PEOPLE AND PLACES

PEOPLE AND PLACES

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Relics Hitler’s Era




Ominous rites: Annual midnight swearing-in of SS-men in Feldherrnhalle. Short for  Schutzstaffel, the SS was the powerful military police arm of the Third Reich which numbered some 50,000 at its largest

Relics of Hitler’s Era

 

 

 

 

 




Left to rot: The abandoned Hitler Youth training school,

NAZIS



Rarely seen color photographs of the Third Reich by Der Fuhrer's own beloved personal photographer Hugo Jaeger give a startling glimpse into the larger than life celebrations from Hitler's heinous reign.
Jaeger collected took nearly 2,000 as he traveled with the loathed dictator during the late 1930s and 40s.
Hitler loved the photographer's work and even commented on first seeing Jaeger's photos: 'The future belongs to color photography.'
Thankfully, the future did not belong to Hitler. Though, the prints survive because Jaeger successfully buried his film, as the Americans closed in at the end of the war, for fear his friendship with Hitler would get him arrested.
Jaeger remained free and by the 1970s he'd been able to retrieve all his film along with their simultaneously brilliant and revolting content. He sold the prints to LIFE, who wrote of Jaeger's upon the publication of his work: 'We do not usually give so much space to the work of men we admire so little.'
Startling loyalty: League of German Girls Dancing during the Reichs Party Congress. The group was the girls branch of Hitler's youth, into which girls were initiated through peer pressure and propaganda at the age of 14
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Startling loyalty: League of German Girls Dancing during the Reichs Party Congress. The group was the girls branch of Hitler's youth, into which girls were initiated through peer pressure and propaganda at the age of 14. Up until 1936, membership in the group was optional but became compulsory that year
Massive crowds: Nazi leader Adolf Hitler saluting leaders and men of the Legion Condor, troops of the German Luftwaffe, an airborne wing of the military Hitler founded despite the Treaty of Versailles stipulation that Germany could have no such force
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Massive crowds: Nazi leader Adolf Hitler saluting leaders and men of the Legion Condor, troops of the German Luftwaffe, an airborne wing of the military Hitler founded despite the Treaty of Versailles stipulation that Germany could have no such force
Terrifying imagery: Propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels speaking at the Lustgarden in Berlin. The master of mass psychology helped Hitler mold Germany into a nation bent on resisting the Allied forces
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Terrifying imagery: Propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels speaking at the Lustgarden in Berlin. The master of mass psychology helped Hitler mold Germany into a nation bent on resisting the Allied forces
Art of power: Here, Hitler and Goebbels are seen in the Charlottenburg Theater's honor box as everyone salutes. A failed playwright himself Goebbels saw to it that no Jewish writers practiced their craft under Hitler's reign
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Art of power: Here, Hitler and Goebbels are seen in the Charlottenburg Theater's honor box as everyone salutes. A failed playwright himself Goebbels saw to it that no Jewish writers practiced their craft under Hitler's reign
Fierce loyalty: Crowds cheer Hitler's Austrian election campaign.In 1938, Hitler--who'd always seen Austria as a part of German--annexed the smaller country into greater Germany
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Fierce loyalty: Crowds cheer Hitler's Austrian election campaign.In 1938, Hitler--who'd always seen Austria as a part of German--annexed the smaller country into greater Germany
 
