Opening a bunker for the first time in 73 years

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  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

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  • @ww2revivaldenmark310
    @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +17

    Newest video from our trip to the eastern front:
    ua-cam.com/video/OVsGGpafV0I/v-deo.html&t

    • @Young-jiini
      @Young-jiini 5 років тому

      Hi guys I know where the Germans banker is here in Kenya. And I believe that they have left a lot of items behind including stoves and padlocks. The front door has a big padlock. Can you guys come over her and help me out ?

    • @colinsylvester9732
      @colinsylvester9732 4 роки тому +1

      @@Young-jiini ààààà

    • @anonomuse9094
      @anonomuse9094 4 роки тому

      I just realized, there is the very real possibility you could find a bunker full of p.o.w. bodies.

    • @emmaotte7882
      @emmaotte7882 4 роки тому

      why was the bunker filled with water though

    • @anonomuse9094
      @anonomuse9094 4 роки тому

      @@emmaotte7882 over the years the water seeps in through the dirt and cracks in the concrete.

  • @ricpowers1475
    @ricpowers1475 3 роки тому +18

    My brothers and i found a intact bunker much, much larger, with long arched hallways throughout while hiking in the forest and cliffs near Irrel, Germany along the former WW1 Siegfried Line...we were in our teens around 1966. We found many incredible artifacts of the wars. If only id have realized the magnitude of what we found living in Irrel. Its entrance was blown up , but opened up into a labyrith of dozens of large ventilated rooms in very untidy condition. But all perfect. Papers with swastikas, books, furniture everywhere. It seems to have been untouched but hastily evacuated.

  • @hc_ox4842
    @hc_ox4842 5 років тому +132

    2:39 that coke is in really good condition

    • @covecove5978
      @covecove5978 5 років тому +12

      It's all sugar it never goes bad!

    • @Tiagomottadmello
      @Tiagomottadmello 4 роки тому +3

      @@covecove5978 Don't forget the phosphoric acid....

  • @williamkechkaylo7915
    @williamkechkaylo7915 5 років тому +284

    unique fixer upper. looks solid enough to probably to be used again for a quiet retreat . a little paint here, a little paint there , couple throw rugs and a fridge full of beer and a large t.v. a man cave is reborn.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +33

      Yeah, and Its possible here i Denmark. Nearly all bunkers are private property. They dont really add any value to a property either.
      So if you’re buying a small House on the West coast of Denmark and it says on paper you’ve Got a lot of square feet. You should probably check the garden!

    • @tronixfix
      @tronixfix 5 років тому +14

      Your "man cave" is in the middle of nowhere! 😂

    • @andyfletcher3561
      @andyfletcher3561 5 років тому +6

      @@tronixfix ...LoL...And that's a bad thing?...All man caves must have an adjacent she-shed!!! ;0)

    • @hihu7200
      @hihu7200 5 років тому +12

      I can see why some people want to document and map out old WW2 bunkers and then bury them again.
      WW2 was a terrible war. It is one thing for an American like me to think a WW2 bunker should be used in the present.
      But in Europe the soil around the bunkers hosted brutal battles in the past. Lives were lost. People were injured.
      I can see why some people want to cover those painful reminders of the past up.

    • @williamkechkaylo7915
      @williamkechkaylo7915 5 років тому +9

      sorry, I , normal don't respond to these, however, yes, it was a bad time but we MUST never forget the past and live with it. these places can be used for good things. you have no idea , neither do I, if anyone was killed there. so, why not use the , places that were for fear and killing for good things. let it rot and just forget??? then, let the pyramids go away. peace be with you and god.

  • @ViveSemelBeneVivere
    @ViveSemelBeneVivere 5 років тому +27

    Well done. Putting the condition of this in perspective, it was not so long ago that WWII occurred. And nearly all who lived through and survived are departed now.

  • @History-Secrets
    @History-Secrets 5 років тому +8

    Awesome video!!
    Must be so exciting to open a bunker after so many years... you never know what you're gonna find inside!
    A lot of hard work and patience.. but really special to be the first person to enter the bunker since WWII... that's priceless!
    Really interesting to see, keep it up!
    Gr Nick

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому

      Thanks Nick.
      A new bunker opening is coming in march, and that one is twice as big. And also with more camera action!
      Regards WW2RevivalDenmark team

    • @thommothomason7297
      @thommothomason7297 5 років тому

      I'm glad there was people willing to find this location and work to dig it out, so we can see what it looks like inside before it is lost forever. Keep up the good work guys! 😁👍

    • @KimFsharpHarp
      @KimFsharpHarp 2 роки тому

      It’s like digging into hell and finding Nazis.

