_Didds_
_Didds_ t1_iy7kz2f wrote
Reply to comment by zebra_heaDD in TIL that after the battle between the USS Constitution and HMS Guerriere, the captain of the Constitution, Isaac Hull, refused the sword of surrender from the captain of the Guerriere, James Richard Dacre, saying he could not accept it from a man who fought so gallantly by alcapwnage0007
Dunno if this is a known fact or not but during the last few months of the war a lot of high German officials were competing to be the one surrendering the nation.
In the sick powerplay of the final day's of the Third Reich surrendering the nation was, internally, seen as equal as being appointed as the next person in line to command the nation in the post war.
It was more or less known for months that uncle Addie wasn't going to stick around to let himself be captured, so a lot of the higher officials used whatever excuses they could find to bail out of Berlin before the Soviet Boogie came to town.
This started a competition to see who would be the one that would get the chance to surrender Germany and use that position to try to appoint himself as a provisory Chanceler.
Himmler had this mind boggling plan to drive to the Brits and more or less present himself as the only person with authority to keep control of the Nation and in his mind the Allies would welcome the SS as a police force in the post nation.
Goering planned to present himself as the leader of the only major branch of the German military that were "clean" of warcrimes and a lot of propaganda was created around it, something that stuck to this day by the way.
At the end Donitz was chosen by Hitler for the task, since he was seen as the least power hungry of the trio. A fact that was both false and led to a lot of unnecessary deaths in the final days as Donitz wanted to try to secure his position before the surrender.
All three, and some other more, had presentation pistols chosen to be used for the occasion. While they packed an assortment of other side arms to give away if they got captured in the process or self defense.
The more interesting about this is that most of them survive to this day.
_Didds_ t1_iy4l0ny wrote
Reply to comment by -Daetrax- in TIL that after the battle between the USS Constitution and HMS Guerriere, the captain of the Constitution, Isaac Hull, refused the sword of surrender from the captain of the Guerriere, James Richard Dacre, saying he could not accept it from a man who fought so gallantly by alcapwnage0007
A lot of high ranking german officers had multiple "surrender" pistols that they carried with them. Goering had a gold plated pistol he intended to use to surrender the nation to the allies, and a couple regular ones if he got captured.
There are several stories like this and those pistols sometimes end up in auctions with solid provenance documentation.
_Didds_ t1_ixd2ubv wrote
She looks beautiful, but gotta say that he looks super handsome here and with a great pose and fantastic choice of colours that favour him.
_Didds_ t1_ixd2jrg wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Putin to meet mothers of soldiers called up to fight in Ukraine by hieronymusanonymous
You are joking but I've read more than once on OSI that Russia might start drafting women on the basis of the historic precedence of women fighting in the Red Army during WW2.
_Didds_ t1_jebty8a wrote
Reply to comment by ThatGamerMoshpit in Unboxing my collection to sell and was stricken by how great these two look together by bensisland
For some reason they made a very limited number of copies for what was a perfectly normal comercial game. It's not like it's rare or anything, but stores received at the time very few copies.
When it released I had to wait 3 months for a copy to reach my local store. A friend of mine loved the game and tried to buy one as well and never got out of the waiting list.