Ominous rites: Annual midnight swearing-in of SS-men in Feldherrnhalle. Short for  Schutzstaffel, the SS was the powerful military police arm of the Third Reich which numbered some 50,000 at its largest
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Ominous rites: Annual midnight swearing-in of SS-men in Feldherrnhalle. Short for Schutzstaffel, the SS was the powerful military police arm of the Third Reich which numbered some 50,000 at its largest
United in hate: Annual midnight swearing-in of SS recruits. The SS was basically Hitler's personal Army who, led by Heinrich Himmler, followed his orders alone
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United in hate: Annual midnight swearing-in of SS recruits. The SS was basically Hitler's personal Army who, led by Heinrich Himmler, followed his orders alone
Dangerous sport: Hitler Youth seen here at the Reichs' Party Congress in Nuremburg showing off their physical prowess.
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Dangerous sport: Hitler Youth seen here at the Reichs' Party Congress in Nuremburg showing off their physical prowess. While the young men of the Hitler Youth could enjoy games and sports with fellow boys, they were also indoctrinated into the Nazi beliefs via the group and its activities
'The Peoples Car'
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'The Peoples Car': A thrilled crowd salutes Hitler and other Nazi officials along roadway to the Fallersleben Volkswagen Works cornerstone ceremony. The Volkswagen, long before its brief American popularity in the 1960s, came out of the struggle to create a cheap German car of the 20s and 30s
Hate Bug: At the 1939 Fallersleben Volkswagen Works cornerstone laying ceremony, Hitler praised the Beetle and used it as part of his nationalist propaganda
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At the 1939 Fallersleben Volkswagen Works cornerstone laying ceremony, Hitler praised the Beetle and used it as part of his nationalist propaganda
Storm troops: Nazi Brown Shirts, soldiers from Germany's  Sturmabteilung or SA
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Storm troops: Nazi Brown Shirts, soldiers from Germany's Sturmabteilung or SA. This was the Third Reich's storm division whose terrifyingly violent and ruthless methods helped pave the way to power for Hitler after he founded the group in 1921



























Chilling archive of the teenage Nazi: Camping gear emblazoned with the Swastika, a six-inch dagger and a diary that reveals Hitler Youth member’s infatuation with the Fuhrer

  • The Hitler Youth was used to train young Nazis for the army
  • A chilling archive from a member is going up for auction in Britain
  • It includes photos of youngsters who went on to die for the Third Reich


A chilling archive belonging to an enthusiastic member of the Hitler Youth has emerged to highlight how the Nazis brainwashed youngsters.
Teenager Helmut Nieboy kept detailed diaries, records and maps during his time with the German equivalent of the Boy Scouts from 1933.
He also amassed a number of photographs showing youngsters who went on to fight and die for the Third Reich, sitting around a campfire, marching and at rallies.
Helmut Nieboy - full of Nazi zeal Nieboy signed off Heil Hitler in his diaries