  • @ducamuk
    @ducamuk 5 років тому +10

    That’s very eerie. I love the history behind it. Thank you for sharing. Please, keep digging.

  • @seth1987
    @seth1987 5 років тому +313

    Was clearly de-militarized and secured before being buried : explains why not a single artifact was found.

    • @Me-yh4uc
      @Me-yh4uc 5 років тому +34

      Seth uhmm. You don’t think the locals took everything of value when the war ended?

    • @larsnielsen4798
      @larsnielsen4798 5 років тому +12

      All bunkers was clean before shotdown of Esbjerg kommune. Thy dont want use to propaganda for the germans.

    • @seth1987
      @seth1987 5 років тому +89

      ​@@Me-yh4uc I live in Ftance and we visited 120+ bunkers North/NW of the country : we only found ONE un-touched bunker : was around Lorient : authorities decided to block the entrance and let it "as it was" because it had been seriously damaged by allies in late 44 when they besieged the U-boats base at keroman.
      We managed to access it, using metal detectors inside to spot any booby-traps.
      We found ammo (7.92 mostly + some 9mm), we also found 4 helmets, French 40's money and one nade.
      Documents also, but too damaged to read.
      Best thing was an insigna on a door, with a German eagle+ Swastika bearing the Todt organisation markings.

    • @leehilton9932
      @leehilton9932 5 років тому +13

      @@seth1987 thats badass man!!

    • @seth1987
      @seth1987 5 років тому +12

      @@Me-yh4uc Might have happened too, that is correct : my grandfather's father did it at ww1's near end : he took an officer's pistol + ammo/2 clips and the very small"suitcase"(original one"in which the gun was carried. Semi-auto pistol, i love it !

  • @rogerwhite9484
    @rogerwhite9484 5 років тому +6

    TY for taking the time to excavate & preserve this historic area so future generations can experience it .

  • @kl0wnkiller912
    @kl0wnkiller912 5 років тому +3

    Outside of Augsburg, Germany there is an old airbase that is now a US Army base. I don't remember the exact name anymore, we just called it Field Station Augsburg. I was stationed there in the 1980s. It was said that it is the base Rudolph Hess took off from when he flew to England. When I was there, the old German buildings were still standing and I explored them extensively. There was a bowling alley, barracks, motor pool, jail, offices, etc but what really got my attention was the kitchen. Under the kitchen was a large cellar and in that cellar was a rather large dumbwaiter with armored steel doors. I never found where the dumbwaiter went up to the kitchen because it didn't. It went down! The doors had been welded shut but I could shine a light through the crack and see that it went down. As far as my light went I could not see any bottom or water. Rumor had it that there was a large underground hanger and storage complex under the base and that the US Army sealed it up because they were afraid it was booby trapped. The year I left in 1983 they bulldozed the entire facility but whatever is down there is still there. There may be other entrances, I don't know. I would have loved to see what was down there.

  • @repr26
    @repr26 5 років тому +1

    Really great that you are mapping and documenting this history. So much has been lost, and so much more is being destroyed.

  • @gotmythumbs
    @gotmythumbs 5 років тому +142

    Incredible video and equally incredible work. Makes you wonder how much is still underground throughout Europe.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 5 років тому +1

      A lot of bunkers from both wars were buried over as they were too expensive to demolish.

    • @ryanlapoint89
      @ryanlapoint89 5 років тому +3

      Gerald Adams when i went to germany for work, it is not uncommon for them to clear the block to remove old bombs and other things when doing any kind of excavating, for buildings, roads, etc.

    • @blackkitty2871
      @blackkitty2871 5 років тому

      ABSOLUTELY HEAPS. I've seen video of stuff in the polish forests with a wooden roof that was big enough to stack a few 747s in.

    • @pkaybrok
      @pkaybrok 5 років тому

      Gerald Adams or any where for that matter.

    • @frenchelvaughn3407
      @frenchelvaughn3407 5 років тому

      Gerald Adamsbyyï

  • @SheepDogActual
    @SheepDogActual 5 років тому +3

    Thank you for your reverence, as a soldier, I appreciate it

    • @djnation7934
      @djnation7934 5 років тому

      Thomas Cole are you a Soldier

    • @SheepDogActual
      @SheepDogActual 5 років тому

      R.I.P xxxtentacion yes, 82nd Airborne, 7th SFG, Order of the Purple Heart, multiple enemy engagements

    • @djnation7934
      @djnation7934 5 років тому

      Thomas Cole ok cool

  • @mikeelder9481
    @mikeelder9481 5 років тому +18

    When we left Zweibrucken to return to the U.S. back in 1973 there was a new bank being built on the Air Force Base. When digging to lay the foundation they found a previously unknown bunker. It was like a time capsule, weapons and uniforms were discovered. Even a German helmet with blood stains in the temple area were found.

