There's a lesson that everyone should learn from all this. No matter how wealthy, no matter how powerful, all that wealth and power can be taken away in an instant. These were some of the most powerful and wealthy people in Europe, possibly the world, and they were reduced to paupers basically. All the wealth and riches is nothing but dust and ashes. Fantastic work as always JD and crew!!
Unfortunately few if any lessons are ever learned keeping in mind that the few run this world. The same ”few” and their relatives also financed what took place during the war. Hitler and the rest get blamed for every bad thing in the world when the real, rotten scum are hiding in the shadows behind fancy titles and positions.
Been watching your videos for just over a year now. I’ve been an amateur WWII history buff for years now and really appreciate your hard work, knowledge and insight. I’ve learned a lot! Thank you!
Love the stories and tid bits of history that the two of you bring to use each week. Some of this that you will never find in any history book. Well done!
As always thank you Eric & JD for posting yet another excellent video as watching your videos are educational and they bring the past to the present in a way no book can hope to do.
Boy oh Boy I love the American artifact series, especially these ones. Because they are within driving range from were I live. Makes me wanna get in my car and explore for myself. Great job JD and Erik
An uncle of mine was in the 3rd...he photographed his way across across Europe, documenting each area, with information on the back of the photos, he has a whole bunch that he shot at the Berghof, many of himself sitting amongst the ruins ....an incredible series.
I love history my era is just before WWI and how that led into WWII and WWII I personally would love to see those photographs. Would love to know more about Arnem too
Please consider a video about the WW1 Aerocraft Herman Goring hid. About 8 Aerocraft are in this very rare collection. Because Herman was a WW1 pilot, ( actually took command of the Red Barons squadron, Jagastafel 11 after his death April 21st 1918,) he saved these magnificent flying machines. Some of them are the ONLY examples that exist to this day. Side note. NO 100% WW1 Fokker triplanes exist. The last one was destroyed in a bombing raid on London in WW2. Thank you, I enjoy your videos.
Goering's house is the one I would've wanted to check out- his family was German nobility, not to mention his fame as a WWI ace pilot. He was by far the "richest" of all of them.
@Patrick McCrann yes, but dude grew up in one of the most beautiful castles (Schloss in German) in all of Germany- and that castle is still in perfect condition today. He already had massive wealth even before the Nazi party took power.
I remember watching a Mark Felton video about Goering's blue car. It's in a private collection somewhere. Supposedly a few years ago it was restored by a shop not too far from where I live. Always another neat video JD.
@@mattskustomkreations I saw it at a car show in Michigan about 10-12 years ago. At the time it was owned by a man named Arturo Keller who owned a fleet of high-end classics. I was told that they were kept in a warehouse in Mexico that was guarded by men with machine guns. Its a blue metallic and there is a bullet mark in one window as someone with a .45 wanted to see if they were bulletproof. It made a mark but didn't go through the one-inch thick glass. I was also told that it got 4 miles per gallon.
@@lawrencelewis2592 That’s interesting about the ownership. Apparently the bullet creased the windshield trim. I don’t remember if it was on Felton’s channel, but Heidrichs assassination car has also been identified and preserved. And I’m sure even with the extreme wartime gas shortage fat Hermann still had plenty of fuel for the Goose.
That blue Mercedes..... Wow! Too bad they couldn't take that back to the US. And the other car story, really, off the cliff🙂 Thanks JD and Eric for keeping history alive!
This blue car survived as the US treasury assumed ownership for war bond drive. In 1956 the car was auctioned off by the US Army at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland, sold to to a man Greenwich, Connecticut. It is currently owned by Carnlough International Limited of Guernsey, Former owners painted it black with new chrome, but currently is being restored to 1945 semblance.
There's an interesting story about Goering's Mercedes sports car, also called "The Blue Goose." When Goering took delivery of the car he was too fat to get behind the wheel! So back to Mercedes it went to had the driver's seat moved back so Goering could get in and drive it!
Phyllis that would have been an amazing war trophy for some GI. It would have taken some special connections to sneak that back. Thanks for the comment.
My Wife and I are loving this series of historical adventures. We did not know until this video series that the hotel General Walker was taken down. I was stationed in Germany from 1970 to 73, during this time in 1972 my Wife and I attended a Christian Retreat at the General Walker hotel. It was a beautifull place then.