Nazi zeal: Helmut Nieboy (left) during his time in the Hitler Youth, while the picture on the right shows how he signed off his diary entries with 'Heil Hitler'
Helmut Nieboy's 'KamaradSchaft Florian Geyer' Hitler Youth company on parade
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Helmut Nieboy's 'KamaradSchaft Florian Geyer' Hitler Youth company on parade
He kept his Swastika-emblazoned tent and trumpet and his sinister 6ins bladed dagger, a far cry from a simple penknife the British Boy Scouts would have used. The diaries include incredibly detailed maps showing route marches the young members were sent on as well as hand drawn portraits of the Fuhrer with patriotic slogans.
The journals also contain lists of fellow members and those who failed to graduate, their ultimate fate left ominously unrecorded with a single red line through their name.
Up for sale: A Hitler Youth dagger with swastika on the handle and a portrait of Hitler with slogans in the diaries
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Up for sale: A Hitler Youth dagger with swastika on the handle and a portrait of Hitler with slogans in the diaries
Nieboy's dagger is a far cry from a simple penknife the British Boy Scouts would have used
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Nieboy's dagger is a far cry from a simple penknife the British Boy Scouts would have used
Helmut Nieboy's Hitler Youth bugle, which will also be sold at the auction at Mullock's of Shropshire
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Helmut Nieboy's Hitler Youth bugle, which will also be sold at the auction at Mullock's of Shropshire
The records are written in Helmut's neat handwriting and his fanaticism is clear, on one page he takes great care to write 'Heil Hitler'.
Helmut was one of 2.3million members of the Hitler Youth in 1933.
The paramilitary organisation was for boys aged 14 to 18 who were brainwashed into being part of Hitler's twisted idyll to build an Aryan super-race.
Members went on to become soldiers for the German military machine, with skilled fighters joining the Waffen SS.
A member of the Hitler Youth pictured blowing a bugle
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A member of the Hitler Youth pictured blowing a bugle
Brainwashed: Helmut Nieboy's Kamaradschaft on manouveres
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Brainwashed: Helmut Nieboy's Kamaradschaft on manouveres
Vetting: Helmut Nieboy's 'KamaradSchaft Florian Geyer' Hitler Youth company with lines through those children seen as not suitable for the group
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Vetting: Helmut Nieboy's 'KamaradSchaft Florian Geyer' Hitler Youth company with lines through those children seen as not suitable for the group
During the war, the young members were drafted into the German Home Guard and then acted as the last line of the defence of Berlin in 1945.
After the war most Hitler Youth members were keen to hide their affiliation and so archives such as Helmut's are rare today.
His was recently unearthed in Germany but is now being sold at auction at Mullock's of Ludlow, Shropshire, with a pre-sale estimate of £4,000.
'Day of Work' Rally in Berlin with Hitler parading Nieboy's incredibly detailed map of a march to Berlin
Devoted to the cause: A diary entry about a 'Day of Work' Rally in Berlin with Hitler parading (left), while on the right is a detailed map of a Hitler Youth march to the capital
Round the camp fire: Nieboy's Youth company on a march in the early 1930s
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Round the camp fire: Nieboy's Youth company on a march in the early 1930s
Speech: Nieboy's company were at this Hitler Youth Rally in front of the Fuhrer in 1935
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Speech: Nieboy's company were at this Hitler Youth Rally in front of the Fuhrer in 1935
Richard Westwood-Brookes, from Mullock's, said: ‘This is a rare archive of material relating to the Hitler Youth.
‘The organisation was Third Reich's way of developing young men for their armed forces.
‘It was their equivalent of the Boy Scout movement and they did similar things but with an emphasis on Nazi ideology.
‘This archive is particularly interesting because of the detailed diaries kept in three volumes, the maps, photographs but also his possessions.
Training: The Hitler Youth was the Third Reich's way of developing young men for their armed forces
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Training: The Hitler Youth was the Third Reich's way of developing young men for their armed forces
‘His tent, knife and trumpet are all among the collection that has remarkably stayed together.
‘Most similar archives would have been destroyed following the war as most people would want to erase evidence of their being in the Hitler Youth.
‘This youth was clearly committed and with his neat diaries and organisational skills I expect he had enjoyed promotion to the armed services by the time the war began.
‘Sadly, there is nothing to say what happened to Helmut.’
Also in the archive is a book of minutes and reports of the meetings of Helmut's group, notes of marching songs the boys sang and political discussions.
It also includes diplomas for his prowess in sport and an account of his attendance at one of the Nuremberg rallies.







