  • @deadarmd
    @deadarmd 5 років тому +1

    Fascinating. As an American who grew up overseas the importance of ww2 wasn't lost on me. I remember those tank stoppers in Poland in 1998. All rusted up, dozens of them lined up in fields...

  • @daleslover2771
    @daleslover2771 5 років тому +22

    From 75 to 78 near Bad kissingen Germany, when we were on F.T.Xs and weekly 72 hrs deployment our move out platoon many of times came Upon bunkers that were emplaced inside of hills, or entrenched, near Farmers lands. Rumor was at Daley barracks, there was a huge parking storage under ground, the post Engineers had to replace a major water line while walking of chow Hall, you could look down where the pipe was being replace, there was a huge Cavern right under the parade field. I seen a vehicle that was parked there, had to been 20 feet down, at least 8 feet of solid concrete, for the ceiling.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +3

      Sounds pretty damn interesting!

    • @daleslover2771
      @daleslover2771 5 років тому +7

      WW2RevivalDenmark in 1975 I was 19 years old private, in US Army, stationed in West Germany on the Czechoslovakian border. Cold war was in full effect, the DMZ in Korea was red hot, your life expectancy on either border was 6 sec, many soldiers would not take 30 day leave because they would never come back! From Moment One to the very last day, you heard the word reverberate from Tac site to the Rear, short, !short !short.! Somebody would call back How short are you ? Return reply would be, "I'm a two-digit midget, I'm so short I could do a double Gander off the side of a dime,"" I'm so short I could crawl under a snake and never touch his belly" ect ect all day long, and if you look at them, they would yell out PRIVATE!!! how many days you got? you would reply 1090 days and counting, and they would be busting up laughing, End of month pay days, paid in the field, when we were in a hot status State 5 or 3 Gi,s would bring out the Monopoly board, each and every one of us who bought into the game was $50 a person that went into the center of the board, normally you could get 3-4 guys to put in fifty bucks a piece, back your game piece on the Monopoly board such as the shoe the dog the iron, horse. I have seen eight guys, put up $400 total and sometimes even more! To see if you could win the game every luxury tax 10% of $75 goes in the middle of the board, if you pull the orange or yellow card from chance or community you had to pay 10% if you had to pay Hotel assessment it was 10% whatever play money mounted up to, if you landed on somebody's house or their Motel 10% in the kitty, I forget how many game pieces there were, but I seen $3,000.00 in the middle of the board before the dice was ever rolled one time. Especially when you only made $310 a month, that was some Bookoo money, 4 hours later there might be $7,000.00 to$ 8000.00 stacked and rubber bands in the middle of that board, tension was so thick you could have cut it with a knife, you got to remember that this is 1975 these are all Vietnam veterans, crazier than a Cage rats, we had this first lieutenant he was a West Point graduate, went in the TOC office, came back with a 45 slammed the clip,in too the well, pulled back the slide locked and loaded one round and pointed at us 30 guys at the Monopoly board he said" I'll kill every damn one of you, if there's $1 missing, I've got to run out to the BCC, confirm integration with Battion, take a break and place I'll be gone 10 minutes." You could see a pin levitating in the air,🤣🤣🤣🤣.

    • @prestonwhite4129
      @prestonwhite4129 5 років тому

      Dale Slover do you think you would be able to find it again? Do you have coordinates or anything like that? I will be in Germany and Europe very soon and I may try my luck!

    • @gchqjtrig6492
      @gchqjtrig6492 5 років тому

      Yeah, right. Sounds like a tall story from ARRSE:-)

    • @daleslover2771
      @daleslover2771 5 років тому

      Tigertank 519 Absolutely I spent 36 months at that post -18 months in the field, the beautiful town of Bad kissingen Germany, world renowned for its water curable properties. But I was talking to a individual in the Oregon National Guard who is there years after I was, ,stated they tore down the old military installation which broke my heart,,, but if you can find Bad kissingen Germany, ask anybody who's 60 years or older they'll tell you exactly where it's at. Going through the front gate, 1600 feet 500 M it'll be 11:30 position parade field It was only by chance that the I seen this Cavern at the right time at the right place going up to eat some nasty ass Chow. Really it wasn't that bad,it kept me live. You got to love the Army.

  • @mistervacation23
    @mistervacation23 5 років тому +3

    My dad was stationed there in the 1940s. I remember him telling me about the barracks he lived in & how cold it was.

  • @chrismurch6739
    @chrismurch6739 5 років тому +13

    An incredible find and piece of history. Thank you for sharing your experience with others around the world.

