AUTHENTIC PHOTO HOUSE OF ADOLF HITLER WWII DOCUMENT , vendido en Agosto 2010, ¡Por 25.49 US$!

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AUTHENTIC PHOTO HOUSE OF ADOLF HITLER WWII DOCUMENT

Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.Item specificsCondition: Used: An item that has been used previously. See the seller’s listing for full details and description of ... Read moreabout the conditionNew or Used: Used

EXTREMELY RARE PHOTO OF HITLER’S HOUSE

(it’s now completely demolished and the forest took over the site)

1933, developed in 1945

 

2.6 x 3.6 inch

 

Original! (I do not sell copies)

 

Photographic & high quality 

 

The Berghof was Adolf Hitler's home in the Obersalzberg of the Bavarian Alps near Berchtesgaden, Bavaria, Germany. Hitler had purchased Haus Wachenfeld with funds he received through the sale of his political manifesto.

 

The small chalet-style building was refurbished and much expanded during 1935-1936 when it was re-named The Berghof. A large complex of mountain homes for the Nazi leadership along with a landing strip and many buildings for their security and support staff were constructed nearby.

 

The Obersalzberg was bombed by hundreds of British Lancaster bombers, including aircraft from No. 617 Squadron RAF ("The Dam Busters"), on 25 April 1945, twelve days before the surrender of German forces on 7 May. At least two bombs struck the Berghof. On 4 May, four days after Hitler's suicide in Berlin, departing SS troops set fire to the villa. Only hours later, the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division arrived at Berchtesgaden along with the French 2nd Armoured Division. The Americans reportedly muddled Berchtesgaden with the Berghof and a French Army captain along with his driver were the first Allied personnel to reach the still-smoldering chalet. A French tank crew soon joined them. Over the next few days the house was thoroughly looted and stripped, apparently by Allied soldiers. One of the most notable artifacts taken by American soldiers was Hitler's Globe.

 

The Berghof's shell survived until 1952 when the Bavarian government blew it up, fearing the ruin would become a neo-Nazi shrine and sight-seeing attraction. The garage remained until 1995. The ruins were further obliterated during the 1990s and early 2000s. By 2007 trees had overgrown the site and only scattered rubble and the top of a retaining wall were visible.

 

00049

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