From buildings built by the Nazis to ornate theatres, burnt out hotels and eerie sanatoriums, these are the abandoned buildings that still litter the powerhouse of Europe.
Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled to the German capital Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film.
Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves.
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Former Hitler Youth Training School) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
An abandoned former Hitler Youth Training School pictured by British photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: The Eagle and Iron Cross mural - Krampnitz Kaserne) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
The Eagle and Iron Cross mural at Krampnitz Kaserne, a military complex, in Fahrland, Potsdam, created by the Germans during the rearmament period
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Warped parquet flooring - Krampnitz Kaserne) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
Warped parquet flooring at Krampnitz Kaserne. The site was also used as a driving training centre until the Russians took control of the area, taking over a day after the Germans abandoned it April 26, 1945
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Gym-basketball court - Krampnitz Kaserne) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
A gym/basketball court at Krampnitz Kaserne. The 35th Guards Motor Rifle Division was then stationed there until its abandonment in 1992, after the Soviet Union dissolved
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Lecture hall - Former Hitler Youth training school) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
Decaying: A lecture hall at the former Hitler Youth training school pictured by Daniel Barter, 30
A view of the former Hitler Youth training school's lecture hall from the stage
A view of the former Hitler Youth training school's lecture hall from the stage
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Former Hitler Youth Training School) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
The inside of the former Hitler Youth Training School in Germany. The windows are open, but this room is still in good condition
German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years.
Mr Barter said: 'I stumbled into photography via my degree, which was in restoration. My interest in abandonments started really young.
'When I was five my junior school had a derelict aeroplane in an adjoining field. Two of my friends and I climbed over the 10ft green wire mesh fence and entered the plane.
'If I close my eyes I can still picture the switches, dials and smell the leather. 'I find abandoned buildings to photograph by word of mouth or a little bit of research.
'To gain access to some of the locations is quite another story and can involve a lot of climbing, sneaking and hiding.
'The best and most interesting thing about photographing abandoned buildings in Germany has to be the clash between different opposing ideologies that dominated this region in the mid to late 20th century.
'There is almost nothing else similar to it around the globe.
'The way it effected the material fabric of these lost places and the way it continues to effect the region as a whole, is I believe unique.'
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Lung sanatorium) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
There are more than 60 buildings at the sanatorium which are looking for a new lease of life
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Guest room - Burnt out Hotel) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
An undamaged guest room in the burnt out hotel looks almost lived in, but very dated
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Main dining table - Burnt out hotel) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
Seen better days: The main dining table in the abandoned and burnt out hotel
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Barbers chair-Manor house that once acted as a sanatorium) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
Left to rot: A barber's chair in a manor house that once acted as a sanatorium
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Stairs - Lung Sanatorium) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
The grand staircase at the Lung Sanatorium that has been daubed with graffiti. The site is south of Berlin. Building work started in 1898
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Theatre) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
Pictured here is an abandoned theatre that has not seen a show for years
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Theatre) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
Mr Barter's photographs show even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Burnt out hotel restaurant) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
A restaurant in the site of a burnt out hotel where food hasn't been on the menu for years
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Corridor - Lung Sanatorium) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
A corridor at the sanatorium. In its time it was also used as a hospital by the Russian Army until German reunification
PIC BY DANIEL BARTER / CATERS NEWS - (PICTURED: Corridor - Lung Sanatorium) - Even the powerhouse of Europe has its fair share of abandoned properties and empty shop fronts as seen in these captivating pictures of decaying buildings Germany. Photographer Daniel Barter, 30, from London travelled Berlin and the surrounding countryside to capture buildings in need of work on film. Far from being resplendent in vintage glory, the deserted music venues and crumbling hospitals are a shadow of their former selves. German eagle motifs flake off ceilings and concert halls designed for hundreds have not seen a show for years. SEE CATERS COPY.
The arches around a courtyard inside the old sanatorium daubed with graffiti





























 
 
 
 