    • @larsnielsen4798
      @larsnielsen4798 5 років тому

      Part of germans luftwaffel back then. Pilots bunker. Lot of fence around the landingzone. Bomb by American back 1944. Say its easy find parts from plans on old landing zone.

  • @eugnton
    @eugnton 5 років тому +1

    I was an exchange student to Denmark in 1984. I lived near Egtved for the entire year. I went on holliday with my family to Skagen, we toured some of the coastal batteries. I also went to Fredrikhavn and saw one there. I thought it was pretty cool that we could do that.

  • @ronniecardy
    @ronniecardy 5 років тому +16

    What a fantastic find lost for 73 years hope it is easy to open the next time

    • @GrouchoCaesar
      @GrouchoCaesar 5 років тому

      was anybody else expecting mirelurks...? Or is than just me?

  • @jamesmitchell1780
    @jamesmitchell1780 5 років тому +2

    As a former broadcast engineer and editor, this video stands head and shoulders over most of the other footage on the internet. It is well crafted , tightly edited and follows a storyline that does not meander but stays focused on point. Others should study your style to improve their submissions.
    Congratulations on an outstanding product. I just subscribed and look forward to seeing your future work.

  • @johnjenkins6547
    @johnjenkins6547 5 років тому +32

    That is awesome to uncover history!

  • @larrymiller5253
    @larrymiller5253 5 років тому +2

    Thank you so much, everyone, for your hard work in opening this little piece of history. I hope you left a little Easter egg for whomever opens it up in the next 100 years. Thanks for the video. History from the ground up is the best kind.

  • @tomk3732
    @tomk3732 5 років тому +12

    Farmer should fix it up and use for storage. Its classic fixer upper.

  • @StoutOrNoot
    @StoutOrNoot 5 років тому +1

    Amazing to think of how many years and generations this thing has just laid untouched for , buried for all that time and forgotten about.

  • @riverking4u
    @riverking4u 5 років тому +8

    Thank you for all your hard work!!!!! Bring us the history of the past.

  • @LyndaWhite-ju1gj
    @LyndaWhite-ju1gj 5 років тому +118

    It sometimes angers me that the German Government has tried to erase any trace of WWII , you can’t change history just by blowing up or covering up everything built in that time period. I think all these magnificent structures should have been preserved as a reminder and if nothing else, and a testament to German ingenuity.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +6

      The germans didnt feel like just giving over their equipment When they left i 1945.
      A lot of items were dug down and thrown into lakes.

    • @LyndaWhite-ju1gj
      @LyndaWhite-ju1gj 5 років тому +11

      WW2RevivalDenmark Yes I’m aware of the scorch earth policy Hitler ordered in the last days of the war a lot of which Albert Speer Hitlers Architect munitions minister refused to carry out but years after hitlers death the German government was blowing up the great stadium at Nuremberg blowing up the Nazi headquarters in Berlin finishing off the bergoff in olbersaulsburg and so on and so on. It’s a shame to see all that beautiful German history go up in smoke for what reason I don’t know

    • @k.w.churchill4397
      @k.w.churchill4397 5 років тому +3

      The Japanese are taught little of the war.

    • @LyndaWhite-ju1gj
      @LyndaWhite-ju1gj 5 років тому +8

      Siegfried S Yes Siegfried I’m afraid you are correct my friend on all counts and you know what they say ( those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it).

    • @cansmashR
      @cansmashR 5 років тому +6

      Yup, the Great United States of Israel.

  • @davidmarshall1259
    @davidmarshall1259 5 років тому +4

    that is a beautifully made structure. it would be good if you could superimpose the airfield to show exactly where on the site this structure stood in the grand scheme of things. big thumbs up from me.

  • @sampyla72
    @sampyla72 5 років тому +142

    Nice one. I kind of feel sad for the bunker. A glimpse of sun and back to sleep in mud and total darkness. Good night bunker

    • @tomulator
      @tomulator 5 років тому +6

      Bunkers are people too ya know...🥴

    • @BadWeatherfreak
      @BadWeatherfreak 5 років тому +9

      Bunker lives matter!

    • @scipioafricanus5871
      @scipioafricanus5871 4 роки тому

      Well it IS a bunker, and they're usually below ground, so...

  • @GruntProof
    @GruntProof 5 років тому +7

    Awesome! This is my favorite part about living in Germany

  • @vancouverman4313
    @vancouverman4313 5 років тому +18

    Amazing how well it was made considering it was just meant to be a temporary structure. Most buildings today have inferior workmanship.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +7

      These are still going to be here in a 1000 years most likely.

