Inside Hitler’s Bunker: Unpublished Photos
- In April, 1945, as Russian and German troops fought — savagely,
street-by-street — for control of the German capital, it became
increasingly clear that the Allies would win the war in Europe. Not
long after the two-week battle ended, 33-year-old LIFE photographer
William Vandivert was on the scene, photographing Berlin’s devastated
landscape.
- Hundreds of thousands perished in the Battle of Berlin — including
untold numbers of civilian men, women, and children — while countless
more were left homeless in the ruins. But it was two particular
deaths, that of Hitler and his longtime companion and (briefly) wife,
Eva Braun, in a sordid underground bunker on April 30, 1945, that truly
signaled the end of the Third Reich.
- Vandivert was the first Western photographer to gain access to
Hitler’s Führerbunker (translation: “shelter for the leader”) after the
fall of Berlin, and a handful of his pictures of the bunker and the
ruined city were published in LIFE in July, 1945. A few of those images
are re-published here; most of the pictures in this gallery, however,
went unpublished — until now — and illustrate the surreal, disturbing
scenes Vandivert encountered in the bunker itself, and in the streets
of the ruined, vanquished city beyond the bunker’s concrete walls. ~TIME
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