The first U.S. film to warn about the dangers of Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime has been found in a Brussels film archive, having lain unnoticed for some 75 years.
'Hitler's Reign of Terror' was produced by Cornelius Vanderbilt, an heir to the wealthy American industrialist family, who visited Germany as Hitler was voted into power in 1933.
The film revolves around footage that Vanderbilt shot and smuggled out, showing Nazi party rallies, book-burnings and the ransacking of Jewish shops.
Last copy: Bruno Mestdagh, the head of the digital collection at the Belgian cinema library, looks at footage of the recently-discovered 1934 U.S. anti-Nazi film, 'Hitler's Reign of Terror' which was directed by Cornelius Vanderbilt
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Last copy: Bruno Mestdagh, the head of the digital collection at the Belgian cinema library, looks at footage of the recently-discovered 1934 U.S. anti-Nazi film, 'Hitler's Reign of Terror' which was directed by Cornelius Vanderbilt
Cinematic treasure: The film as well-received when it premiered in New York, but thanks to a complaint by the German Embassy it was heavily censored for subsequent showings
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Cinematic treasure: The film as well-received when it premiered in New York, but thanks to a complaint by the German Embassy it was heavily censored for subsequent showings
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Cinematic treasure: The film as well-received when it premiered in New York, but thanks to a complaint by the German Embassy it was heavily censored for subsequent showings. The discovered copy was probably ordered by someone who wanted to show it in Belgium, but never collected it
At its premiere in New York in 1934, the film was a big success, said Bruno Mestdagh, head of the digital collections at the Belgian film archive Cinematheque.
'The German embassy in the United States protested, so the film was censored and adapted. It was then shown in other cities but with much less success,' Mestdagh said.
The version uncovered by the archive was most likely ordered by someone who wanted to show it in Belgium but never collected it, so the reel survived the war, and Nazi occupation, in the Belgian customs office.
Directed by: The film was produced by American journalist and railroad heir Cornelius Vanderbilt IV, above
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Directed by: The film was produced by American journalist and railroad heir Cornelius Vanderbilt IV, above
Staged: One of the films stranger parts is when Vanderbilt, left, stages a reenactment of his brief interview with Adolf Hilter, center, before the newly-elected chancellor gave a  speech at the Berlin Sports Palace in 1933
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Staged: One of the films stranger parts is when Vanderbilt, left, stages a reenactment of his brief interview with Adolf Hilter, center, before the newly-elected chancellor gave a speech at the Berlin Sports Palace in 1933
See it in person: The Museum of Modern Art in New York plans to screen the film next month
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See it in person: The Museum of Modern Art in New York plans to screen the film next month
In the 1970s, it was transferred to the archive, which holds some 70,000 titles in its vast vaults in Brussels, 80 per cent of them foreign. But it was only two years ago that the curators realized they had the only surviving copy.
The film has now been remastered and will be shown at New York's Museum of Modern Art in October.
The film is arranged much like a newsreel, where Vanderbilt provides a voice-over to his own original footage, and mixes it with newsreel footage from other sources.
News of the day: The film is shot in the style of a newsreel with Vanderbilt providing a voice-over to his original footage, mixed in with newsreel footage from other sources
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News of the day: The film is shot in the style of a newsreel with Vanderbilt providing a voice-over to his original footage, mixed in with newsreel footage from other sources
Bad omen: For the film, Vanderbilt traveled to the town in Austria where Hitler attended primary school and found he was one of the most unpopular kids. 'Nobody had a good word for him,' he said.
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Bad omen: For the film, Vanderbilt traveled to the town in Austria where Hitler attended primary school and found he was one of the most unpopular kids. 'Nobody had a good word for him,' he said.
'Vanderbilt was able to capture some spectacular footage but he just had a few minutes and they constructed a complete film around it. But that wasn't done by professional film-makers, so the film has a sometimes amateurish feel to it,' Mestdagh said.
Part of that feel comes from the somewhat clunky re-enactments of a brief interview that Vanderbilt snatched with Hitler as he prepared to address a rally in Berlin's Sports Palace after winning the 1933 election.
 

Hitler’s last gasp! Kamikaze Doodlebug with room for a PILOT that 

was the Nazi's final bid to bomb Britain is to go on view after it is saved from the scrapheap

