Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Library Collections
  3. Online Collections
  4. The Berlin Airlift

The Berlin Airlift

This collection focuses on the Berlin Airlift. It includes 126 documents totaling 444 pages covering the years 1948 through 1952.

Supporting materials include audio recordings and oral histories.

The Berlin Airlift

Documents

Displaying 1 - 74 of 74 documents

1948

1949

1950

1951

1952

Background

From Airbridge to Berlin, by D.M. Giangreco and Robert E. Griffin (used with permission)

Post war Germany was divided into three sections - the Allied part was controlled by the United States, Great Britain and France and other part by the Soviet Union. The city of Berlin, although located in the eastern Soviet half, was also divided into four sectors - West Berlin occupied by Allied interests and East Berlin occupied by Soviets. In June 1948, the Soviet Union attempted to control all of Berlin by cutting surface traffic to and from the city of West Berlin. Starving out the population and cutting off their business was their method of gaining control. The Truman administration reacted with a continual daily airlift which brought much needed food and supplies into the city of West Berlin. This Airbridge to Berlin lasted until the end of September of 1949 - although on May 12, 1949, the Soviet government yielded and lifted the blockade.

When the airlift began, there were only two airfields in Berlin; Tempelhof with one runway in the US sector and Gatow with one runway in the British sector. In 1945, when the Americans arrived in Berlin, Tempelhof's lone runway was sodded and had been used only for small aircraft and fighters during the latter stages of World War II. It was beautifully equipped with hangars and a large terminal building, but it was surrounded by high apartment buildings which required a 500 foot ceiling in thick weather. Before June 1948, US Army engineers had built a 12 foot thick rubber base runway and covered it with steel landing mats which was adequate for US military needs before the airlift. However, under the continuous pounding of heavy, loaded aircraft the steel landing mats started to break. Depressions in the runway began to form and soon a force of 225 men was kept busy working on the runway between plane landings in attempting to keep the field operational. In early July 1948, construction on a new runway at Tempelhof began without interrupting airlift traffic and during the same period the old runway was being constantly repaired. In late 1948, construction began on a third Tempelhof runway.

Photographs

Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 images
71-3984 (untitled)

Berlin Airlift airplane being loaded with supplies

71-3984
71-3985 (untitled)

Aircraft loaded with supplies for Berlin

71-3985
71-3986 (untitled)

Trucks loading planes for Berlin Airlift

71-3986
71-3987 (untitled)

Planes lined up for take-off for Berlin Airlift

71-3987
83-175 (untitled)

Berlin Airlift planes at Templehof Airport

83-175
2013-3708 (untitled)

Berlin Airlift, Airplane Flies over Crowd

2013-3708
2013-3747 (untitled)

C-47 planes parked on the ramp at Rhein Main Air Base

2013-3747
64-702 (untitled)

Political Cartoon, "Whose Move?"

64-702
ca.