In 1991, my wife, young son and I stayed in the former home of Albert Speer just down the road from the Berghof for 5 days. Had lunch in the Platterhof (General Walker Hotel). Access to Hitlers bunker by a long staircase. Revisited 3 years ago and stayed in Berchtesgaden. So sad to see the General Walker gone, now a miserable car park. Most historic buildings are no longer there. A visit to the Eagles Nest is worth the visit…
Wow!!! I just heard something about the Berchtesgaden hotel being shut down as well?! I wanted one day to visit and stay there I really hope someone anyone would preserve these places . That had to be amazing to see the place in 91 and get to walk in it
@@MrCarGuythey suck I know a lot of the history of world war II was terrible but just to see the things they were they were then for people and future generations so they can remember you know history won't be doomed to repeat itself
Interesting video. I was stationed in Germany as a JAG lawyer and on the weekends my wife and I would explore for WWI & WWII history. In 2022 my wife, kids and I went back to Germany and toured that same area and we stood at the entrance of these bunkers. I miss Germany a lot! There is so much to see with wonderful people to greet you and the food is awesome
I've been looking for footage of this bunker for so long, I honestly thought it was completely sealed off. It's a shame it's been vandalised, just imagine what this would have looked like 80 years ago.
@@nickybluechips7567 so it's fully filled in now? The thing is, on one hand I can understand it as some very disturbed people would use it as a shrine. But, imagine had they restored it and used it as a sort of museum - the amount of money it would generate would be worth while It's a concern that people want to seal up history rather than learn from humanities past mistakes.
While stationed in Germany in the '70s and '80s, we stayed at the General Walker/Platterhof or Berchtesgadener Hof four or five times and were fascinated by the history. In latter visits, I always brought the Obersalzburg issue of After the Battle, (a then-and-now history magazine to which I still subscribe). We took both the Platterhof and Zum Turken tours of the bunker complex. The former ended in an area still strewn with construction materials left behind, we were told, by Italian laborers. The Zum Turken tour ended with the most intriguing feature, a bricked up passage with one or two bricks missing from the top, allowing just a glimpse into the darkness of the Berghof section beyond. Thanks so much for clearing the darkness away with your incomparable coverage.
The "missing bricks" were still there or should I say not there about 6 years ago. I managed to point my camera through the hole and took a few photos.
We were there the last week (Gen. Walker) it opened, September 1994. We got a tour of the back room where they stored the alpine art, and much of it belonged to Nazi germany, but was confiscated by the US Army. There were stamps in the back of the pictures showing ownership of the reich; it was crossed out and a newer stamp showed it was the property of the us government.
I wish everything remained and was preserved. People would spend serious money for tours if this was the case. As evil as the regime was, it’d still be fascinating. It’s unfortunate many sites were destroyed and looted.
The Berghof was heavily bombed and largely reduced to rubble at the end of the war. My Uncle was there with the US Army in 1945 and he brought back a large piece of stucco and exterior. He wrote on the back side of it and gave it a description and explanation. He passed away a few years ago. I have it now. A piece of history.
@@satelliteuse7221 Watch your effing mouth. My Uncle got 3 Purple Hearts fighting in that War. And he had the scars to prove it. I'd say he paid his dues.
Cool for you! The bunker is a war relic. Am I the only one who found the tour claustrophobic? My stomach was in my throat the whole time. Glad it finally ended. My curiosity kept me from exiting the video, but I wanted to quit! I'd have to take Valium or something similar to actually tour through it. I never used to be like that. I have to express my feelings about Nazi Germany and the psycho fuck Hitler and his evil cunt Eva Braun (Note: Her last name is pronounced Brown in German not brawn - Braun literally means brown. I hate mispronunciation. Braun products are always mispronounced. You can hear one of the Germans actually pronounce her name as Brown.)
He stole something from Hitlers House after he went there to kill him. He went there to kill him because a racist wanted to purify the world. He no doubt lost friends in the war that decided human freedom and dignity. That man and men like him won the last just war the world has ever had and you better shut your f*****g mouth when thinking about people you will never live up to. The world owes them everything and those educated in history will never forget exactly what they won for us.
AWESOME VIDEO For many years ive wanted to see more details of this bunker system. Sincere gratitude for allowing us the opportunity to see more of what is there. Thank you.
I know I can’t believe they destroyed or let some of these historic sites go away . I get some things like the remains of a Nazi they don’t make a grave that’s marked so people can support them but historic sites like this are amazing history lessons and teaching tools
History is important, so I think these bunkers should be renovated and restored with the furniture and telephone, machine-guns and pictures, tour guides with stories. People would visit from all over the world and pay to see these bunkers. I certainly would, and whilst there book into local hotel and tour the area.
I think the Berghof should be rebuilt to it's original design as a hotel/ museum, not for any ghoulish purpose but as a testament to architectural excellence. Imagine the wine cellar they would have, always chilled to the perfect temperature.
The question I've always had about this is one that never seems to get asked or addressed: how much time did Hitler actually spend down there? My guess is, next to none. Maybe he did an inspection tour or two, but the Berghof was his vacation home and the area was NOT under Allied attack at any time that he was there, so there would have been no need for him to go down there, right? By all accounts, 14 July 1944 was the last time he was even at the Berghof. Not that it's not fascinating, but I'd bet that the people who have explored it have seen more of it than he ever did. The thing that I find most fascinating is the time, energy and expense that they put forth in planning and building this and other bunkers, which they had to know were just "last ditch defenses" and not "regularly used command centers or fortifications."
Not that I agree with anything that the nazis stand for , but wow considering the tunnels are 80 + years old , the Germans can sure engineer a project, the walls still seem freshly painted in many areas , minimum damp and so well thought out, Brilliant documentary really enjoyed 👍
You should take a look at what Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida is doing, he's stopping people learning history and restricting access to College Education i don't know what he's afraid of and the Governor of Tennessee is doing the same, it's a bit odd that they don't want people to learn about History, but they keep going on about people being "Woke" if they have any education, in fact Matt Gaetz called General Milley "Woke" because he's read many Books on Nazi Germany, Communist Russia and other Historical Books on War and general History and the Republicans seem to want to keep people poor and hardly High School Educated
@@jamesphilip6737 It’s true. Just look at the ignorant rant that’s formed around Critical Race Theory. It would be hilarious if it weren’t so unbelievably ignorant.