This is crazy, walking back tonight to my hotel in Berchtesgaden I noticed that train tunnel and wondered what it was, now I’ve just seen this video😂, this tunnel is under my window, mad stuff. Love your channel 👍🏻
My Grandpa being an ex Stuka gunner from 1936 had a rather ill opinion about the former air leader. Everything was okay at my Grandpas house until my American father inquired in a bout of small talk an opinion regarding Goering. Then my Grandpa would go into a fit of rage about Goering that included, "faul, gefräßig, schwein kind" ........that was a gentle way of portraying the language used. Clearing the kitchen and letting things simmer down was the only way of diffusing the situation.
Excellent video, thanks! The first time I visited Berchtesgaden, our hotel was right across from the upper portion of the train tunnel you showed. On the side of it, on one of the larger flat stones, was a metal date with a gap like this.. " 19 40", apparently the gap was filled with a swaz, at least it seems that way. I was there a couple of months ago and the "0" is now gone.
That crystal cup was amazing 👍 That photo of Goering's house was also interesting to me. The structure looks similar to a building in a picture of my father in law. I'm definitely going to do some comparisons later today. Hope your current trip is going well.
0:23 I can see it now; *PFC to his Company CO* PFC: "Sir, me and the boys have got a War Trophy we'd like to take back home with us, Sir..." CO: "Sure, son. What it is?" PFC: "Sir... Umm... Well... You see, it's Hermann Göring's 540K Blue Goose, Sir! 😁"
Eddy Göring had a real working gasoline engine, a scaled down engine with a block and sparkplugs real pneumatic tires and wheels with miniature brakes, in other words, a miniaturized real car that had seats for two, a real trunk (boot) fenders (wings), doors that opened. It was much wider and longer than the kind kids get these days but she and her passenger, her mother, sat at abut the same height as kids modern electric cars. I have a picture taken from a video in the 90s that show shows a home movie of them driving along the very wide hallway. My dad traveled a lot into places most people didn't go because he was an insurance adjuster and one day he found a ruined child's car which had only two wheels and one tire, no steering wheel but everything else was there, except everything was ruined. He bought the car from the man and brought it home for me to play in, me being 5 at the time. Mom didn't want that piece of junk in her back yard, so when I was 6, we went to my grandmother's country farm house that was just on the edge of scores of miles of pasture, hills and woods, but being in the village of Duck Hill, Mississippi, taking the car so that I would have it to play in. Then a cousin about my age came to visit and we put it on the old children's metal wagon, like the Red Flyer wagon, where one person pulls it and the front wheels can be steered by the handle. We would pull each other around but it was super unwell balanced due to the size of the car. He went home and I pulled the wagon with no one in into the village and found a friend, Douglas, and he wanted to play too. I pulled him around on the sidewalks, and then it was my turn. We had to cross a ditch on a sidewalk bridge and the ditch ran along parallel to the sidewalks for a while. The ditch must have been five feet deep, no water in it, and as Douglas pulled me along that, the wagon tipped to the side, sending me seated in the car, down into the ditch. I remember every second of that and it hurt like hell with the car trapping me. Douglas thought it was funny but couldn't get it off me. So he ran to get my father to come do it. I was hurt so badly that I don't remember what my mom said to him but he took that car away and I never saw it again. And when I saw the video of Emmy and her mom, I saw that her car was exactly my car only in new shape. I have often wondered if maybe, just maybe, the man my dad bought it from had been in the Army and brought it home as a souvenir from Göring's looted mansion. If it was, the bombing might explain the damage to the little car.
My Grandpa Wally was in it from the get go, 39-46. He told me it was such a good time in Germany that he volunteered to stay into 46. He said what was I gonna do back home? He was the man in Deutschland.
I can watch your WW2 videos all day. You should be commended on the quality although I think the word confiscated sounds more appropriate. Our grandfathers were heroes not thieves.
4:07. That’s not just any Mercedes owned by HG, that’s the famous “Blue Goose” 1937 540K Special Roadster custom painted in Luftwaffe Blue. THIS was the car that General Taylor drove. It wound up being auctioned off by the US govt and is now in private hands in Guernsey. The car has one or 2 bullet holes courtesy of the 101st. I bet the museum owners would love to have that original emblem!
8:26. One of the coolest names ever: check out the signature 3rd from bottom left - Vinegar Dick Barnes! 🤘I think the piece is a chair back or chair cushion.
