US military police at Potsdamer Platz where the US,
British and Soviet sectors meet. The square was often the scene of
confrontations between Communists and supporters of Western
democracy
British soldiers relax in their occupation
sector. The Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in the background still sits on
the Kurfustendamm and has been left in its ruined state as a memorial to
war.
The Unter den Linden in the Soviet sector
looking toward the Brandenburg Gate and British Sector.
The May 13, 1948 meeting of the Berlin
Kommandantura, one of last meetings that the Soviets representatives
attended.
Civilians milling about in Anhalter station on
1 April. The Soviets deployed, but did not completely stop civilian rail
traffic during this period.
Supplies for the US garrison in Berlin being
unloaded from C-47 aircraft at Tempelhof during the emergency air movement
later dubbed the Little Lift, 2 April 1948.
May Day demonstration in Berlin, 1948. Part of the crowd is
turning left to the Reichstag rendezvous of anti-communists while others
continue to a Soviet demonstration. This photo was taken from the border
of the British and Soviet Sectors ata point where the Berlin wall would
later be constructed.
Rail and barge traffic begins to stack up as
the blockage begins in earnest. Before the currency reform, black-market
activity was common throughout Germany.
Rail and barge traffic begins to stack up as
the blockage begins in earnest. Before the currency reform, black-market
activity was common throughout Germany.
US troops check identification cards and search
for unauthorized goods during a search and seizure operation.
Allied financial experts explain the currency reform at a
press briefing at OMGUS headquarters, 18 June 1948. US Deputy Assistant
Financial Advisor Jo Fisher Freeman is speaking, British and French
advisors are seated to his right and the man at far left against the wall
is believed to Edward Tenenbaum.
West Sector residents exchanging Reichsmarks for Deutsche Marks.
The Soviet side of their checkpoint on the autobahn at Helmstedt.
A light dusting of snow covers surplus US Army
vehicles of all types at Wurttemberg in the winter of 1946. The soldiers
who operated them had long since returned to the United States.
A miniature city is used to instruct military police in
Germany on the situations likely to arise in various parts of a city,
September 1946. After the war, Western forces were geared toward support
and civil control
General Curtis LeMay
General Albert Wedemeyer
US air traffic controllers at the Berlin air Safety Center
check and post flight progress strips indicating movement of American
aircraft in and out of Tempelhof. The Soviet panel for their airfield at
Schonefeld is at right and a corner of the British panel for Gatow
airfield can be seen at left.
Peasants chatting over a brief lunch at
Tempelhof.
Parachutes in hand, Berlin-bound pilots take a
quick look at the morning paper before heading for their plane.
Jewish Passover food arriving in Berlin.
Berlin-bound cargo arrives on a Danish ship at the
port of Bremerhaven.
Fresh milk being loaded on a C-47.
Shipments of
whole milk soon were dropped in favor of more weight efficient condensed
milk.
C-47 transport aircraft, containing 190
sacks of flour each, arrive at Tempelhof, 2 July 1948. A pair of B-17
weather aircraft can be seen at the far side of the airfield along with a
lone C-54 at extreme right.