Mural showing the night in 1989 when the wall fell |
The Trabant was the small cr ost East Germans drove. |
Mural shows the years that people died trying to cross the wall |
Map shows the island of West Berlin in the sea of East Germany |
After returning to Alexanderplatz for a coffee break, it was off to see old Berlin along the Unter den Linden. The best way is from the river Spree. Here are some pictures from the cruise:
One of the Berlin train stations that survived World War II |
Richard embraces the German liberal views about beer in public |
Marilyn impersonates the Walk symbol from East Berlin crossings |
A view of the buildings along the River Spree |
Berlin Cathedral Church |
View of Reichstag's glass dome |
German Chancellory (Parliment) |
Berliners "beaching" along the river |
Ornate 19th century bridge |
Bode Museum at the end of Museum Island |
Next we walked along the Unter den Linden to Checkpoint Charlie which allowed access to East Germany from the American sector. For the pictures of Frederick the Great you will notice how people have thrown potatoes at the base of the statue. This is not disrespect, but rather to thank him for importing potatoes to Germany to help with a famine.
Zeughaus (17th century German Historical Museum) |
Statue of Frederick the Great |
Potatoes at the plinth of statue |
Panorama showing square with with 3 churches |
Photo of Checkpoint Charlie |
Checkpoint Charlie today |
Trabants are just art now |
Photo showing Brandenburg Tor in 1945 and restored |
Brandenburg Tor today |
Marilyn was off to see some theater while the guys continued sight seeing and got lost on the train ride home. After some checking of maps and the GPS on my phone, we figured it out.
Rick and Carl under Brandenburg Tor |
A stroll through the Tiergarten |
The Reichstag viewed from the Tiergarten |
Monument to Soviet soldiers who died in World War II |
A Soviet T34 tank next to the monument |
Plaque commemorating the spot where Reagan asked Gorbashev to "tear down this wall" |
Great pics, Dwight! Especially those with the juxtaposition of old and new. Enjoy Oktoberfest 🍻
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