7:53 Carved wood panel Wow! Now that's a show stopper to me. Eric, i'm sure You know those "batons" are fasces from where we get the word fascist. Most notable to me is the complete lack of overtly Nazi symbols in the carving. Intuition is screaming to me that it's 1920's perhaps Italian. Goering would not have had a piece like this as part of his elegant home. It was on the train as a piece of early Fascist art. i understand that my intuition is worth jack sh¡t. Provenance is everything! i only offer my guesses as possible avenues for further investigation !:-) Thank You JD and Eric. God bless 🙏
I viewed a photo many years ago concerning Goering's house. In the attic was supposed to be an elaborate model train layout. Do you have any information concerning this?
@@TheHistoryUnderground Most of the time women would make doilies, but sometimes they would make them out of other materials, but this would be the first leather one I've ever seen. If it is one, or it was wall art.
Being of Swedish background the unknown piece you have looks sort of Scandinavian possibly Swedish, and perhaps from a chair back. Goering's fist wife was from Sweden and the chair it came from may have been associated with her.
I believe the army soldiers found 2 cars and they were driving them around but a four-star general he kept that Blue one for himself had it shipped back to the United States and then after years of driving it he sold it to a Doctor and the doctor painted it Black.. after the doctor sold it the next owner put it back to the original color..I believe when the general finally sold it to the doctor he paid $10,000 for it..By now if it still has the original Nazi plate that was added on was made out of brass was screwed onto the dash the car is probably worth some big dollars now..The videos that I saw he had World War 1 and World War 2 airplanes in the basement and the only ones that got destroyed was a "WW-1- triplane" only 2 left in the world the rest of the Plane's were not damaged they were taken to a museum..They showed all his Planes at the Museum it was so long ago I really don't remember where they have them at but they saved like save 30 airplanes..Something to look-up.. I have a bunch of magazines from WWII they are German with Hermann Goering and Adolf Hitler on it the magazine it's called= AOLER or ADLER..Berlin, 30 November 1943..
Around the mid 2000's that car was taken out of storage and sent to a small shop in Maine,And was not restored but freshened up and made running again i actually took several photos of the car theres a small brass plate on the glovebox door telling about the day it was 'captured' The bulletproof plate was extended up behind the passenger/driver i took alot of pictures
@@TheHistoryUnderground Do you condone looting and stealing of property? Those are also war crimes mind you according to the Geneva Convention and the UN 🇺🇳 Charta.
@@John414 Guess you missed the parts of how the Nazi's, including Goering stole and looted from Jews during the war? Art, Statues, silver, gold teeth...anything of value the Nazi's stole and many pieces that could be identified and discovered who the ORIGINAL owner(s) were had those items returned back to them.
There's a lesson that everyone should learn from all this. No matter how wealthy, no matter how powerful, all that wealth and power can be taken away in an instant. These were some of the most powerful and wealthy people in Europe, possibly the world, and they were reduced to paupers basically. All the wealth and riches is nothing but dust and ashes. Fantastic work as always JD and crew!!
Excellent point. Thanks.
Unfortunately few if any lessons are ever learned keeping in mind that the few run this world. The same ”few” and their relatives also financed what took place during the war. Hitler and the rest get blamed for every bad thing in the world when the real, rotten scum are hiding in the shadows behind fancy titles and positions.
Most of their wealth came from stealing 😢.
@@sandrapersaud3105 you're right. They were monsters.
@@sandrapersaud3105 Rich people have always stolen.
Been watching your videos for just over a year now. I’ve been an amateur WWII history buff for years now and really appreciate your hard work, knowledge and insight. I’ve learned a lot! Thank you!
I love the stories behind the artifacts. It makes it more fascinating and real. Thank you JD and Eric!
Our pleasure!
Absolutely brilliant series with so much information to process.
Goerings car was one of the fastest vehicles at it’s time.
Always loved the Band of Brothers scene where Winters introduces Nixon to Goering's liquor supply. The look on his face!! Happy VE day!
😅
The best series ever!
Keep up the great content! Always giving facts that are never discussed in other documentaries
More to come! Thanks.
Love the stories and tid bits of history that the two of you bring to use each week. Some of this that you will never find in any history book. Well done!
As always thank you Eric & JD for posting yet another excellent video as watching your videos are educational and they bring the past to the present in a way no book can hope to do.
