Guest Historian Chris Oakley says, Further events from the France44 Timeline If you're interested in viewing samples of my other work why not visit the Changing the Times web site.
| February 11 | ![]() |
On this day in 1945, as millions of people around the Allied world celebrated the end of World War II in Europe and scientists in the New Mexico desert began preparations for the first experimental atomic bomb detonation, deposed former German chancellor Adolf Hitler was handed over to a detachment of U.S. Army MPs under the terms of the surrender articles signed by the German government the previous day. | |
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The Führer, who'd been incarcerated in a secret Luftwaffe detention camp since his overthrow by Hermann Goering back in January, would be indicted for war crimes two months later as the first of dozens of defendants scheduled to be prosecuted by a multi-national tribunal in the city of Nuremburg. |
February 15
On this day in 1945, Allied troops began their occupation of Germany; the vanquished former Reich was divided into four occupation zones, the largest of which was under Soviet control (pictured) and encompassed most of Germany's eastern half. | |
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The zone divisions were meant to be temporary pending a final conference to settle the question of the country's postwar political future, but ideological differences between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union hardened those divisions and Germany would spend the next four decades split into separate nations. |
February 17
On this day in 1945, Franklin Roosevelt left Washington for what would be his final trip abroad as President of the United States to meet with Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin at the Russian Crimea resort town of Yalta for discussions regarding Germany's political future and the timetable for the Soviet Union's entry into the war with Japan. | |
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Less than two months after the Yalta summit Roosevelt would be dead, leaving his successor and former vice-president Harry S. Truman to oversee the final stages of the war in the Pacific. |
February 24
On this day in 1945, Allied occupation forces in western Germany began confiscating surviving Luftwaffe combat aircraft that had been grounded in the last days of the Second World War in Europe due to lack of fuel. | |
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Of particular interests to the occupation forces were two prototypes of the Messerschmitt Me-262 (pictured), one of the world's first jet fighters. These prototypes would inspire a string of design innovations by Western aerospace engineers in the late 1940s and early '50s; by 1951 America's first swept-wing jet fighter, the F-86 Sabre, would be in service with the U.S. Air Force in Korea. A third Me-262 prototype, seized by the Red Army in eastern Germany, would become the basis for the Sabre's chief adversary in Korea, the MiG-15. |
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"Geta" survives a violent struggle with disloyal members of Praetorian Guar | "Aaron Burr" arrested for treason | "Willie Lincoln" lives in Notorious Hellions, all |
"Operation Valkyrie" succeeds and the Red Army have to face the Wehrmacht alone. | Author of "Profiles in Courage" dies on-board PT-109 | A "charismatic young lawyer" calls the British Government to account. |
A terminal illness forces Nelson Mandela to accept PW Botha's "secret offer". | American freedoms are rescued when "The States Fight Back". | A nightmare vision of the future is predicted in "The Death of Orwell". |
© Today in Alternate History, 2013-. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.





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