  • 5,000 V1 rockets launched by Nazis to bomb London; aim was random - they dropped when out of fuel 
  • Some were modified with small cockpit, to be flown accurately towards targets like Buckingham Palace
  • Pilot was meant to bail out at last moment but airspeed of 550mph meant they would not have survived
  • Historian Trevor Matthews was given V1 Reichenberg for free; paid £40,000 to have it restored... in Germany 
An incredibly rare Kamikaze version of Adolf Hitler's deadly V1 terror weapon is about to go on display at a British museum 47 years after it was saved from the scrapheap - and restored in Germany.
The piloted Doodlebug was effectively a suicide bomb packed with one ton of explosives in its nose.
Towards the end of the Second World War, some 5,000 V1 rockets, the world's first cruise missile, were launched by the Germans to bomb London, causing massive loss of life.
Because their aim was so random - the bombs dropped when they ran out of fuel - some were later modified with a small cockpit so they could be flown accurately towards a specified target, such as Buckingham Palace. 
Scroll down for video 
An incredibly rare Kamikaze version (pictured) of Adolf Hitler's deadly V1 terror weapon is about to go on display at a British museum 47 years after it was saved from the scrapheap. The piloted Doodlebug was effectively a suicide bomb packed with one ton of explosives in its nose
An incredibly rare Kamikaze version (pictured) of Adolf Hitler's deadly V1 terror weapon is about to go on display at a British museum 47 years after it was saved from the scrapheap. The piloted Doodlebug was effectively a suicide bomb packed with one ton of explosives in its nose
Several of the V1s were found by Allied soldiers in Germany after the war and one of them was transported to Britain (pictured, at Farnborough, Hampshire) for military scientists to examine
In 1970, the 28ft long missile was salvaged by aviation historian Trevor Matthews (pictured with it), who was given it for free when he was told it was about to be scrapped
 SLIDE ME 
Several of the V1s were found by Allied soldiers in Germany after the war and one of them was transported to Britain (left, at Farnborough, Hampshire) for military scientists to examine. In 1970, the 28ft long missile was salvaged by aviation historian Trevor Matthews (pictured with it, right), who was given it for free when he was told it was about to be scrapped
The pilot was meant to bail out at the last moment but it was ultimately a suicide mission as the airspeed would have been 550mph and they would not have survived. 
Although 175 of the piloted V1s were made, they were never put to use because Hitler ran out of money.
Several were found by Allied soldiers in Germany after the war and one of them was transported to Britain for military scientists to examine. 
Because the regular V1's aim was so random - the bombs dropped when they ran out of fuel - some were later modified with a small cockpit so they could be flown accurately towards a specified target, such as Buckingham Palace
The pilot was meant to bail out at the last moment but it was ultimately a suicide mission as the airspeed would have been 550mph and they would not have survived
Because the regular V1's aim was so random - the bombs dropped when they ran out of fuel - some were later modified with a small cockpit (above) so they could be flown accurately towards a specified target, such as Buckingham Palace. The pilot was meant to bail out at the last moment but it was ultimately a suicide mission as the airspeed would have been 550mph and they would not have survived
Mr Matthews, who runs a small aviation museum, did little with the V1 - or Fieseler Fi103R Reichenberg - until four years ago when he paid £40,000 to have it restored... in Germany
Mr Matthews, who runs a small aviation museum, did little with the V1 - or Fieseler Fi103R Reichenberg - until four years ago when he paid £40,000 to have it restored... in Germany