Excellent programme as always. The history you tell is so important and told in such a fantastic and enthralling way. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it
Boy oh Boy I love the American artifact series, especially these ones. Because they are within driving range from were I live. Makes me wanna get in my car and explore for myself. Great job JD and Erik
Its all stolen
An uncle of mine was in the 3rd...he photographed his way across across Europe, documenting each area, with information on the back of the photos, he has a whole bunch that he shot at the Berghof, many of himself sitting amongst the ruins ....an incredible series.
Wow! I would love to see that.
Have you thought about making a book of the pictures???
Please post them
@@TheHistoryUnderground I will get in touch....
I love history my era is just before WWI and how that led into WWII and WWII I personally would love to see those photographs. Would love to know more about Arnem too
Always think of the Hell those boys went through to get there and the many that did not make it. Always nicely made made videos.
👍🏻
This series is absolutely fantastic great work JD and Eric.
Glad you enjoy it!
I am absolutely fascinated by history. We learn so much when we study the past
I’m so excited that these items were preserved. Looking forward to visiting the museum this summer.
👍🏻
Me too ! And I live in Maryland.
Always so happy when a video comes up from you. I love learning this history.
Endlessly fascinating. THANK YOU for documenting all this! You'll NEVER learn about this in any school
Especially in FLORIDA OR TEXAS!!!!!
Please consider a video about the WW1 Aerocraft Herman Goring hid. About 8 Aerocraft are in this very rare collection. Because Herman was a WW1 pilot, ( actually took command of the Red Barons squadron, Jagastafel 11 after his death April 21st 1918,) he saved these magnificent flying machines. Some of them are the ONLY examples that exist to this day.
Side note. NO 100% WW1 Fokker triplanes exist. The last one was destroyed in a bombing raid on London in WW2. Thank you, I enjoy your videos.
Goering's house is the one I would've wanted to check out- his family was German nobility, not to mention his fame as a WWI ace pilot. He was by far the "richest" of all of them.
Most of his "wealth" came from his great stealing ability.
Definitely.
@Patrick McCrann yes, but dude grew up in one of the most beautiful castles (Schloss in German) in all of Germany- and that castle is still in perfect condition today. He already had massive wealth even before the Nazi party took power.
@@Marvel66666 He still was a thief of incredible magnitude. That is a fact. If he couldn't buy it, he stole it.
I also love how you touched upon the loss and recovery of some of the arts from the war. ❤️🙋♂️🏍💨
Got more in the next episode.
Again JD. Love what you put on you tube my friend !! THANK you Frank from montana......
Hey guys. Was the art recovered stolen art. Goering’s taste was spectacular. Thank you for sharing JD.
Yes.
A good movie about recovering and returning the stolen art is "Monuments Men"
I was never really interested in WWll. It happened “over there”. It seemed so far away when I was growing up. But you, JD, make it real. 🙏 thank you 😊
🙏🏼
Lucky you, for most of the World, not so much!😢
I remember watching a Mark Felton video about Goering's blue car. It's in a private collection somewhere. Supposedly a few years ago it was restored by a shop not too far from where I live. Always another neat video JD.
Yep, the Blue Goose. According to Wikipedia it is currently owned by Carnlough International Limited of Guernsey.
@@mattskustomkreations I saw it at a car show in Michigan about 10-12 years ago. At the time it was owned by a man named Arturo Keller who owned a fleet of high-end classics. I was told that they were kept in a warehouse in Mexico that was guarded by men with machine guns. Its a blue metallic and there is a bullet mark in one window as someone with a .45 wanted to see if they were bulletproof. It made a mark but didn't go through the one-inch thick glass. I was also told that it got 4 miles per gallon.
@@lawrencelewis2592 That’s interesting about the ownership. Apparently the bullet creased the windshield trim. I don’t remember if it was on Felton’s channel, but Heidrichs assassination car has also been identified and preserved. And I’m sure even with the extreme wartime gas shortage fat Hermann still had plenty of fuel for the Goose.
That blue Mercedes..... Wow! Too bad they couldn't take that back to the US. And the other car story, really, off the cliff🙂
Thanks JD and Eric for keeping history alive!
This blue car survived as the US treasury assumed ownership for war bond drive. In 1956 the car was auctioned off by the US Army at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland, sold to to a man Greenwich, Connecticut. It is currently owned by Carnlough International Limited of Guernsey, Former owners painted it black with new chrome, but currently is being restored to 1945 semblance.