    • @echomike6043
      @echomike6043 5 років тому +1

      Roger Rarebit - Yeah, if the worst that ever happens to a bunker is a tractor plowing that field it’ll be invincible.

    • @Philip-b9r
      @Philip-b9r 5 років тому +2

      Vancouverman because it’s a military grade bunker? Most buildings today happen to be houses made out of affordable material that can’t withstand explosives and bullets

    • @Noutelus
      @Noutelus 5 років тому +2

      @Reformed Anti-semite Nope the concrete from ancient rome lasted so long because they did not add steel.

    • @vancouverman4313
      @vancouverman4313 5 років тому +1

      @@Philip-b9r Is that so? Gee whiz ya learn sumthin new every day!

  • @indycustommade3568
    @indycustommade3568 5 років тому +2

    First all for never being mapped you guys did an absolutely awesome job finding it and getting to the entrance. Let's hope that seeing a bunker or bunkers will be for history sake and not any more wars. I think we have had enough wars to last a lifetime. Happy hunting and keep up the great work.

    • @Luzviminda777
      @Luzviminda777 3 роки тому +1

      Everything is mapped in Denmark, if you build a house they'll control the execution is exactly as the drawing you submitted. The civil defence force has mapped all shelters in the land , even a concrete basement in a school or apartment building is registered with a level according to thickness of concrete and which steel structures is implemented.

  • @porscheguy09
    @porscheguy09 5 років тому +3

    Very cool. I imagine there’s a lot more bunkers and military installations like this just waiting to be discovered. Thanks for sharing.👍

  • @joejones6968
    @joejones6968 5 років тому +4

    History is very important, thank you for making this video for all of us to see. Good work and may you and your team have all the success you could hope for. Thank you.

    • @james5796
      @james5796 Рік тому

      Agreed Amen - we must never forget

  • @jin8766
    @jin8766 5 років тому +1

    thank you, everyone, for sharing and for your hard work

  • @jimtalbott9535
    @jimtalbott9535 5 років тому +3

    For clarity, I hope someday they take one of these small bunkers and completely excavate it, down to floor level - then you could get a true picture of inside and outside of it. It would certainly take some digging.

  • @ChrisDavis1975
    @ChrisDavis1975 5 років тому +1

    Your choice of music is hauntingly appropriate. Well done! 👍🏻

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 5 років тому +33

    Thanks for the look into the past!
    I thought your drone photography was especially nice.

  • @LAPGOCHINSTRUCTOR
    @LAPGOCHINSTRUCTOR 5 років тому +6

    Thank you for opening up this bunker - the living conditions must have been hell. great video and use of the drone :)

  • @elzaaltmann
    @elzaaltmann 3 роки тому +8

    Strange how we try to put the war behind us, yet we dig up its remnants in order to find out more

    • @larryzigler6812
      @larryzigler6812 3 роки тому

      It would be strange if we were not interested

  • @reneliamansanero9263
    @reneliamansanero9263 5 років тому +1

    An excellent documentation about an exhumation of a german bunker in Denmark - my compliments & thank You!

  • @marks2731
    @marks2731 5 років тому +3

    I find it a bit sad that such historically important items are buried and forgotten.
    When I was a kid there was a pill-box near a local river.
    At some point it got removed.
    Now, no one will know that years ago soldiers used to stand guard there, prepared to defend us.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому

      In Denmark, sadly WW2 is not really seen as historically valuable. They destroy and remove bunkers, and build right on top of old positions.

  • @lisaschuster9187
    @lisaschuster9187 5 років тому +1

    72 years isn’t very long ago. My Dad’s 92 and still goes out jogging. But it’s fun to open these “secret Santa” doorways. The bunkers in Normandy are all being washed onto the beaches!

    • @rebeccakleine5473
      @rebeccakleine5473 5 років тому

      Yes it is a long time. My Father who served in the German Army turned 100 this year.

  • @mrpirate3470
    @mrpirate3470 5 років тому +30

    Really enjoyable video, very interesting liked and subbed :). I wish you'd shown more of the 'mortar bunker' as I couldn't see any place or opening to fire the very high trajectory angles that mortars use.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +9

      Yeah , Well the hole for the mortar had been shut off by a concrete slab.
      I had No idea id make a video on that bunker at the time, so i didnt get Good photos or video sadly.
      But thanks a lot!

  • @cliffordthomas9623
    @cliffordthomas9623 5 років тому +2

    Tks for taking time and gathering resources to share this with us. Would be awsome to find out who was assigned to this bunker and share their story / pictures. Thanks again. The music was awsome.
    Regards

  • @thomasstanley3283
    @thomasstanley3283 5 років тому +13

    I would love to do something like that

  • @paulmurgatroyd6372
    @paulmurgatroyd6372 3 роки тому +1

    Amazing to see the quality of construction even at that late stage of the war.

