February 23, 2018 at 4:58 pm
I`m off to Berlin shortly and have read several books that have a chapter or two on the Berlin airlift within them, can anyone recommend a good book that is just on this subject?……….Martin
By: ianwoodward9 - 25th February 2018 at 10:23
With the 70th anniversary of the start of the Berlin blockade fast approaching, this is a great time to visit that city. I wonder if our aviation publications will choose to cover the anniversary and, if so, if they will find anything new to say, given the many books on the subject.
It really depends what you mean by “shortly”.
The Shrader book (mentioned above) and “The Berlin Blockade” by Ann & John Tusa are solid history books and, in paperback, relatively cheap. If time is short, you may not get through them in time (the former is over 300 pages of text and the latter over 500) but they are comprehensive.
Dudley Barker’s “Berlin Air Lift – An Account of the British Contribution” (prepared by the Air Ministry and the Central Office of Information”) was published by HMSO in 1949. It is much shorter in terms of text length (about 60 pages, including those with illustrations). It has the limitation indicated by the sub-title but carries the power of a (relatively) contemporary document. [My copy, bought second hand, bears the stamp of the “Daily Worker Library” which gives it an extra frisson for me). [A few years back, on-line, I found a PhD thesis that set out to assess the British contribution within the overall context; I can’t recall the details but it was for the University of Buckingham, as I recall.]
In late November 1988, BBC Radio 4 marked the 40th anniversary with a programme entitled “Blockade”. I don’t know if it can be found through the BBC website (perhaps through their Genome project rather than the BBC i-Player).
I still have a soft spot for Robert Rodrigo’s 1960 book “Berlin Airlift”, having had the book for so long, but it has over 200 pages of text.
If time is indeed short, I’d probably suggest Arthur Pearcy’s “Berlin Airlift”. It has less than 150 pages and, with photographs on most pages, the text is readily digestible. It has an aviation bias, as one might expect from an Airlife publication, but covers the basics of the events well enough. It is also on glossy paper, which shows off the photos well, so you will end with – well, not quite a coffee-table book (it’s not a tome) but – something you can look through again (and again?) long after you’ve read it and returned from Berlin.
By: Ant.H - 24th February 2018 at 20:04
Not a book as such, but here is a link to one of the RAF Historical Society’s Journals which covers the Airlift pretty extensively from a British perspective (the opening pages are about wartime Bomber Command, Airlift sections starts at page 33).
By: Archer - 24th February 2018 at 17:51
Can anyone confirm that there is a Heinkel HE111 at the Berlin Technical museum
I couldn’t find one when I visited in 2014. According to http://axis.classicwings.com/ they have a He-111H-2 that has been recovered from a Norwegian lake, so perhaps that’s the one you’re thinking of. I haven’t been there since 2014 so I cannot say for sure if it is on display yet.
By: J Boyle - 24th February 2018 at 16:45
If you search Amazon on the subject there are a couple of dozen books.
Some are straight histories, a book on the aircraft used, books that address the operation as the beginning of the cold war, and as mentioned, a novel or two.
A couple of books have stories of the crews, most notably Capt. Halverson who gained fame as the “Candy bomber”.
By: bazv - 24th February 2018 at 16:38
Might be worth watching The Big Lift (1949) with Montgomery Clift as a USAF Flight Engineer – flying in a C54 into Templehof Airport – some lovely flying scenes including the approach into Templehof through and past apartment blocks.The usual aviation related weak story line but it was actually filmed during the Airlift with the service crews actually operating the aircraft.Lots of scenes shot in the Berlin area which might be of interest !
The film may still be on youtube but not sure how good the quality is.
rgds baz
By: Adrian Fromm - 24th February 2018 at 16:28
The Berlin Airlift by Robert Jackson as a history.
ISBN 0-85059-881-8 (on the copy I have)
Published by Patrick Stephens Limited
Also, Air Bridge by Hammond Innes – a long time since I read it, but I seem to rember its a a good fictional tale. Maybe one for the journey.
ISBN: 9780099577768
By: windhover - 23rd February 2018 at 20:36
One of the best books is:
The Blockade Breakers.
Helena P. Schrader.
The History Press.
ISBN 978-07524-5600-3
Published 2010. Still freely available.
By: kartman - 23rd February 2018 at 20:30
Can anyone confirm that there is a Heinkel HE111 at the Berlin Technical museum, i have seen mention online of an ongoing restoration of a recovered example?…………..Martin