👍🏻
@@ericscottstevens That is so cool! Thanks for adding this info!
There's an interesting story about Goering's Mercedes sports car, also called "The Blue Goose." When Goering took delivery of the car he was too fat to get behind the wheel! So back to Mercedes it went to had the driver's seat moved back so Goering could get in and drive it!
Phyllis that would have been an amazing war trophy for some GI. It would have taken some special connections to sneak that back. Thanks for the comment.
This is hands down the best channel on youtube
Outstanding history JD and Erik!!!
👊🏻
Over the top...perfect explanation for Goering.
Great collection and stories. Thanks for not giving the 506 PIR credit for being first and singlehandedly winning every battle since D-Day.
I’m glad you added “art thief” after art collector.
My Wife and I are loving this series of historical adventures. We did not know until this video series that the hotel General Walker was taken down. I was stationed in Germany from 1970 to 73, during this time in 1972 my Wife and I attended a Christian Retreat at the General Walker hotel. It was a beautifull
place then.
Really enjoyed the video mate Eric one best it was really interesting mate can't wait for the next one 👍
always learn so much from your vids, thank you from our family
So nice of you
Another cool video!!!! Truly interesting stuff. Göring was a lavish man with an over the top taste indeed. In his mind a royal of sorts.
New to the channel. But totally addicted with the world war 2 videos. Have watched some of your civil war ones as well.
They sure thought as themselves as royalty! Interesting story about Speirs.
his car the "blue goose" is still in existence and has been restored....would be cool to reunite that emblem with the car!
I find all this so interesting, and to see somne of the things that were brought back, is amazing.
This is crazy, walking back tonight to my hotel in Berchtesgaden I noticed that train tunnel and wondered what it was, now I’ve just seen this video😂, this tunnel is under my window, mad stuff. Love your channel 👍🏻
Have to go have a look in the morning now😀
My Grandpa being an ex Stuka gunner from 1936 had a rather ill opinion about the former air leader.
Everything was okay at my Grandpas house until my American father inquired in a bout of small talk an opinion regarding Goering. Then my Grandpa would go into a fit of rage about Goering that included, "faul, gefräßig, schwein kind" ........that was a gentle way of portraying the language used.
Clearing the kitchen and letting things simmer down was the only way of diffusing the situation.
Ha! Sounds like he had a proper view of him.
It is stunningly beautiful there. I can almost smell the edelweiss.
Couldn't agree more!
This series is fascinating AND enlightening. Thanks you guys. 👍
My Father told me stories about the cars and motorcycles they used ride around on. Times have changed
You said you would get to the train tunnel. Here it is!
🙂
Great work JD as always love the story here and the whole series you Eric have put together Well done sir Thank you
Excellent video, thanks! The first time I visited Berchtesgaden, our hotel was right across from the upper portion of the train tunnel you showed. On the side of it, on one of the larger flat stones, was a metal date with a gap like this.. " 19 40", apparently the gap was filled with a swaz, at least it seems that way. I was there a couple of months ago and the "0" is now gone.
Thank you for sharing
🎖️🏆⭐🇺🇲🙏
That crystal cup was amazing 👍 That photo of Goering's house was also interesting to me. The structure looks similar to a building in a picture of my father in law. I'm definitely going to do some comparisons later today.
Hope your current trip is going well.
I thought the same thing about the cup. These monsters lived like kings at the expense of everyone else.
Thanks! Having a good time.
0:23 I can see it now;
*PFC to his Company CO*
PFC: "Sir, me and the boys have got a War Trophy we'd like to take back home with us, Sir..."
CO: "Sure, son. What it is?"
PFC: "Sir... Umm... Well... You see, it's Hermann Göring's 540K Blue Goose, Sir! 😁"
😅
He drove the car off the cliff, Spears was quite the character.
Eddy Göring had a real working gasoline engine, a scaled down engine with a block and sparkplugs real pneumatic tires and wheels with miniature brakes, in other words, a miniaturized real car that had seats for two, a real trunk (boot) fenders (wings), doors that opened. It was much wider and longer than the kind kids get these days but she and her passenger, her mother, sat at abut the same height as kids modern electric cars. I have a picture taken from a video in the 90s that show shows a home movie of them driving along the very wide hallway.