    • @erswnn
      @erswnn 2 роки тому

      Disposable slave labor made it a lot easier.

  • @MrJD2you
    @MrJD2you 5 років тому +9

    Surely there would be more things in the near area to also discover.

  • @rodneyf.9595
    @rodneyf.9595 5 років тому

    Thank you to all involved
    It's a wonderful thing y'all are doing ❤️

  • @cplrey
    @cplrey 5 років тому +11

    Absolutely amazing! It would have been a fun project to share with your friends.

  • @MrTreblue
    @MrTreblue 5 років тому

    Only just found your channel and this was the first video I watched. Such an absolutely beautiful thing to see a bunker opened for the first time in such a long time! The stories these buildings would tell if they could... ❤

    • @DPalm-gq4ew
      @DPalm-gq4ew 5 років тому

      If you like this you should check out ww2historyhunter. His stuff is awesome and he takes his son and daughter on their 'small adventures also.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому

      We appreciate it.
      Cheers WW2RD team

  • @andrewleniart4694
    @andrewleniart4694 5 років тому +4

    Thanks for sharing this footage. Very interesting.

  • @jangamaster8677
    @jangamaster8677 5 років тому +1

    Awesome video! Thanks for sharing this with us

  • @KimHenriksen.
    @KimHenriksen. 5 років тому +10

    Very nice video

  • @MsGrandunion
    @MsGrandunion 5 років тому

    Fantastic work! I have a house in Birmingham, and when I bought it I was aware that there would have been an Andersen in the back garden, but had no idea if it was still there. After a lot of digging and scraping around I found it. Not in the best shape but still recognizable and fascinating. I checked in at the library to find diaries of the bombings, and from that could pinpoint the dates that the family living there at the time would have spent in the shelter.

    • @MsGrandunion
      @MsGrandunion 5 років тому

      @DanielJ Yes, its in poor shape and flooded to almost a foot deep, but still useable to grow mushrooms in!

  • @stm62
    @stm62 5 років тому +8

    I went with my dad who was a WW2 vet to France. I cannot believe how much cement that Hitler poured !

    • @foxyroxstar
      @foxyroxstar 3 роки тому

      ConCRETE and The Conquered! but Alas! "Once This Bunker Was Brought Back Up To Speed/Fully Operational..Our First Target We Selected! KLM flight 4805?"

  • @christianfrancoisdohmenchr638
    @christianfrancoisdohmenchr638 5 років тому

    Very sensitive and respectful Danish style. Thank you for your important work, I remember these bunkers from when I spent holidays there over 30 years ago - caught my first sepsis while exploring 🤪

  • @ggrotz4863
    @ggrotz4863 5 років тому +5

    Hats off to the carpenters that built all the forms!

  • @bjornstensson7470
    @bjornstensson7470 5 років тому +5

    Awesome,just awesome video!!!THANX!!!

  • @mrg6727
    @mrg6727 5 років тому +10

    Awesome, many thanks for sharing this.

  • @emmanuelgoldstein2558
    @emmanuelgoldstein2558 4 роки тому

    Great music. So melancholy.

  • @historyguard-ww2
    @historyguard-ww2 5 років тому +8

    So, I didn't "go wrong" when I subscribed to your channel ! ;-)
    ...It looks very interesting and exciting !
    I love to explore and find WW2 relics (Eastern Front...in my case ...;-/) !
    There are many stories behind ALL those relics to be told ...
    I didn't see until now a (WW2) 'mortar bunker' ! Interesting !
    I wonder...HOW that bunker was "lost in time" for so many decades...in the middle of that field... so much soil 'was deposited' above it...!
    The agriculture works...will not 'affect' the bunker...? Will you mark it to be 'avoided' by the workers...?
    Hard work but...amazing result(s)...nice teamwork ! ;-)
    I'm waiting for the next part/episode...!!

    • @ThePama222
      @ThePama222 5 років тому

      HISTORY GUARD The bunker was quickly stripped for all metal and then they just pushed dirt over it and left.
      And nope the farmer does not hit the bunker, although the leftover concrete is destroying hos plow.
      Thanks for watching!

  • @warrenvalentino5763
    @warrenvalentino5763 Рік тому

    Great video! Wow! what a Awesome find! Thank You for posting this video.

  • @justrandomcarsurbex3057
    @justrandomcarsurbex3057 5 років тому +10

    Amazing! Thanks for the video!