@@kevnwarriner8819 High School educated by Common Core, so students aren’t exposed to ideas the Fascist Capitalists fear. Hitler and Stalin did the same thing, waging war on intelligence, denigrating higher education, and getting rid of the smart people because they were in direct opposition of his planned conquests and ethnic cleansing. We hear about the 6 million Jews Hitler murdered, but we often forget about the 4 million others he rounded up and killed which included the smart people who refused the Nazi ideology. Stalin’s purges were for the same reason. Difference between them and the GOP is that Hitler and Stalin murdered their intelligentsia while the Republican Party has simply arranged to stop producing them while convincing the incurably ignorant that education is evil. Got to hand it to them, it’s working fabulously. The chronically stupid have no idea they are stupid and rail against ideological, economic, and political arguments they don’t know the first thing about. Don’t believe me? Check the responses to this comment.
In the late '70's I went down the bunkers in the village below. We entered through the small underground Chapel in the chalet we stayed in whilst skiing with the Army. There were a lot of artefacts still there at that time. I was in the Royal Artillery and it was called Exercise Snow Queen. We only had fairly weak Army torches so we were always worried the batteries would die. Wish we had gone further through the tunnels who knows what was there. David.
The scale of the bunker system and moisture make it hazardous and hard to supervise. There Are also two unseen layers. One above and one below easily accessed and how mg posts were accessed. All quite dangerous incl cardon dioxide issues
@@trailerparksupervisor7046 No, I am a fan of history and I watch many videos of all that was left from World War 11 by Germany, Japan, and Russia. Having been in Korea and visited many of the Pacific Islands I just enjoy seeing videos of all historical events.
@@trailerparksupervisor7046 Would you show me where I said I admired him? Quit trying to put words into my statements. I just thanked the guy for posting the video and I did find it interesting and I don't care what you think.
It’s amazing how well Hitler’s team thought and build these bunkers. You can be down there for long periods without any need to come up. Pretty amazing indeed...
@@justinhealey2408 On point, Hitler and his regime started to act like rodents afraid or predators from the sky.....time to get down under, the end is near.
@@justinhealey2408wouldn’t last for ever? I can’t stand 🤡‘a like you know full well you’re American and scoff on propaganda all day everyday fed loads of lies teamed up with communists.
@@justinhealey2408 This has nothing to do with inscurities. Every country even today have locations with hidden bunkers, to keep high ranking personel save during war time events
Thank you for uploading this footage. Having been in the bunker from the Documentation Centre & Hotel Zum Turken I found this fascinating. These should be open to the public as well.
In 1987 I along with 4 other Paratroopers had the crazy idea to go on the standard Army tour of the bunkers. We took gear with us and hid in the open part of the bunkers and waited until they locked us in under the General Walker, knowing that we would have to spend the night down there we explored the parts of the bunker that were normally not accessible at the time. I remember going into Hitler's bunker room and finding the sealed up wall and wondering what was behind it. 35 years later I know know what was there.
This is an amazing documentary. I believe this historic places should restore to see the future generations to learn what has happened in the past. This cannot be erased from history. Thank you sir.
My brother-in-law and I entered the bunker from the General Walker Inn (now destroyed by the Germans) in the fall of either 1995 or 1996. Very creepy knowing where you were at the time. We later walked by Hitler's house where there was not much except for concrete foundations and some broken glass. I picked up a piece of glass from the site but have forgotten where I put it. We also toured the Eagles' Nest on a clear beautiful day --- impressive views. The General Walker Inn was amazing, huge sleeping rooms, very thick walls. After realizing that the SS used the place it was hard to get to sleep.
How sad that they thrashed the place. There must be detailed filming of every square inch somewhere before people destroyed it. The first soldiers did immortalize themselves by writing their names on the wall because they are long dead BUT the people who thrashed the bunkers are just criminals. Interesting film thank you for posting it.
@@persistentapparartionkitty5830 but it would have become a shrine to the past.. Attracting neo nazis who are still around. Still, it is too bad it was looted. I suppose one day they could restore it as a museum. I thinknthey did that for Churchills war headquarters.
@@Madmen604 there's always going to be radical nutcases but we can't destroy history just because of them. Personally I would like to walk through Adolfs Bunker but apparently that's not worth preserving. One would think Neo Nazis would love going to Auschwitz to celebrate but that wasn't torn down. Ugly history is still history there are mueseums dedicated to Medieval Torture. It's history and it's best to not forget it so we won't repeat it.
I always find myself fascinated with the odd things. Like when Hitler built that bunker I bet he never expected that amount of purple to be entering it.
Historically, I have always found these bunkers lacking. Like a house made for Hitler but never lived in, these bunkers have no history. The Zum Turken Hotel had (at one time) allowed access to these tunnels but it was ceased just a few years ago…for some unknown reason. I have been told that the German’s are much better at facing their disturbing past than the Austrians (who remain in denial) but it does not seem to be entirely true. Always with the tired cliche “We don’t want the Neo Nazis turning these places into shrines” begins to ring hallow. With the complete erasing of the Berghof and Hitler’s small Mooslahnerkopf teahouse overlooking Berchtesgaden below (not the Eagles Nest), this all begins to smack of national embarrassment.
Christopher, it's sad you feel your opinion has any merit. Not only do these bunkers have historical importance, but historical beauty, as history and all sites belong to all of humanity and should always be preserved. Please do your research on these and others, you will be much more informed.
@@cliffgray8347 - The Führer Bunker had enormous significance and historical merit. The Berghof Bunkers were never used …so where does all this sentimentality come from? Where is the value in an historical artifact with no history? The Berghof was a spectacular specimen of history and the Allies and the Bavarian government couldn’t wait to obliterate any sign of it having ever been there! The claustrophobic dank bunker tunnels that were never used by the Nazis remain! So far! But you can have them! There is no history there!
@@SteveVi0lence the rest of the west weren't a lot better, they just did their crimes with much less media coverage, after all, a lot of them build their nations by genociding aboriginals or red Indians...etc
@@SteveVi0lenceanother 🤡 who doesn’t know history, love reading these comments and laughing at fools like you imagine thinking it wasn’t civil Jesus lord almighty go watch more history and some news.
Wow, pity it was looted after the US camera crew went through and not preserved. Would be an amazing place to have visited. Lucky there is comparison footage. Amazing construction of it's time.
@@BEGAFILMHISTORYINMOTION ---Can't figure out where you get some of these narrators from. The guy in this video sounds like he is guiding a tour for children through "Alice in Wonderland".