My dad traveled a lot into places most people didn't go because he was an insurance adjuster and one day he found a ruined child's car which had only two wheels and one tire, no steering wheel but everything else was there, except everything was ruined. He bought the car from the man and brought it home for me to play in, me being 5 at the time.
Mom didn't want that piece of junk in her back yard, so when I was 6, we went to my grandmother's country farm house that was just on the edge of scores of miles of pasture, hills and woods, but being in the village of Duck Hill, Mississippi, taking the car so that I would have it to play in. Then a cousin about my age came to visit and we put it on the old children's metal wagon, like the Red Flyer wagon, where one person pulls it and the front wheels can be steered by the handle. We would pull each other around but it was super unwell balanced due to the size of the car. He went home and I pulled the wagon with no one in into the village and found a friend, Douglas, and he wanted to play too. I pulled him around on the sidewalks, and then it was my turn. We had to cross a ditch on a sidewalk bridge and the ditch ran along parallel to the sidewalks for a while. The ditch must have been five feet deep, no water in it, and as Douglas pulled me along that, the wagon tipped to the side, sending me seated in the car, down into the ditch. I remember every second of that and it hurt like hell with the car trapping me. Douglas thought it was funny but couldn't get it off me. So he ran to get my father to come do it. I was hurt so badly that I don't remember what my mom said to him but he took that car away and I never saw it again. And when I saw the video of Emmy and her mom, I saw that her car was exactly my car only in new shape. I have often wondered if maybe, just maybe, the man my dad bought it from had been in the Army and brought it home as a souvenir from Göring's looted mansion.
If it was, the bombing might explain the damage to the little car.
Recently came across your channel and have literally been non stop watching. Great channel and great videos keep it up !
I was there with the 3d I.D. back in the early 70s. Bavaria is such a beautiful area.
I love the music! They do a great job!
Excellent presentation gentlemen!
Thank you kindly!
My Grandpa Wally was in it from the get go, 39-46. He told me it was such a good time in Germany that he volunteered to stay into 46. He said what was I gonna do back home? He was the man in Deutschland.
Thank You Very informative and interesting.
Another outstanding video 👌. Thank you again for sharing these great videos. Happy Easter too you and God bless 🙏
Goerring is one favorite subject and this video was great, just too short. Lol
Keep up the good work.😊
Very interesting video! I've marked it on my travel map as a "must see" stop when I plan to go by there.
cuando inauguran las autopistas ,se ve manejando ese coche a toda velocidad ,color metalizado mate 👌
Very interesting , greetings to Gettysburg🇺🇸✌️🇩🇪
Love these videos best history lesson ever
🙏🏼
Fantastic video really enjoyed it as I do all of your work
I can watch your WW2 videos all day. You should be commended on the quality although I think the word confiscated sounds more appropriate. Our grandfathers were heroes not thieves.
Great video!
Thanks!
4:07. That’s not just any Mercedes owned by HG, that’s the famous “Blue Goose” 1937 540K Special Roadster custom painted in Luftwaffe Blue. THIS was the car that General Taylor drove. It wound up being auctioned off by the US govt and is now in private hands in Guernsey. The car has one or 2 bullet holes courtesy of the 101st. I bet the museum owners would love to have that original emblem!
Spiers had one hell of a character about him that he drove the car off a cliff rather than hand it over lol
Those Mercedes today would be worth a small fortune even without the Provenance.
Amazing about that tunnel never knew that is where it is. Many thanks.
Such interesting objects. The leather object looks to me like it could be from the back of a chair.
Thank you so much for this Obersalzburg content I'm loving it.
8:26. One of the coolest names ever: check out the signature 3rd from bottom left - Vinegar Dick Barnes! 🤘I think the piece is a chair back or chair cushion.
Ditto to what Ryan just said. Kudos to all of your videos. Please share the MUSIC you use for your channel!!
Great video!! I’m so glad they found the stolen art work. Hopefully it got returned to it’s rightful owners and country of origin. 👍🙂
Thanks JD Awesome video
👊🏻
Love your videos.
7:53 Carved wood panel
Wow! Now that's a show stopper to me.