No going back: The V1 suicide mission

Line up the sight: The rare V1 rocket
Line up the sight: The rare V1 rocket
The V1 and V2 flying rockets - or Hitler's vengeance bombs as they were called - killed thousands of people and carried enough explosives to wipe out several buildings.
But due to their random nature, Hitler experimented with the idea of getting an airmen to steer them in the direction of a target.
About 70 pilots, mostly Hitler youth, underwent training to fly one, knowing full well they wouldn't be coming back.
The missiles were meant to have been carried under a Heinkel 111 bomber and dropped over the North Sea.
At that point the pilot started the engine and put the rocket into a terminal dive towards a target, which could have been a ship or building.
In 1970, the 28ft long missile was salvaged by aviation historian Trevor Matthews, who was given it for free when he was told it was about to be scrapped. 
Mr Matthews, who runs a small aviation museum, did little with the V1 - or Fieseler Fi103R Reichenberg - until four years ago when he paid £40,000 to have it restored - in Germany.
Specialists there returned the rocket bomb to its original condition and it is now set to take centre stage in a brand new £120,000 exhibition space at the Lashenden Air Warfare Museum in Kent.
Mr Matthews, 61, said: 'Only six Reichenbergs exist today, and this is the only one in Britain.
'We acquired it from the Army in 1970 from outside a bomb disposal unit in Kent where it was about to be scrapped.
'We asked if we could have it for our museum which we were just starting up and returned a few days later with a lorry.
'We originally thought it was a normal V1 because it didn't have a canopy. Once we got it back and did a bit of research, we found out it was a Reichenberg.
'We didn't have the money or expertise to have it restored and did a cosmetic job on it which was totally inaccurate.
'Then a few years ago we found there was a firm in Germany that specialised in rebuilding Reichenbergs and V1s. You wouldn't have thought there was a need for it but apparently there is.
'Since it came back to us three or four years ago, we have raised funds to build an extension at the museum so we can house and display the Reichenberg.
'It has cost us £120,000 which was raised from from raffles, boot fairs and donations.
'The British Aviation Preservation Council lists the Reichenberg as being a benchmark aircraft with a historical rating of five which is the highest that can be given, because it is the only one of its kind in Britain.
'The limited number of people who have seen it so far have been very impressed and fascinated by it - they didn't know they existed.
'It makes history far more interesting. If you can see or touch something from history, it brings the thing to life.' 
The rocket is 28ft long and has a wingspan of 22ft. It was fitted with an Argus 109-014 pulse jet engine. The other five Reichenbergs are in museums in France, Holland, Canada, the US and Germany. Above, a US soldier tries out the cockpit of one of the adapted V1s in Dannenberg, Germany, in 1945
The rocket is 28ft long and has a wingspan of 22ft. It was fitted with an Argus 109-014 pulse jet engine. The other five Reichenbergs are in museums in France, Holland, Canada, the US and Germany. Above, a US soldier tries out the cockpit of one of the adapted V1s in Dannenberg, Germany, in 1945
Mr Matthews said: 'Although the pilot was meant to bail out, in reality they would have died. It was a sideways opening canopy that took two people to lift. Even if the pilot could have managed it, at speeds of 400mph to 500mph the first thing they would have hit was the rocket motor behind them.' Pictured, the V1's fuses
The V1's engine intake
Mr Matthews said: 'Although the pilot was meant to bail out, in reality they would have died. It was a sideways opening canopy that took two people to lift. Even if the pilot could have managed it, at speeds of 400mph to 500mph the first thing they would have hit was the rocket motor behind them.' Left, the V1's fuses; right, the engine intake
Mr Matthews, 61, said: 'Only six Reichenbergs exist today, and this is the only one in Britain. We acquired it from the Army in 1970 from outside a bomb disposal unit in Kent where it was about to be scrapped.' Above, American soldiers by a V1 in 1945 as they interrogate a German garrison commander (centre, back to camera)
Mr Matthews, 61, said: 'Only six Reichenbergs exist today, and this is the only one in Britain. We acquired it from the Army in 1970 from outside a bomb disposal unit in Kent where it was about to be scrapped.' Above, American soldiers by a V1 in 1945 as they interrogate a German garrison commander (centre, back to camera)
About 70 pilots, mostly Hitler youth, underwent training to fly one, knowing full well they wouldn't be coming back.
Mr Matthews said: 'Although the pilot was meant to bail out, in reality they would have died.
'It was a sideways opening canopy that took two people to lift. Even if the pilot could have managed it, at speeds of 400mph to 500mph the first thing they would have hit was the rocket motor behind them.
'It would basically have been a suicide mission.
'These weapons wouldn't have changed the course of the war but they could have put a big dent in morale if they had taken out Buckingham Palace or the Houses of Parliament.'
The rocket is 28ft long and has a wingspan of 22ft. It was fitted with an Argus 109-014 pulse jet engine.
The other five Reichenbergs are in museums in France, Holland, Canada, the US and Germany.
About 70 pilots, mostly Hitler youth, underwent training to fly one, knowing full well they wouldn't be coming back
About 70 pilots, mostly Hitler youth, underwent training to fly one, knowing full well they wouldn't be coming back
'In the hour-and-a-half that Hitler talked to that packed audience, he was as effective as a barker at a side show, traveling with a circus,' Vanderbilt comments in the voice-over.
He also visits Leonding, the Austrian town where Hitler attended primary school, explaining: 'From all I could gather, he was one of the most unpopular kids in the neighborhood. Nobody had a good word for him.'
