The amount of people that it must of took to build all the bunkers weapons and God knows what else is truly amazing to say the least This is the best video and translation I've ever watched great job You have a new subscriber and fan from northern Ontario Canada Im going to go down the rabbit hole of videos you have and enjoy every episode
Thankyou so very much for posting this !!! This is very well put together and the layout map helps very much too . Thankyou for your time in doing this , it is all that is left for many to see and understand . Great piece of video history. Love every minute of it !!!
I understand the conflicting emotions these ruins cause, but is is still sad it has been so looted and vandalized. My dad was in the Pacific Campaign and my husband uncle was in D Day+2. This is history that needs preservation.
I wonder looking at all the destructions and looting if our side is not any more righteous; our government is not constitutional as it could be; ashamed this could not have been saved
I just found this Channel and I am hooked. I have always been intrigued by WWII specifically the German side. It's all so fascinating. Not glorifying the acts at all, but still interesting nonetheless. Thank you for your extraordinary documentation.
There's nothing " fascinating" about WWII especially the " german side" How morbidly is to be " fascinated" about " one side" who killed premeditated Millions of innocent people??? 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
@@loanathiess4888 ma'am stay in your uncultured one sided box. To educate yourself you must learn about the good and bad of the situation. I am in no way glorifying the actions.
@@missjones6845 There's for sure no need to be lectured in anything especially of obviously one person seeking for some some public attention Despite this I've visited myself the bunker and have more informations first hand than you'll ever be able to dream about You're a waste of time
In my opinion it is almost criminal to not renovate it and make it open to the public. The condition is remarkable and a very important piece of history. From a building and architectural viewpoint this is unbelievable. Why they closed it and filled it in is beyond me.
Omg im so captivated by these bunkers and just imagining how they were then. Omg and to be in Eva's room. I would love to go there. Thank you for the trip thru.
Sorry you're on this page looking just like i am. AND JENNIFER GO TELL EVERYONE ELSE ON THIS PAGE THAT THEY'RE TOO EXCITED TOO. AND PHANTOM HOW I FEEL ABOUT EVA IS MY OPINION, CUZ WE ALL HAVE THEM. THNX
Hitler never spent any time in the Berghof bunker- he moved from the Chancery to the Wolfs Lair and then back to the Chancery - spending the early years in the Berghof
Fantastic film! 👌🏻 I have always wanted to Know what's hiding behind the Bricked door every time i visited the Zum Türken-sektion of the Berghof bunker, and now i Know thanks to BEGAfilm! ❤️ I have written a historical tourguide over the Obersalzberg- and Berchtesgaden-area and this is a missing piece recovered!
Everyone should be proud of their history("a terrorist is a freedom fighter, just not in everyone's book"). don't know why germans think of themselves as an exception.
I went 1ce. Am planning many more trips in my retirement. Fantastic history. Why did they destroy all of the 3rd Reich remains. OK, it's not warm and fuzzy history but it is INCREDIBLE history. Stop trying to hide it, talk about it and let everyone come and experience it.
Um lugar sombrio, só de pensar no tanto de trabalhadores que foram forçados a construir um local desse tamanho, já possível imaginar o sofrimento deles.
There are those that cheer the destruction of such a place because it makes them uncomfortable, I disagree because history is what it is and is not always comfortable. History should not be whitewashed and forgotten, but maintained for future generations to learn from. Take for instance Auschwitz in Poland, it was not not razed or demolished, but maintained as a powerful history lesson no matter how uncomfortable it makes one feel.
It predates the slave labor years. Well, some of it, don't know if camp labor was involved later. Can't change the past. History repeats since then, different flags and people but similar.
@@craftpaint1644slave labour lmao, again another idiot who’s clueless about ww2 believes every propaganda film and documentary made. The victors write history remember that dopey.
Sorry but this isn't the first tour of the Bunker. I've been in it a couple of times when I was stationed in Germany. You can see Graffiti on the walls.
This thing is massive. Much bigger than I thought. I'm wondering how long did this take to build, and I agree, it would be interesting to see it as it actually was .
@@lostpony4885 When I used to think of Hitlers bunker, I used to think of like a one or two room bomb shelter type thing. This surprised me that it was so much larger than that, like a whole complex. Pretty amazing.
Instant like. I was in Germany from 09 to 13. I was very fortunate and I was able to visit many amazing places. I wish I had been more educated on war time Germany. I guess hindsight is always 20 20
Well it was probably looted by the locals afterwards, since they had nothing and most of their family members had been killed by the people who built the bunker.
i visited the tunnels under the Zum Turken and find this video fascinating .If you've visited the Zum Turken tunnels you come against the bricked up doorway leading to the area you showed in detail of Hitlers room and the rooms in that vicinity, this is great to watch thanks so much.
The Hotel and bunker system was amazing as well as the ruins for the Berghof. I wish I had explored all the other sites around the area like the tea house and such
@@cagrangersealninja3720 . Well worth it if you go back. We visited the Documentation Centre, Berghof site and walking around bumped into the coke store that held fuel for the Nazi hierarchy mansions. Also walked around some grand buildings that were a farm built by Bormann now the local golf club.A real highlight was finding the Mooslahnerkopf Teehaus site which like others from this part of history can’t be found in the tourist guide books, I had done some RUclips homework so that helped but had to ask a couple of ladies on a walk who gave us a feeling we were on the right track but weren’t certain. The second person we asked was a friendly German guy on his mountain bike who said it was a secret place and gave us specific directions.....and as we were approaching the site it became recognisable from a couple of hundred yards away , what a feeling I was so elated and felt I had achieved something special , spent a while filming and taking camera shots...you don’t want to leave as you find it hard to digest you are in such a place of historical interest. Even if you have no interest in the dark history of the area it has such stunningly beautiful countryside as you will know and easy to see why Hitler found this the ideal place to get away from the madness he had generated.
@@timmyhamilton56 i was stationed not far from Nuremberg so I spent a lot of time up there. I went to zepplin field and the documentation center next door. There are a lot of sites there. Also went to flossenburgh which is in upper bavaria as well as Dachau near Munich. Not to mention all the typical sites
@@cagrangersealninja3720 This part of history is always of big interest to me and I try to visit different places on my travels , I feel like an excited school kid when a target is achieved and another site ticked off. I need to visit the Normandy beaches that’s a big one for me. Already done Munich and some relevant sites but no time for Dachau unfortunately, Berlin and some great locations including the site of Hitler’s bunker and Sachsenhausen 45 mins north of Berlin by train. The River Kwai , bridge and cemeteries a very interesting place. Budapest, Warsaw, and Krakow,did Poland twice in 1975 and 2005 visited Auschwitz/Birkenau on both occasions, that was an education in itself.