Eric, i'm sure You know those "batons" are fasces from where we get the word fascist. Most notable to me is the complete lack of overtly Nazi symbols in the carving. Intuition is screaming to me that it's 1920's perhaps Italian. Goering would not have had a piece like this as part of his elegant home. It was on the train as a piece of early Fascist art.
i understand that my intuition is worth jack sh¡t. Provenance is everything! i only offer my guesses as possible avenues for further investigation !:-)
Thank You JD and Eric. God bless 🙏
1970s Department store music as a backdrop. Interesting.
dont know where i got it from but i have a hitlers hearth ashtray from the weathershield co. from 1946 w a piece of the fireplace in it.. pretty cool.
As always, a great video, thanks!🇺🇸😃
Awesome show thanks❤
Yay more history 😁👍
👊🏻
Do you know what happened to the art on the train? So glad the cars were in the tunnel and we still have the art.
Thank you
Next episode 🙂
Much of that art most likely belonged to the Jewish people during home raids. Wonder if anything was given back to the families after the war.
@@Sheri7029 my thinking we will find out
Some of the Jewish family descendants are still fighting for its return.
@@loopshackr yes, a very sad part of it.
Hit it out of the park Again guys!
I viewed a photo many years ago concerning Goering's house. In the attic was supposed to be an elaborate model train layout. Do you have any information concerning this?
Always get your moneys worth with a
JD vid 👍🏾
Being that it’s free to watch, I’d completely agree. 😅
Ty for correcting the record, that 2d of the 506th actually finished 3d in the sprint for Berchesgarten...🤓
Common misconception.
The mystery item, looks like the sweat pad for fancy furniture. They used them to hide dirt and sweat stains on fancy furniture.
Hmmmm.
@@TheHistoryUnderground
Most of the time women would make doilies, but sometimes they would make them out of other materials, but this would be the first leather one I've ever seen. If it is one, or it was wall art.
Being of Swedish background the unknown piece you have looks sort of Scandinavian possibly Swedish, and perhaps from a chair back. Goering's fist wife was from Sweden and the chair it came from may have been associated with her.
I believe the army soldiers found 2 cars and they were driving them around but a four-star general he kept that Blue one for himself had it shipped back to the United States and then after years of driving it he sold it to a Doctor and the doctor painted it Black.. after the doctor sold it the next owner put it back to the original color..I believe when the general finally sold it to the doctor he paid $10,000 for it..By now if it still has the original Nazi plate that was added on was made out of brass was screwed onto the dash the car is probably worth some big dollars now..The videos that I saw he had World War 1 and World War 2 airplanes in the basement and the only ones that got destroyed was a "WW-1- triplane" only 2 left in the world the rest of the Plane's were not damaged they were taken to a museum..They showed all his Planes at the Museum it was so long ago I really don't remember where they have them at but they saved like save 30 airplanes..Something to look-up.. I have a bunch of magazines from WWII they are German with Hermann Goering and Adolf Hitler on it the magazine it's called= AOLER or ADLER..Berlin, 30 November 1943..
The SPOILS of WAR are what we must never forget so that we try not too spoil each others RIGHT too LIVE FREE
My Great Uncle claimed to have taken a cigarette holder from Georings home. We still have it.
Great work bud
Thanks 👍
Around the mid 2000's that car was taken out of storage and sent to a small shop in Maine,And was not restored but freshened up and made running again i actually took several photos of the car theres a small brass plate on the glovebox door telling about the day it was 'captured'
The bulletproof plate was extended up behind the passenger/driver i took alot of pictures
At this antique shop there is a radio from goering’s house.
Hilarious to see a ford parked at this tunnel entrance.. can you imagine back then, Fords driving in this area?
The blue Mercedes 540k, is currently in the Curtis LeMay museum with many other specific vehicles, inc a actual Hitler Mercedes Touring Car
Goering was a "Really big" art collector. I think that was a Hun pun.
P.S. I think that cushion may have been from a window bench or a portable seat he could take with so that he could rest his regal arse upon it.
American soldiers who looted and stole European items should immediately return those items. The Göring family still resides in Bavaria.
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@@TheHistoryUnderground Do you condone looting and stealing of property? Those are also war crimes mind you according to the Geneva Convention and the UN 🇺🇳 Charta.
@@John414 Guess you missed the parts of how the Nazi's, including Goering stole and looted from Jews during the war? Art, Statues, silver, gold teeth...anything of value the Nazi's stole and many pieces that could be identified and discovered who the ORIGINAL owner(s) were had those items returned back to them.