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Rare color footage From World War 11
http://uvideo100.com/war.html ^

Posted on 01/03/2014 3:41:06 PM PST by navysealdad

Footage showing surrendering troops to US Army. southern Bohemia, Czechoslovakia 1945. Isn't strange that some Germans still carry weapons when surrendering plus a few shots from Prague.

(Excerpt) Read more at uvideo100.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: bohemia; czechoslovakia; wwii
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To: navysealdad

Beautiful film. Thanks!

You really do wonder, though, what happened to these folks.


21 posted on 01/03/2014 4:44:08 PM PST by Cincinnatus.45-70 (What do DemocRats enjoy more than a truckload of dead babies? Unloading them with a pitchfork!)
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To: gortklattu

I knew a guy in South Alabama who had a bunch of German POWs work on his farm. He told me some interesting stories about them.

One thing is he said he gave them each a pack of cigareetes and a coca cola. They would get Red Cross packages from Germany. He said the first thing they would do is take out the ersatz cigarettes and throw them away.

He exchanged Christmas cards with several of them until he or they died.


22 posted on 01/03/2014 4:54:42 PM PST by yarddog (Romans 8: verses 38 and 39. "For I am persuaded".)
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To: navysealdad

Thanks for posting!

First quick takes: Look for the guy in semi-dress uniform with a leg missing moving smartly up the road with crutches while being passed by vehicles full of seemingly healthy countrymen sitting on their asses.

One of the half tracks seems to have a severely bent spindle causing the front left wheel to wobble badly.

Glad we have a week of crappy weather coming-I want to categorize all of those German vehicles and it’ll take at least that long!


23 posted on 01/03/2014 5:05:01 PM PST by SnuffaBolshevik
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To: Riley

MY friends Dad was taken from his home in Slovenia (Yugoslavia)and was sent to the ME to fight - first chance they got they arrested those on command and surrendered to a group of Canadians. He spent the rest of the war in Canada and loved it. After the war he came to Australia to live as he didn’t want to live under the Socialists. He always used to laugh at how, once they had been taken captive and forced to fight they played the convert to Nazism right up until the first sight of the Allies. He thought the Germans stupid but in reality the Germans thought themselves so ideologically perfect and superior that if someone was shown what they truly stood for they would make believers out of them. Sounds a lot like liberals!


24 posted on 01/03/2014 5:06:26 PM PST by melsec (Once a Jolly Swagman camped by a Billabong.)
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To: navysealdad

“Isn’t strange that some Germans still carry weapons when surrendering plus a few shots from Prague.”

It served several purposes. The American forces accepting the surrenders were often grossly outnumbered by those German forces who were surrendering. The Americans could not handle that much surrendered weaponry until the German forces reached their POW collecting points, where they were finally disarmed. The american and German forces did not want the German weaponry to fall into unauthorized hands. The surrenderd German forces needed their weapons to protect against retaliatory attacks from vengeful partisans and civilians, until they reached their protected POW collecting points in these convoy columns.


25 posted on 01/03/2014 5:17:11 PM PST by WhiskeyX ( provides a system for registering complaints about unfair broadcasters and the ability to request a)
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To: navysealdad

Notice that some of the vehicles carried several young women. I suspect they were Czech who collaborated with the Germans for food and niceties in return for sex. If they stayed in their villages after the Germans left, they would be attacked, beaten and maybe killed for their acts of collaboration.


26 posted on 01/03/2014 5:18:18 PM PST by CedarDave (Fox News - Obama couldn't sign up for healthcare because the system couldn't verify his identity!)
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To: SnuffaBolshevik
First quick takes: Look for the guy in semi-dress uniform with a leg missing moving smartly up the road with crutches while being passed by vehicles full of seemingly healthy countrymen sitting on their asses.

I noticed that, too.

27 posted on 01/03/2014 5:34:48 PM PST by Riley (The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column.)
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To: Riley
The American unit that his bunch surrendered to was sending prisoners back to the Russians, so he bolted and...just went home.

One of my uncles was with the Sixth Minesweeper Flotilla, serving in the Baltic. They all hauled posterior when the Russians came down and surrendered to the British. The Russians wanted the minesweepers and the Brits said they could have 'em. Next, the Russians said they needed the German crews to bring the ships to Russia as their men didn't know how to run them. Said they'd send the Germans back at the end of the cruise.

They never did.

28 posted on 01/03/2014 5:51:40 PM PST by Oatka (This is America. Assimilate or evaporate.)
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To: Riley
A machine shop in Montgomery, AL had a semi-retired employee who came in to run the especially challenging jobs. He was a Russian who fought in WW II and still spoke with a thick Russian accent.

He was captured by the Germans early in the war and sent to a POW camp in Austria. He said the camp was the nicest place he'd ever seen and he was treated better there than he had been in the Red Army.