@@timmyhamilton56 wow! I never made it up to Berlin unfortunately. Normandy as well as Poland are the top of my list. I hope I am able to go back some day. Germany felt like home and I get almost homesick when I think about it. Unfortunately I am very near "working poor" and will probably never get a chance to return. I feel very blessed to have had the opportunity to live abroad.
You would figure that there would still be some sort of power source still connected from ww2 and also for the people of today that want to tour these famous ww2 sites and have these bunkers apart of a museum program of sorts to keep them preserved for future generations like if I was flown to Germany and someone paid me to keep those sites clean and maintained as museum sites I would take that job in less then a heartbeat I love history of all kinds good or bad.
I actually went on a Tour of the Berghoff thru the Gusthoff. From inside the Gusthoff Kitchen down the Stairs into the Bunker hallway greeted with a Machine gun Nest then around the Corner into the Kitchen and mess hall. Conveniently the Bunkers Kitchen exhaust was tied into the Gusthoffs Kitchen as to hide the Bunker Kitchen exhaust. It had accomodations for 20-30 Soldiers and further into the system had a Roadway big enough for cars. Quite Impressive
People actually went through the effort & labor to remove (steal) such equipment & machinery like clothes washers, from a labyrinth-like maze? Just amazing...They had to have flatbed trucks waiting to haul the stuff off to who knows where, I would think?
In 1991, my wife, young son and I stayed in the former home of Albert Speer just down the road from the Berghof for 5 days. Had lunch in the Platterhof (General Walker Hotel). Access to Hitlers bunker by a long staircase. Revisited 3 years ago and stayed in Berchtesgaden. So sad to see the General Walker gone, now a miserable car park. Most historic buildings are no longer there. A visit to the Eagles Nest is worth the visit…
The views have to be some of the best in the world up there
Wow!!! I just heard something about the Berchtesgaden hotel being shut down as well?! I wanted one day to visit and stay there I really hope someone anyone would preserve these places . That had to be amazing to see the place in 91 and get to walk in it
Those with political power have done everything possible to let it get erased
@@MrCarGuythey suck I know a lot of the history of world war II was terrible but just to see the things they were they were then for people and future generations so they can remember you know history won't be doomed to repeat itself
Interesting video. I was stationed in Germany as a JAG lawyer and on the weekends my wife and I would explore for WWI & WWII history. In 2022 my wife, kids and I went back to Germany and toured that same area and we stood at the entrance of these bunkers. I miss Germany a lot! There is so much to see with wonderful people to greet you and the food is awesome
Thx .
I Love the US and the people .
Friendship forerver 🇩🇪🤝🇺🇸
I've been looking for footage of this bunker for so long, I honestly thought it was completely sealed off. It's a shame it's been vandalised, just imagine what this would have looked like 80 years ago.
Filled in and sealed sometime in 1999, seems that even twenty + years ago people seemed frightened by the fact this was still accessible.
@@nickybluechips7567 so it's fully filled in now? The thing is, on one hand I can understand it as some very disturbed people would use it as a shrine. But, imagine had they restored it and used it as a sort of museum - the amount of money it would generate would be worth while
It's a concern that people want to seal up history rather than learn from humanities past mistakes.
@@nickybluechips7567 It was not filled... only sealed.
And yet, people are able to video it…amazing…
Not stripped bare like this that's for sure. That stolen bathtub is probably on eBay.
While stationed in Germany in the '70s and '80s, we stayed at the General Walker/Platterhof or Berchtesgadener Hof four or five times and were fascinated by the history. In latter visits, I always brought the Obersalzburg issue of After the Battle, (a then-and-now history magazine to which I still subscribe). We took both the Platterhof and Zum Turken tours of the bunker complex. The former ended in an area still strewn with construction materials left behind, we were told, by Italian laborers. The Zum Turken tour ended with the most intriguing feature, a bricked up passage with one or two bricks missing from the top, allowing just a glimpse into the darkness of the Berghof section beyond. Thanks so much for clearing the darkness away with your incomparable coverage.
The "missing bricks" were still there or should I say not there about 6 years ago. I managed to point my camera through the hole and took a few photos.
We were there the last week (Gen. Walker) it opened, September 1994. We got a tour of the back room where they stored the alpine art, and much of it belonged to Nazi germany, but was confiscated by the US Army. There were stamps in the back of the pictures showing ownership of the reich; it was crossed out and a newer stamp showed it was the property of the us government.
Was at the Walker in 1989, fun times exploring!
I was there too but in 1986
In 2019 the bricks was still missing
I wish everything remained and was preserved. People would spend serious money for tours if this was the case. As evil as the regime was, it’d still be fascinating. It’s unfortunate many sites were destroyed and looted.
The best English version I’ve seen yet and very informative. Love to see more!
The Berghof was heavily bombed and largely reduced to rubble at the end of the war. My Uncle was there with the US Army in 1945 and he brought back a large piece of stucco and exterior. He wrote on the back side of it and gave it a description and explanation. He passed away a few years ago. I have it now. A piece of history.
Your uncle was robber
@@satelliteuse7221 Watch your effing mouth. My Uncle got 3 Purple Hearts fighting in that War. And he had the scars to prove it. I'd say he paid his dues.
Cool for you! The bunker is a war relic. Am I the only one who found the tour claustrophobic? My stomach was in my throat the whole time. Glad it finally ended. My curiosity kept me from exiting the video, but I wanted to quit! I'd have to take Valium or something similar to actually tour through it. I never used to be like that.
I have to express my feelings about Nazi Germany and the psycho fuck Hitler and his evil cunt Eva Braun (Note: Her last name is pronounced Brown in German not brawn - Braun literally means brown. I hate mispronunciation. Braun products are always mispronounced. You can hear one of the Germans actually pronounce her name as Brown.)
@@cii1072 Right. He still stole something that did not belong to him. Makes him no different than a common looter.
He stole something from Hitlers House after he went there to kill him. He went there to kill him because a racist wanted to purify the world. He no doubt lost friends in the war that decided human freedom and dignity. That man and men like him won the last just war the world has ever had and you better shut your f*****g mouth when thinking about people you will never live up to. The world owes them everything and those educated in history will never forget exactly what they won for us.