  • @ItsonlyaJimmy
    @ItsonlyaJimmy 5 років тому +1

    Awesome video!! Thanks for sharing it for all of us to see.

  • @cadlac59
    @cadlac59 5 років тому +7

    Awesome. War must have really sucked, imagine how claustrophobic that’d be.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +5

      Yeah you're right. But soldiers stationed in Denmark during the war saw it as holiday. It was quite a break from the heavy fighting on the eastern and western fronts.

  • @ricknav1
    @ricknav1 3 роки тому +1

    Some suggestions:
    Some background on the excavators (who they are, what sparked this little expedition, who funded it, etc.), how was the site found, who currently owns the land (was he aware of the bunkers existence, what were the terms for allowing the dig, was re-burying it a requirement, etc.), conduct an a/v with narration instead of stills with text, lose the melancholy music ... in fact ... don't use any music at all (I'd much rather hear the actual sounds of the dig, the narrator and the voices of the workers. I did like the few bits of military details that were included. More of that would be great. Again, just suggestions. The video was ok.

    • @Lost-In-Blank
      @Lost-In-Blank Рік тому

      Good constructive criticism by Lighten.
      I think the moody music would be fine for the intro and outro-ductions. But the other points are good.
      Don't be discouraged, keep trying, keep improving.

  • @number1dad610
    @number1dad610 5 років тому +9

    The fort Ive always wanted. Dry it out real good,new ventilation, new cement. Man cave

  • @allopez1754
    @allopez1754 Рік тому

    I wish I could see a relic from the ww2 such as a bunker so my eyes can see what German ingenuity was like during that era to see what you all said experience that no one else can ever see in a lifetime the experience to go back in time to see what life in the ww2 was particularly about bunkers

  • @saints66able
    @saints66able 5 років тому +27

    Why cover it again. If it was on my land l would see either a tourist opportunity, or a great cellar or room

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому +10

      The farmer sadly had no interest in using it.

    • @vasili1207
      @vasili1207 5 років тому

      @John Beck soldiers graffiti your explanation makes no sense..... its underwater it will only deteriorate more... Water is concretes enemy.

    • @darkshadowsx5949
      @darkshadowsx5949 5 років тому +1

      @@ww2revivaldenmark310 that's sad. that farmers suck beans.

    • @blackkitty2871
      @blackkitty2871 5 років тому +1

      @John Beck do you realize it's on private land??? In a field??? It's a pity he didn't dry it out and use it to hide from the tax man or something.

  • @bunkie2100
    @bunkie2100 5 років тому +2

    Wow. My father lived in Esbjerg through the end of the war. He didn’t speak about it very much but little he told us was fascinating. I would be interested in any sources for the history of Esbjerg. His description of the day that the end of the war was announced and the response of the Germans to the spontaneous street celebration (to fire upon people using an anti-aircraft gun) sticks in my memory. Mange tak før det!

  • @Timotheus157
    @Timotheus157 5 років тому +25

    The spirit of Europa awakens as the ghosts of the past light the way.

    • @xisotopex
      @xisotopex 5 років тому +2

      doubtful, bit we can always hope

    • @cavalrysafety6489
      @cavalrysafety6489 5 років тому +1

      It is only a matter of time...

    • @Eireann.
      @Eireann. 3 роки тому

      Know thy enemy

  • @edwardlochbihler2089
    @edwardlochbihler2089 5 років тому +2

    Must have been pretty incredible to enter the bunker after all these years and considering it was filled with water and looked to be fairly intact structurely

  • @goerizal1
    @goerizal1 5 років тому +10

    that was a hallowed ground - regardless of politics - of men doing their duty.

  • @rogerchanda
    @rogerchanda 5 років тому

    VERY good find. A glimpse into the minds passed

  • @michaelmoritz7838
    @michaelmoritz7838 5 років тому +7

    I truly enjoyed this video, so interesting and amazing.

  • @TheFrenchy82
    @TheFrenchy82 5 років тому +1

    You are lucky not to have to watch those awful bunkers everyday !
    I'm French and we still have some bunkers inside cities.. it would cost too much to destroy those bunkers !
    of course most of the bunker are next to the sea front.. and most bunkers are disappearing into the sand .
    It's strange to see bunker in the "middle of nowhere" like this. nice work !

  • @rcarraturo
    @rcarraturo 5 років тому +3

    Excellent video thank you for sharing this.

  • @davidcrandell1172
    @davidcrandell1172 5 років тому +1

    Outstanding guys and thanks for sharing.

  • @mx3rider519
    @mx3rider519 5 років тому +4

    Please talk insead of subtitles. Also less slideshows more video please. Very cool video! Hope to see more

    • @foreignfoamer3592
      @foreignfoamer3592 5 років тому

      Please just make your own videos if you don't like the way he does them.

