just a pit stop on the way to New York. I thought I might as well spend a few days there. Despite some nice places, it still ended up a pit stop for me -- New York City was infinitely more interesting),
my 6th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con trip (including Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and San Francisco).
Ego strokes: Author photos that I took were used on two book jackets this year: Jason Emerson's book "The Dark Days of Abraham Lincoln's Widow As Revealed by Her Own Letters" and Dennis L. Noble's "The U.S. Coast Guard's War on Human Smuggling." I also had a photo of Jason Stelter published in the Washington Examiner and a picture of Miss DC, Ashley Boalch, published in the Washington Post.
Number of photos taken this year: just over 390,000.
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