AWESOME VIDEO
For many years ive wanted to see more details of this bunker system.
Sincere gratitude for allowing us the opportunity to see more of what is there.
Thank you.
I know, I feel the same, and so much information.
So interesting.I kinda wish it was still intact with all the rooms full of its furniture. It would make a great museum.
Exactly, better than Disneyland.
Even the door hinges were taken it was stripped of anything that could be lifted
No it will attract the whyte supremacists and aryan brotherhood groups to go worship...
@@Jason.cbr1000rr sadly, I’m sure it does even at it’s current condition.
@@jennifer801 yup told you so 🙂👍
Wish it had been preserved like a museum
I know I can’t believe they destroyed or let some of these historic sites go away .
I get some things like the remains of a Nazi they don’t make a grave that’s marked so people can support them but historic sites like this are amazing history lessons and teaching tools
History is important, so I think these bunkers should be renovated and restored with the furniture and telephone, machine-guns and pictures, tour guides with stories. People would visit from all over the world and pay to see these bunkers. I certainly would, and whilst there book into local hotel and tour the area.
I think the Berghof should be rebuilt to it's original design as a hotel/ museum, not for any ghoulish purpose but as a testament to architectural excellence. Imagine the wine cellar they would have, always chilled to the perfect temperature.
The question I've always had about this is one that never seems to get asked or addressed: how much time did Hitler actually spend down there?
My guess is, next to none.
Maybe he did an inspection tour or two, but the Berghof was his vacation home and the area was NOT under Allied attack at any time that he was there, so there would have been no need for him to go down there, right?
By all accounts, 14 July 1944 was the last time he was even at the Berghof.
Not that it's not fascinating, but I'd bet that the people who have explored it have seen more of it than he ever did.
The thing that I find most fascinating is the time, energy and expense that they put forth in planning and building this and other bunkers, which they had to know were just "last ditch defenses" and not "regularly used command centers or fortifications."
Not that I agree with anything that the nazis stand for , but wow considering the tunnels are 80 + years old , the Germans can sure engineer a project, the walls still seem freshly painted in many areas , minimum damp and so well thought out,
Brilliant documentary really enjoyed 👍
egyptian piramids are older as many other ancient buildings ..... ;)
@@officiallymrpnoo really?? 😮
@@noneya9866 😅😅😅😉
Kindly make these videos available as DVD or download. We don't know when history will be removed from RUclips in the interests of progressivism.
You should take a look at what Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida is doing, he's stopping people learning history and restricting access to College Education i don't know what he's afraid of and the Governor of Tennessee is doing the same, it's a bit odd that they don't want people to learn about History, but they keep going on about people being "Woke" if they have any education, in fact Matt Gaetz called General Milley "Woke" because he's read many Books on Nazi Germany, Communist Russia and other Historical Books on War and general History and the Republicans seem to want to keep people poor and hardly High School Educated
@@kevnwarriner8819 sure...lol.
@@jamesphilip6737 It’s true. Just look at the ignorant rant that’s formed around Critical Race Theory. It would be hilarious if it weren’t so unbelievably ignorant.
@@kevnwarriner8819 High School educated by Common Core, so students aren’t exposed to ideas the Fascist Capitalists fear. Hitler and Stalin did the same thing, waging war on intelligence, denigrating higher education, and getting rid of the smart people because they were in direct opposition of his planned conquests and ethnic cleansing. We hear about the 6 million Jews Hitler murdered, but we often forget about the 4 million others he rounded up and killed which included the smart people who refused the Nazi ideology. Stalin’s purges were for the same reason. Difference between them and the GOP is that Hitler and Stalin murdered their intelligentsia while the Republican Party has simply arranged to stop producing them while convincing the incurably ignorant that education is evil. Got to hand it to them, it’s working fabulously. The chronically stupid have no idea they are stupid and rail against ideological, economic, and political arguments they don’t know the first thing about. Don’t believe me? Check the responses to this comment.
@@jamesphilip6737 Ignorance is bliss.
In the late '70's I went down the bunkers in the village below. We entered through the small underground Chapel in the chalet we stayed in whilst skiing with the Army. There were a lot of artefacts still there at that time. I was in the Royal Artillery and it was called Exercise Snow Queen. We only had fairly weak Army torches so we were always worried the batteries would die. Wish we had gone further through the tunnels who knows what was there. David.
maybe some hitler babies breeding like rats ?
Yes Us army flash lights were crap in the 1970s as well.
Dim.
It always amazes me that in all these years they made no attempts to clean those places and make them available for tourists and research.
Most, not all, do not want anything to do with anything the nazi did. Even today.
@@23draft7 What did they "do"?
The scale of the bunker system and moisture make it hazardous and hard to supervise. There Are also two unseen layers. One above and one below easily accessed and how mg posts were accessed. All quite dangerous incl cardon dioxide issues
I really enjoyed seeing this. Thanks for filming and showing it.
You’re a fan of hitler?
@@trailerparksupervisor7046 No, I am a fan of history and I watch many videos of all that was left from World War 11 by Germany, Japan, and Russia. Having been in Korea and visited many of the Pacific Islands I just enjoy seeing videos of all historical events.
@@ronniewidener8701 if you are a follower of history then you will be aware that Mr Hitler is not a man to be admired.
@@trailerparksupervisor7046 Would you show me where I said I admired him? Quit trying to put words into my statements. I just thanked the guy for posting the video and I did find it interesting and I don't care what you think.
@@ronniewidener8701 sir, I didn’t say that you admired him. I just said that he is not a man to be admired. Surely you agree with me.
Incredible workmanship
It’s amazing how well Hitler’s team thought and build these bunkers. You can be down there for long periods without any need to come up. Pretty amazing indeed...
And i guess shows his insecurities, at some point? Late 43'-early44'? Wonder the dates of the builds..he knew it wouldnt last forever
@@justinhealey2408 On point, Hitler and his regime started to act like rodents afraid or predators from the sky.....time to get down under, the end is near.
@@justinhealey2408wouldn’t last for ever? I can’t stand 🤡‘a like you know full well you’re American and scoff on propaganda all day everyday fed loads of lies teamed up with communists.
@@justinhealey2408 This has nothing to do with inscurities.
Every country even today have locations with hidden bunkers, to keep high ranking personel save during war time events
Thank you for uploading this footage. Having been in the bunker from the Documentation Centre & Hotel Zum Turken I found this fascinating. These should be open to the public as well.