Late in the war, the Wehrmacht recruited a Russian division to fight on the Eastern Front against their countrymen. He volunteered.

On their way to the front, however, it became apparent that the situation in the East was collapsing. The German officers turned the men loose, to do what they would.

The machinist said that he turned and made for the American lines as quickly as he could. He knew what would happen to him were he ever caught by the Red Army. He described it as a "breathless race" across South Germany -- on foot, on a bicycle, riding on horse-drawn wagons, anything to get away.

To his dying day, the Russian thanked Gen. George S. Patton for his life. And he probably loved America as much as anybody ever loved any country.

29 posted on 01/03/2014 6:11:52 PM PST by okie01 (The Mainstream Media -- IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: centurion316

Good insight but my guess is that the location was
within German borders because of the reaction (or lack
of reaction) by the civilians watching the procession
in most of the video.


30 posted on 01/03/2014 6:16:37 PM PST by Sivad (NorCal red turf)
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To: centurion316

Sadder though was the fate of Soviet POWs that were liberated by the Americans, who desperately did not want to return to the Soviet Union, because they knew their fate was death, since Stalin considered anyone who surrendered to be traitors.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Keelhaul


31 posted on 01/03/2014 6:18:26 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: fso301
What I meant was did the Americans turn them over to the Russians?

The area looks like France, and if it is, they wouldn't have been turned over to the Russians.

32 posted on 01/03/2014 6:20:36 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: centurion316
can’t tell about the Germans but it’s a mixed bunch.

It is a mixed bunch. Probably no way of knowing if they met and mixed together on the road or what? These people just look happy to be surrendering to anyone other than Russians.

I suspect the vehicles containing a mix of SS and non-SS men may be due to their being part of the same ad-hoc unit. Towards the end, defensive lines would be formed with one SS man separated by 4 or 5 men from other units and the men from the other units taking their lead from the SS man.

At 2:23 there is a staff car PD-3865 with some men in mufti that don't quite look the part of medics. I'm sure they received "special attention". At 2:49 an SS officer in a staff car talks to an American officer. At about 2:51 there is a partial tag on the right front of the halftrack. At 3:25 there is a Wolfsangle rune (2nd SS Division Das Reich?) on the left rear of the halftrack above an insignia that is the same as the left rear of the halftrack at 3:28.

33 posted on 01/03/2014 6:55:13 PM PST by fso301
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To: Fiji Hill
The area looks like France, and if it is, they wouldn't have been turned over to the Russians.

My guess is somewhere near Passau. Crowd reaction appears to be that of German civilians or at least ethnic Germans (Sudeten Germans). Geography doesn't look like Linz, Austria.

One of the halftracks might have a rune of the 2nd SS Panzer Division which surrendered in the area of Linz, Austria but Passau, Germany is not far away.

34 posted on 01/03/2014 7:02:05 PM PST by fso301
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To: fso301

These scenes appear to take place in the spring. US forces would have reached Passau and Linz in May of 1945.


35 posted on 01/03/2014 7:11:42 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: fso301

The German 7th Army consisted of the 2d Panzer Division and various odds and ends including some school troops. They surrendered about this time, so this could be them.


36 posted on 01/03/2014 7:32:44 PM PST by centurion316
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To: Sivad

The 16th Armored Division was not committed until they were in Czechoslovakia. The civilians may have been Sudeten Deutsch.


37 posted on 01/03/2014 7:34:56 PM PST by centurion316
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To: Fiji Hill
These scenes appear to take place in the spring. US forces would have reached Passau and Linz in May of 1945.

Per Wiki, Passau is at latitude 48;34 N. Spokane, Washington is a little south at latitude 47,39N.

Note the blooming tree behind the staff car at 2:23. I don't know what kind of tree that is but The Washington State Apple Blossom Festival is a festival held annually in Wenatchee, Washington from the last weekend in April to the first weekend in May.

So, this video could be springtime in Passau.

38 posted on 01/03/2014 7:49:44 PM PST by fso301
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To: melsec
My uncle fought for Germany in late 1944. He was 14 when they drafted him, sent him to training camp for 2 weeks (maybe 6 weeks?). He left camp with whatever he could carry in one backpack besides his gear.

He took the train out to the Eastern Front and spent the rest of the war walking back to Germany, where he surrendered to the British and worked as a gardener.

Heinz passed last year and with his passing one of the last direct links to WW II in our family.

39 posted on 01/03/2014 8:10:00 PM PST by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: fso301

I should have paid attention to the first post. The footage was shot in Sudetenland, Czechoslovakia. The civilians are probably Sudeten Germans who will shortly be kicked out when the Czechs ethnically cleanse the region. After the Communist coup of 1948, some native Czechs will pretend to be Sudeten Germans so as to get expelled beyond the Iron Curtain.

I noticed some of the Germans are holding a flag that appears to be that of the Weimar Republic.


40 posted on 01/03/2014 8:26:38 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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