Skip to content

Old Photo Gallery

  • Home
  • Info
    • About Us
    • Terms of Use
    • Sources & Credits
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
  • Art
    • Artworks
    • Cover Art
    • Colorization
    • Fashion & Culture
  • People
    • Celebrities
    • Places & People
  • Wars
    • Wars & Military
    • Civil Wars
    • Vietnam War
    • WWII
    • WWI
  • Funny
  • Inventions
  • Movies
  • Movies & TV
  • Music
  • Photography
  • Sports
  • Then & Now
  • Vehicles & Transportation
  • Vintage Ads
  • Weird

#1 Siam the elephant looking through a gate.

Home » WWII
#1 Siam the elephant looking through a gate.

Zoologischer Garten: The Berlin’s Zoo that Allies Bombed and Killed 90% of the Animals during WWII

#1 Siam the elephant looking through a gate.

WWII

Related posts:

#24 Man Holding Research Balloon in Desert, New Mexico

#5 Stop Him and the Job’s Done Poster by Harry Morse.

#4 A Tuskegee airman standing on an airfield, looking at airplanes

#7 French refugees, returning to their homes in St. Pois, France after the Germans were driven out …

#85 These Sudeten German civilians who fled into Germany during the Czech-German crisis might be ca…

#7 Women preparing for aircraft maintenance, 1940s

#136 Poster showing a pilot getting ready to get into his cockpit . The Japanese flags pasted on th…

#11 Scrap For Victory: During World War II Americans Contributed Scrap Metal To The War Efforts #11 …

#44 Bizarre Adverts from the 1940s that Encourage People to Paint their Homes to Protect from Dictat…

←#25 Life in East Berlin during the 1970s and 1980s Through the Lens of Bernd Heyden #25 Places & People
#2 In the middle of the hail of bombs in 1943, hippo “Knautschke” was born in Berlin Zoo and was one of only 91 zoo animals to survive the Second World War.→

Old Photo Gallery

Explore a captivating collection of vintage photographs that tell stories of the past, preserving memories and history through stunning imagery.

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Sources & Credits
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

OldPhotoGallery 2026