It should all be restored to how it was in 1945 I've no idea why it has suffered such damage .Deserves to all be brought back to what it used to be.
@@stephensav2728 as intriguing as it all is, it's best not to restore it. It was after all a murderous regime.
@@nstl440 Ah well been worse regimes in history i would say ! And after all, Hitler did leave us with the Volkeswagon lol
@@stephensav2728 vw with their scandals... not much has changed..
@@stephensav2728 it should never be restored or in any way respected. It is one symbol of a demonic monster.
In 1987 I along with 4 other Paratroopers had the crazy idea to go on the standard Army tour of the bunkers. We took gear with us and hid in the open part of the bunkers and waited until they locked us in under the General Walker, knowing that we would have to spend the night down there we explored the parts of the bunker that were normally not accessible at the time. I remember going into Hitler's bunker room and finding the sealed up wall and wondering what was behind it. 35 years later I know know what was there.
This is an amazing documentary. I believe this historic places should restore to see the future generations to learn what has happened in the past. This cannot be erased from history. Thank you sir.
My brother-in-law and I entered the bunker from the General Walker Inn (now destroyed by the Germans) in the fall of either 1995 or 1996. Very creepy knowing where you were at the time. We later walked by Hitler's house where there was not much except for concrete foundations and some broken glass. I picked up a piece of glass from the site but have forgotten where I put it. We also toured the Eagles' Nest on a clear beautiful day --- impressive views. The General Walker Inn was amazing, huge sleeping rooms, very thick walls. After realizing that the SS used the place it was hard to get to sleep.
How sad that they thrashed the place. There must be detailed filming of every square inch somewhere before people destroyed it. The first soldiers did immortalize themselves by writing their names on the wall because they are long dead BUT the people who thrashed the bunkers are just criminals. Interesting film thank you for posting it.
Sad???????
Fantastic!! Thank you for preserving history for us all to see!
It’s really a crime that History like this has been destroyed or buried SMH future generations should be able to tour such places.
@@persistentapparartionkitty5830 but it would have become a shrine to the past.. Attracting neo nazis who are still around. Still, it is too bad it was looted. I suppose one day they could restore it as a museum. I thinknthey did that for Churchills war headquarters.
@@Madmen604 there's always going to be radical nutcases but we can't destroy history just because of them. Personally I would like to walk through Adolfs Bunker but apparently that's not worth preserving. One would think Neo Nazis would love going to Auschwitz to celebrate but that wasn't torn down. Ugly history is still history there are mueseums dedicated to Medieval Torture. It's history and it's best to not forget it so we won't repeat it.
Yes thank you
I enjoyed it immensely
Fascinating! I get that it’s a dark part of history, and that generation couldn’t care less, but nowadays they should take better care preserving it.
Exactly, one day someone will say that NSDAP did not exist.
I always find myself fascinated with the odd things. Like when Hitler built that bunker I bet he never expected that amount of purple to be entering it.
Historically, I have always found these bunkers lacking. Like a house made for Hitler but never lived in, these bunkers have no history.
The Zum Turken Hotel had (at one time) allowed access to these tunnels but it was ceased just a few years ago…for some unknown reason.
I have been told that the German’s are much better at facing their disturbing past than the Austrians (who remain in denial) but it does not seem to be entirely true. Always with the tired cliche “We don’t want the Neo Nazis turning these places into shrines” begins to ring hallow.
With the complete erasing of the Berghof and Hitler’s small Mooslahnerkopf teahouse overlooking Berchtesgaden below (not the Eagles Nest), this all begins to smack of national embarrassment.
Christopher, it's sad you feel your opinion has any merit.
Not only do these bunkers have historical importance, but historical beauty, as history and all sites belong to all of humanity and should always be preserved.
Please do your research on these and others, you will be much more informed.
@@cliffgray8347 - The Führer Bunker had enormous significance and historical merit. The Berghof Bunkers were never used …so where does all this sentimentality come from? Where is the value in an historical artifact with no history? The Berghof was a spectacular specimen of history and the Allies and the Bavarian government couldn’t wait to obliterate any sign of it having ever been there! The claustrophobic dank bunker tunnels that were never used by the Nazis remain! So far! But you can have them! There is no history there!
Such brilliant engineering,very little moisture damage. Top class German skills..
Yeah too bad they couldn't engineer a civil society
Comunque nonostante tutto è in stato di completo abbandono!!😉😉🌟🙏
Built by Slave Labour, not by the Germans themselves.
@@SteveVi0lence the rest of the west weren't a lot better, they just did their crimes with much less media coverage, after all, a lot of them build their nations by genociding aboriginals or red Indians...etc
@@SteveVi0lenceanother 🤡 who doesn’t know history, love reading these comments and laughing at fools like you imagine thinking it wasn’t civil Jesus lord almighty go watch more history and some news.
Wow, pity it was looted after the US camera crew went through and not preserved. Would be an amazing place to have visited. Lucky there is comparison footage. Amazing construction of it's time.
Excellent video, I'd never seen this set of bunkers previously. Well done, thank you...
*Fascinating video. Thanks so much for uploading. What year was this filmed?*
I dont know the exact year anymore but it was in the early 90s.
@@BEGAFILMHISTORYINMOTION *Thank you.*
@@BEGAFILMHISTORYINMOTION ---Can't figure out where you get some of these narrators from. The guy in this video sounds like he is guiding a tour for children through "Alice in Wonderland".
@Bob Dole By the labor of the captured or enslaved ‘enemies’, or as seen in the more ‘professionally’ finished areas, their own builders & craftsmen.
Great history lesson. I was in Germany in 67 and 68. This was a lot of history. Save it for study.
An absolutely fascinating tour. Thank you so much.
It may be Hitlers bunker, but it's still amazing German engineering. I want one.
Thanks for sharing.
@Koba Will do. Thank you.
I agree, my family left Germany in the 1830’s but my roots are proud of the engineering feats that they have done.
I'd sell you this one. Its unused rn...
An excellent video, the bunker system is so extensive
Imagine going through all the bunkers while they were connected
Great movie! Fantastic exploration! Best regards from Brazil!
Incredible that so much of it is still intact.
The amount of people that it must of took to build all the bunkers weapons and God knows what else is truly amazing to say the least
This is the best video and translation I've ever watched great job
You have a new subscriber and fan from northern Ontario Canada
Im going to go down the rabbit hole of videos you have and enjoy every episode
Truly amazing? 😂
You know they did all of that with slave workers right?