    • @mx3rider519
      @mx3rider519 5 років тому

      @@foreignfoamer3592 i do

    • @foreignfoamer3592
      @foreignfoamer3592 5 років тому

      @Derek Charette more than 80% likes in the video. Idk what you talking about.

  • @ianwatson129
    @ianwatson129 5 років тому +1

    Excellent, well done!! I look forward to the next video

  • @BADALICE
    @BADALICE 5 років тому +18

    How is it that this is burried and forgotten? How is it that it is now covered over again?
    That's a great bunker, make a great root celler.

    • @richardcline1337
      @richardcline1337 5 років тому +4

      Seems a complete shame to go to all of that work and effort only to bury it again. Doesn't make much sense, does it?

  • @johnlove7214
    @johnlove7214 5 років тому +1

    Man I would love to be able to go around the world digging up artifacts that just drives me crazy so so lucky.

  • @BunkersBPV
    @BunkersBPV 5 років тому +6

    Very nice work, this 621 has beautiful camouflage on the outside. Good thing he was found again.

  • @laurapritchard5598
    @laurapritchard5598 5 років тому

    Fascinating, and great aerial shots! Many thanks!

  • @1337fraggzb00N
    @1337fraggzb00N 5 років тому +3

    I like that small excavator :D Good for gardening :D

  • @pierreklee7490
    @pierreklee7490 5 років тому +1

    No one should ever forget history.

  • @TheElmatoc
    @TheElmatoc 5 років тому +33

    *It's crazy how they found a Coca-Cola bottle still with some coke inside!!* 2:39

    • @Michael-Benjamin1224
      @Michael-Benjamin1224 5 років тому +5

      Internet Explorer....and can you believe the SOB is a 20oz plastic Coke classic as well, not a 16oz glass bottle. Them German's are light years ahead of the rest!
      (🇧🇪- ⬅️I think these colors are right.)

    • @charliegustin1533
      @charliegustin1533 5 років тому

      😐

    • @davem8836
      @davem8836 5 років тому

      lol

  • @massivley
    @massivley 5 років тому +1

    Fascinating to watch love watching these videos

  • @StephanieElizabethMann
    @StephanieElizabethMann 3 роки тому +4

    A stark reminder of the lives of people who have lived and may have died in a small corner of a continent. The human in a time of war where being human regardless of which side they were on was a deadly experience.

  • @88997799
    @88997799 5 років тому +1

    Amazing the roof didn’t collapse. Tractors on farms aren’t light equipment but it’s not the weight of a tank. However the roof isn’t new anymore.

    • @ww2revivaldenmark310
      @ww2revivaldenmark310  5 років тому

      Ceiling is 2 meters of reinforced concrete. Not going to collapse anytime soon.

  • @ronnysterling7694
    @ronnysterling7694 5 років тому +3

    Could make a nice tiny home, a little damp

  • @mr.m2556
    @mr.m2556 5 років тому +1

    Thank you for sharing the experience.

  • @riaandw3155
    @riaandw3155 5 років тому +8

    Wow...who was waiting for guns and bombs and that tipe of stuff to be discovered. Nice bunker though...

    • @darkshadowsx5949
      @darkshadowsx5949 5 років тому

      they would either be rusted to pieces or removed at the end of the bunkers use. no sense in leaving functional stuff behind just because the war ended.
      although, I'm not too surprised that a gas lamp was left behind. relatively inexpensive item at the time.

  • @MilitaryExplorersUK
    @MilitaryExplorersUK 5 років тому

    Amazing find so much history still out there to be discovered. Well done keep up the outstanding work.

  • @ItzOver9k
    @ItzOver9k 5 років тому +4

    THIS is what I wish would be on Discovery instead of that crap where they NEVER find gold or treasure or anything but pieces of wood and incorrect time period pieces.

  • @lt.petemaverickmitchell7113
    @lt.petemaverickmitchell7113 5 років тому

    THANK YOU for doing what you do!
    Absolutely paramount in preserving the history of WWII.

  • @Track_Tension
    @Track_Tension 5 років тому +6

    Holy Gerardo Rivera and the mystery of Al Capone's vault flashbacks Batman!

  • @johntexas8417
    @johntexas8417 4 роки тому

    I really liked this and the drone view too.
    Thank you
    🤠🇺🇲

  • @thatfeeble-mindedboy
    @thatfeeble-mindedboy 5 років тому +1

    That seepage water is crystal clear! I don’t know why this surprised me, but it did ... I mean, it’s basically a shallow well after all ... but still .... very cool discovery; thanks for posting, and good hunting!