Hitler and Papen at Lustgarten, Berlin, Germany, 1 May 1933

Caption   Hitler and Papen at Lustgarten, Berlin, Germany, 1 May 1933
Source   German Federal Archive
Identification Code   Bild 102-15783
More on...   
Adolf Hitler   Main article  Photos  
Franz von Papen   Main article  Photos  
Photos on Same Day See all photos dated 1 May 1933
Added By C. Peter Chen

This photograph has been scaled down; full resolution photograph is available here (800 by 557 pixels).

Licensing  According to the German Federal Archive (Bundesarchiv), as of 21 Jul 2010, photographs can be reproduced with if these preconditions are met:
- quote the "Federal Archives" as source,
- add the signature of the pictures and
- of name of the originator, i.e. the photographer.
...
You also can use fotos from the Federal Archives for free on Wikimedia Commons
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Bundesarchiv



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Visitor Submitted Comments

  1. Bill says:
    14 Dec 2010 06:55:54 PM

    Hitler once asked for a car loan, he had his eye on a 1924 Mercedes-Benz Model 11/40 for
    18,000 Reichmarks.

    Its not known if Hitler ever received his car loan but, years later he got just about everything he ever wanted an Army, Navy and an Air Force a whole Country and its people, plus an Empire and a fleet of Mercedes-Benz Automobiles.
  2. Bill says:
    2 Apr 2012 03:10:52 PM

    Mercedes-Benz built 88, Model 770Ks that were delivered to the Chancellery motor pool.
    Nobody knows who drove the cars, or who sat in them, Hitler didn't have a drivers licence
    and stood or sat in many of them.

    CARS DON'T KILL PEOPLE, PEOPLE DO...

    Surviving cars are in collections and valued in the millions of dollars. To some it may be creepy to buy and keep the cars that were part of a regime, the murdered millions and changed the course of world history.
    These cars are part of history, and we must remember never to repeat such a dark time in history ever again...looking at the file photograph, one can almost hear the crowd yell..Sieg Heil, Sieg Heil, Sieg Heil...

    The 770K was 20 feet long, had 2,000lb of armor plate 1/2 inch thick, bullet-proof glass 1 1/2 inches thick, carried 500lb of fuel, oil and radiator coolent and weighted 10,000lbs. Powered by a stright 8-cylinder engine of 230hp with a top speed of 100mph.

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