7minute 15 sec. Looking for hidden tunnels. That's real Wolfenstein3d
awesome -- the missing part after 29:19 is now here !!
Thankyou so very much for posting this !!! This is very well put together and the layout map helps very much too . Thankyou for your time in doing this , it is all that is left for many to see and understand . Great piece of video history. Love every minute of it !!!
I understand the conflicting emotions these ruins cause, but is is still sad it has been so looted and vandalized. My dad was in the Pacific Campaign and my husband uncle was in D Day+2. This is history that needs preservation.
The whole of Germany was looted and her people nearly destroyed in the years after the war.
I wonder looking at all the destructions and looting if our side is not any more righteous; our government is not constitutional as it could be; ashamed this could not have been saved
The looting you see here was done by the Allies.
A savage peace is a good documentary that shows the horrors ethnic Germans faced after the war
I just found this Channel and I am hooked. I have always been intrigued by WWII specifically the German side. It's all so fascinating. Not glorifying the acts at all, but still interesting nonetheless. Thank you for your extraordinary documentation.
Me too
There's nothing " fascinating" about WWII especially the " german side"
How morbidly is to be " fascinated" about " one side" who killed premeditated Millions of innocent people???
🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
@@loanathiess4888 ma'am stay in your uncultured one sided box. To educate yourself you must learn about the good and bad of the situation. I am in no way glorifying the actions.
@@missjones6845 There's for sure no need to be lectured in anything especially of obviously one person seeking for some some public attention
Despite this I've visited myself the bunker and have more informations first hand than you'll ever be able to dream about
You're a waste of time
@@loanathiess4888 Karen, you don't know anything.
In my opinion it is almost criminal to not renovate it and make it open to the public. The condition is remarkable and a very important piece of history.
From a building and architectural viewpoint this is unbelievable.
Why they closed it and filled it in is beyond me.
Amazing work! Thank you for posting this.
The interview with Herbert Doehring has been taken down by YT after I was 1/2 way through. Could you possibly upload it somewhere else and let us know
Superb video. Excellent Berghof bunker complex.
There were tours of this in the early 90s. I went on a tour of this in 1992.
Omg im so captivated by these bunkers and just imagining how they were then.
Omg and to be in Eva's room.
I would love to go there.
Thank you for the trip thru.
YES REALLY. JUST LIKE EVERYBODY ELSE.SMMFH
@@aliciacruz5957 your a little too excited. Almost like you think of them heroically.
I think you should reassess your Eva crap😂☠️
Sorry you're on this page looking just like i am. AND JENNIFER GO TELL EVERYONE ELSE ON THIS PAGE THAT THEY'RE TOO EXCITED TOO.
AND PHANTOM HOW I FEEL ABOUT EVA IS MY OPINION, CUZ WE ALL HAVE THEM. THNX
HISTORY IS HISTORY WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT
Hitler never spent any time in the Berghof bunker- he moved from the Chancery to the Wolfs Lair and then back to the Chancery - spending the early years in the Berghof
Great historical documentary which I never knew existed at the Berghoff. Amazing in which direction to dig underground to say the least.
Fantastic film! 👌🏻
I have always wanted to Know what's hiding behind the Bricked door every time i visited the Zum Türken-sektion of the Berghof bunker, and now i Know thanks to BEGAfilm! ❤️
I have written a historical tourguide over the Obersalzberg- and Berchtesgaden-area and this is a missing piece recovered!
@Bob Dole With explosives and skilled engineers! 👌🏻
Why did they fill this in ?
This is history.
They ought to blow up everything related to that man
Because this bunker can be a temple for the nowadays nazis. This is the truth
The left works in mysterious ways
@@stiannobelisto573 They are scum, thats all.
@@trailerparksupervisor7046 Bunkers didn't establish Nazisim and didn't stop it's downfall so what's the point?
Why don't germans preserve it or at least maintain it for coming generations to learn & see . They can & restore it at least for history students.
And today's neo-Nazis would use it as a shrine to their hero. There are more than enough WW2 souvenir landmarks in Germany that these won't be missed.
@@skeeterinnewjersey5256eh dumb argument
Too ashamed, I would think.
Everyone should be proud of their history("a terrorist is a freedom fighter, just not in everyone's book"). don't know why germans think of themselves as an exception.
Come on now man you really think that the neo nazis going to take over the world@@skeeterinnewjersey5256
Fascinating video and tour. Thanks so much for sharing! 👍👍👍. I visited the area twice and always wanted to see more of the bunker systems. 👍
Thank you for this footage. When I got there in 1995 it was all covered up.
If they had not destroyed it, for Germany that would have been a tourist attraction. How many years did it take to build that bunker..
I went 1ce. Am planning many more trips in my retirement.
Fantastic history.
Why did they destroy all of the 3rd Reich remains.
OK, it's not warm and fuzzy history but it is INCREDIBLE history.
Stop trying to hide it, talk about it and let everyone come and experience it.
Um lugar sombrio, só de pensar no tanto de trabalhadores que foram forçados a construir um local desse tamanho, já possível imaginar o sofrimento deles.
Amazing! I’ve watched all your videos! We need more these are amazing👏🏼
Hello from Sweden 🇸🇪
There are those that cheer the destruction of such a place because it makes them uncomfortable, I disagree because history is what it is and is not always comfortable. History should not be whitewashed and forgotten, but maintained for future generations to learn from. Take for instance Auschwitz in Poland, it was not not razed or demolished, but maintained as a powerful history lesson no matter how uncomfortable it makes one feel.
Living history. A shame they sealed it up forever.
Dana, as far as I know, you can still tour it.
@@garlandremingtoniii1338 The video says they concreted it up
Or is it?
You have an excellent speaking voice and your videos are awesome!
Amazing !! ...My Heart goes out to the folks that had to build one ..of many structures.
They were paid Italians
It predates the slave labor years. Well, some of it, don't know if camp labor was involved later. Can't change the past. History repeats since then, different flags and people but similar.
@@craftpaint1644slave labour lmao, again another idiot who’s clueless about ww2 believes every propaganda film and documentary made. The victors write history remember that dopey.
Thank you so much for the video. I always wondered what his bunker looked like.
28:36 these guys were experts in installing wooden doors!
This is the best video I’ve ever seen on the underground tunnels of Hitler’s home! 👍🤟👏💪
Hitler lived in Führer bunker
@@lorne852 the stairs that lead to the inside of the berkhof from the tunnel. Where in Hitlers house do they go? Kitchen? Dining Room?