A crime museum is displaying the bullet-ridden skull of a pro-Nazi officer who was executed with his own gun as part of a macabre exhibition of Holocaust relics.
The display also features gold teeth extracted from Jews as they entered Auschwitz, muzzles used to German Shepherd dogs who patrolled the camps and attacked prisoners, and a series of syringes used in brutal medical tests on prisoners.
An SS officer's boot - with foot bones still inside - clogs used by Jews at a Nazi death camp, and toys taken from Jewish children also make up the collection at Littledean Crime Through Time Museum in Gloucestershire.
A crime museum in Gloucestershire is displaying the bullet-ridden skull of a pro-Nazi officer who was executed with his own gun as part of a macabre exhibition of Holocaust relics
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A crime museum in Gloucestershire is displaying the bullet-ridden skull of a pro-Nazi officer who was executed with his own gun as part of a macabre exhibition of Holocaust relics
Medical Syringes recovered from Auschwitz at the time of liberation. It is believed they were used to carry out gruesome medical tests on camp prisoners
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Medical Syringes recovered from Auschwitz at the time of liberation. It is believed they were used to carry out gruesome medical tests on camp prisoners
Gold dental caps that were removed by the Nazis from Jewish inmates on their arrival to Auschwitz during the holocaust years
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Gold dental caps that were removed by the Nazis from Jewish inmates on their arrival to Auschwitz during the holocaust years
Museum curator, Andy Jones, 52, said: 'The new exhibit features a collection of artefacts recovered at the end of the holocaust.
'The muzzle worn by a German Shephard dog in Auschwitz is the only one on display in the world.
'The prison guards would remove the muzzles and unleash the poison fanged hounds onto the prisoners - including pregnant Jewish women.
'Artefacts like the Jew's gold teeth reveal the brutal side of the holocaust.
'The Nazis would remove the prisoners crowns and gold teeth as they came into the camp.
'The guards would wrench them out with pliers and melt them down to create gold bars.'
The skull belongs to a Utase Black Legion Officer.
Toys taken from Jewish children as they entered Auschwitz also make up the collection at Littledean Crime Through Time Museum in Gloucestershire
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Toys taken from Jewish children as they entered Auschwitz also make up the collection at Littledean Crime Through Time Museum in Gloucestershire
A boot still containing the bones of the foot from a Nazi SS soldier
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A boot still containing the bones of the foot from a Nazi SS soldier
Well-worn homemade clogs used by inmates at a Nazi death camp
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Well-worn homemade clogs used by inmates at a Nazi death camp
It shows that his nose brutally smashed as he was pistol-whipped then executed with his own gun.
The Black Legion were a pro-Nazi group who massacred Chetniks, Partisans and Serb civilians during the holocaust.
It is believed that the officer's fatal injuries were inflicted when the prisoners were liberated - and then turned on their captors.
The collection also features Nazi SS insignia rings believed to have once belonged to officers
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The collection also features Nazi SS insignia rings believed to have once belonged to officers
The uniform striped hat belonging to a concentration camp inmate
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The uniform striped hat belonging to a concentration camp inmate
The hat is in stark contrast to this original Nazi SS NCO peak cap which will also be displayed
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The hat is in stark contrast to this original Nazi SS NCO peak cap which will also be displayed
A pair of spectacles removed from a Jewish inmate at Auschwitz
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A pair of spectacles removed from a Jewish inmate at Auschwitz
The collection also shows medical syringes recovered from Auschwitz - the implements were used in the brutal medical tests performed at the camp by the Nazis on the helpless prisoners.
Uniforms worn by inmates of the death camps and wrist restraints used by the Gestapo are a reminder of the atrocities committed during the war, and caps and honour rings worn by SS officers stand in sharp contrast to the tiny dolls confiscated from Jewish children as they entered the death camps.



































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