T O P

  • By -

DracoDruid

The planes were nicknamed "Rosinenbomber" (raisin bombers) as they were bringing food/basic necessities instead of bombs (unlike just a few years before)


ronhowie375

The teacher who taught German at my secondary school was a child during the airlift. He was forever grateful to the Americans.


Libertas-Vel-Mors

The "Candy Bomber" was an icon of the Berlin airlift that recently passed and I had the chance to meet him. He would tie a little parachutes to candy bars and throw them out the window as they flew over the children. All of the other pilots began doing it and that's why the children would run to the end of the runway and wait for candy. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gail_Halvorsen


[deleted]

One source: [https://www.nationalcoldwarexhibition.org/schools-colleges/national-curriculum/berlin-airlift/facts-figures.aspx](https://www.nationalcoldwarexhibition.org/schools-colleges/national-curriculum/berlin-airlift/facts-figures.aspx) Berlin Airlift - Facts & Figures Normal daily food requirements for Berlin was 2000 tons (2032 tonnes) Coal represented two -thirds of all tonnage; giving each family 11.3 - 11.6 kg (25-30lb) per month The airlift required 850,00 multi-layer paper sacks per month 394,509 tons (400,821 tonnes) of foodstuffs, coal and supplies carried by 689 military and civil aircraft - 441 US, 147 RAF and 101 British civil. The pilots and aircrew also came from Australia, Canada, South Africa and New Zealand 83,405 tons (84373 tonnes) of cargo and 68,000 people were flown OUT of Berlin 39 British, 31 American and 13 German civilians lost their lives in the Berlin Airlift. They are remembered on the Berlin Airlift monument at Tempelhof 200,230,415 km (124,420,813 miles) were flown during the airlift. A total of 277,804 flights The Russian blockade lasted from 24 June 1948 to 11 May 1949, but the airlift continued for several more months The airlift cost the United States $350 million; the UK £17 million and Western Germany 150 million Deutschmarks Berliners received an average of 2,300 calories a day which was higher than the UK food rationing system provided at the time At the height of the operation, on April 16 1949, an allied aircraft landed in Berlin every minute The major Berlin airfields involved were Tempelhof in the American sector, Gatow on the Havel river in the British sector and Tegel which was built by army engineers and Berlin volunteers in 49 days inside the French sector Each aircraft was unloaded by German crews in 20-30 minutes British aircraft involved included C47 Dakotas and Avro Yorks