@@SONORSQ2guy none, Hitler lived on the other side of Germany. This was a vacation house bunker.
A Excellent History Video.. Highly Recommended.. Thank You Very Much For Sharing..
Imagine being deep in there when the flashlight stops…
This is fascinating never seen this before
Must have cost them a fortune to build this
Thank you for this excellent video!
I am Italian and I love history.
Sorry but this isn't the first tour of the Bunker. I've been in it a couple of times when I was stationed in Germany. You can see Graffiti on the walls.
This channel is rivaled only by Mark Felton. Brilliant
They should restore everything to the way it was.
This thing is massive. Much bigger than I thought. I'm wondering how long did this take to build, and I agree, it would be interesting to see it as it actually was .
@@scottsteel2395 its funny i was thinking how small it is. Such little rooms and no extra space.
@@lostpony4885 When I used to think of Hitlers bunker, I used to think of like a one or two room bomb shelter type thing. This surprised me that it was so much larger than that, like a whole complex. Pretty amazing.
Instant like. I was in Germany from 09 to 13. I was very fortunate and I was able to visit many amazing places. I wish I had been more educated on war time Germany. I guess hindsight is always 20 20
Unfortunately, people always seem to find it necessary to loot and vandalize history such as this.
Well it was probably looted by the locals afterwards, since they had nothing and most of their family members had been killed by the people who built the bunker.
That is how it goes when an order collapses.
@@SG-ug9xj Well put, sir, I applaud you.
@@SG-ug9xj No, the destruction you see here was caused directly by the allies.
Imagine this place at the height of war, it would have been a beehive of activity
Did not realize it was so big.
i visited the tunnels under the Zum Turken and find this video fascinating .If you've visited the Zum Turken tunnels you come against the bricked up doorway leading to the area you showed in detail of Hitlers room and the rooms in that vicinity, this is great to watch thanks so much.
The Hotel and bunker system was amazing as well as the ruins for the Berghof. I wish I had explored all the other sites around the area like the tea house and such
@@cagrangersealninja3720 . Well worth it if you go back. We visited the Documentation Centre, Berghof site and walking around bumped into the coke store that held fuel for the Nazi hierarchy mansions. Also walked around some grand buildings that were a farm built by Bormann now the local golf club.A real highlight was finding the Mooslahnerkopf Teehaus site which like others from this part of history can’t be found in the tourist guide books, I had done some RUclips homework so that helped but had to ask a couple of ladies on a walk who gave us a feeling we were on the right track but weren’t certain. The second person we asked was a friendly German guy on his mountain bike who said it was a secret place and gave us specific directions.....and as we were approaching the site it became recognisable from a couple of hundred yards away , what a feeling I was so elated and felt I had achieved something special , spent a while filming and taking camera shots...you don’t want to leave as you find it hard to digest you are in such a place of historical interest. Even if you have no interest in the dark history of the area it has such stunningly beautiful countryside as you will know and easy to see why Hitler found this the ideal place to get away from the madness he had generated.
@@timmyhamilton56 i was stationed not far from Nuremberg so I spent a lot of time up there. I went to zepplin field and the documentation center next door. There are a lot of sites there. Also went to flossenburgh which is in upper bavaria as well as Dachau near Munich. Not to mention all the typical sites
@@cagrangersealninja3720 This part of history is always of big interest to me and I try to visit different places on my travels , I feel like an excited school kid when a target is achieved and another site ticked off. I need to visit the Normandy beaches that’s a big one for me. Already done Munich and some relevant sites but no time for Dachau unfortunately, Berlin and some great locations including the site of Hitler’s bunker and Sachsenhausen 45 mins north of Berlin by train. The River Kwai , bridge and cemeteries a very interesting place. Budapest, Warsaw, and Krakow,did Poland twice in 1975 and 2005 visited Auschwitz/Birkenau on both occasions, that was an education in itself.
@@timmyhamilton56 wow! I never made it up to Berlin unfortunately. Normandy as well as Poland are the top of my list. I hope I am able to go back some day. Germany felt like home and I get almost homesick when I think about it. Unfortunately I am very near "working poor" and will probably never get a chance to return. I feel very blessed to have had the opportunity to live abroad.
Freaking awesome video folks 👍 ❤️ ❤️ ❤️
Amazing tunnel system, how could anyone imagine the construction of such a system.
Let alone it's final construction. Unbelievable task.
You would figure that there would still be some sort of power source still connected from ww2 and also for the people of today that want to tour these famous ww2 sites and have these bunkers apart of a museum program of sorts to keep them preserved for future generations like if I was flown to Germany and someone paid me to keep those sites clean and maintained as museum sites I would take that job in less then a heartbeat I love history of all kinds good or bad.
Imagine finding a hidden room that is stall intact
with a skeleton
Interestingly. It is a pity that it was destroyed, it could remain as a piece of history for future generations.
Sad how everything just a shell now everything stripped
fascinating thank you for the upload ive beenthere twice above ground but the underground was sealed off
I actually went on a Tour of the Berghoff thru the Gusthoff. From inside the Gusthoff Kitchen down the Stairs into the Bunker hallway greeted with a Machine gun Nest then around the Corner into the Kitchen and mess hall. Conveniently the Bunkers Kitchen exhaust was tied into the Gusthoffs Kitchen as to hide the Bunker Kitchen exhaust. It had accomodations for 20-30 Soldiers and further into the system had a Roadway big enough for cars. Quite Impressive
WoW..................Thank you for sharing.
Fantastic footage
Why is it burried and closed down forever now? Could they not make somekind of museum out of this complex?
@Rocco Calma be kind pls... the fool part is not needed, I asked a normal question
Don’t forget your souvenirs at the gift shop on the way out 😂
People actually went through the effort & labor to remove (steal) such equipment & machinery like clothes washers, from a labyrinth-like maze? Just amazing...They had to have flatbed trucks waiting to haul the stuff off to who knows where, I would think?
You try surviving a world war, have nothing left, no job and no way to make money or buy necessities! Stealing from the nazi's isn't such a crime.
Thanks very much for posting this.
why is it not restored
Very interresting and it is always nice to learn new things. This was very well put together and makes one to push on and learn more.:>)
100% enjoyed watching this one guys love seeing the difference from the bunkers over here in Scotland
Excellent... ✌️
Very nice videoooooooOOOO 📹
Greetings from Spain!