Parachute Regiment Throws a Party

They celebrate Armistice Day in occupied Berlin

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 98

While they were in Berlin for the football game between the Third Division and the 82nd Airborne, Flo and her comrades were invited to a party hosted by the 504th Parachute Regiment. To celebrate Armistice Day in occupied Berlin must have been especially poignant so soon after the end of this second world war. 

Flo saved the wine list which listed no wine, but more cocktails than I knew existed. I recognize a few—Manhattan, Martini, Gin Fizz—but not most. I wonder if modern bartenders are still making any of these drinks. The list notes that champagne and beer are available, but there is no mention of wine, at least on this page. Maybe Americans were just not partial to wine in the year 1945.

Ch. 99: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/02/27/christmas-new-years-1945/

Images of War-Torn Berlin

Flo and comrades get a look at the German capital

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 97

By the end of World War II, Berlin was no longer a city so much as a vast field of ruins. After enduring 363 air raids and a final, catastrophic ground assault, the German capital lay shattered—famously described by its own residents as a heap of rubble. Street by street, block by block, the urban fabric had been torn apart, leaving behind a landscape of collapsed buildings, twisted steel, and drifting ash.

Flo at the Brandenburg Gate, built in 1791. It would soon be incorporated into the Berlin Wall, dividing the city into East and West sectors during the Cold War.

Nearly 80 percent of Berlin’s city center had been destroyed. Across the wider metropolis, some 600,000 apartments were reduced to dust and broken brick. Infrastructure collapsed alongside homes: in the final days of fighting, 128 of the city’s 226 bridges were blown apart, a quarter of the subway system was deliberately flooded, and running water, electricity, and rail transport virtually ceased to function. Iconic landmarks suffered the same fate as ordinary neighborhoods. The Reichstag and Brandenburg Gate were battered by artillery and close-quarters combat, while along the grand boulevard Unter den Linden, only 16 of its 64 buildings remained standing.

Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church and the city center

The human cost was staggering. Civilian deaths from bombing raids alone are estimated at between 20,000 and 50,000. During the final Battle of Berlin, another 125,000 civilians are believed to have died amid the chaos of street fighting, shelling, and firestorms. At least 450,000 people were left homeless, and the city’s population collapsed from 4.3 million in 1939 to just 2.8 million by the war’s end—a mass exodus of refugees, evacuees, and the dead.

All photos from Flo’s album

Unlike many cities that later erased the physical traces of war, Berlin chose to preserve parts of its devastation as visible memory. Bullet holes and shrapnel scars still mark walls in districts like Mitte and Charlottenburg. The shattered spire of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church stands deliberately unrepaired, a permanent anti-war monument rising from the city center. Elsewhere, mountains of rubble were piled into artificial hills—Teufelsberg and Volkspark Humboldthain—turning the wreckage of war into silent landmarks.

Some monuments survived

These images of destruction are not only records of ruin. They are reminders of the scale of collapse, the human suffering beneath the debris, and the deliberate choice to remember, rather than forget, what war reduced Berlin to in 1945.

The grand boulevard of Unter den Linden
The Berlin Cathedral
Major Dan Wickersham in the US zone

Ch. 98: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/02/23/parachute-regiment-throws-a-party/

To Berlin for a Football Game

Mary McAuliffe Joins the ARC Crew

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 96

By command of Gen. Schmidt permission to attend a football game in Berlin
Love the car.
Mary McAuliffe, ARC; Gen. Schmidt; Flo Wick
Having a little snack before taking off. Flo and Mary
No fair getting photographed while eating!
Mary McAuliffe, Major Wickersham, Lt. Col. Ramsey
Gen. Schmidt saw them off.
The Third Division played the 82nd Airborne at Hitler’s Olympic stadium Nov. 11, 1945.
The brass section
Attention! The gigantic stadium, built for the 1936 Olympics, survived the bombings.

Ch. 97: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/02/19/images-of-war-torn-berlin/