Open in App
  • Local
  • Headlines
  • Election
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • Snopes

    Fact Check: Real Pic of US Soldier Removing 'Adolf Hitler' Street Sign in Germany?

    By Caroline Wazer,

    3 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2e60Jj_0vvuol6400

    Claim:

    A photo shared on social media authentically showed a U.S. soldier in Germany during World War II replacing a street sign that read “Adolf-Hitler-Str.” with another that read “Roosevelt Blvd.”

    Rating:

    True ( About this rating? )

    For years, social media users have shared a photo allegedly showing a U.S. soldier during World War II swapping out a German street sign reading "Adolf-Hitler-Str." for another reading "Roosevelt Blvd."

    On Aug. 27, 2024, one Reddit user included the image in a post ( archived ) on the r/USHistory subreddit alongside the caption: "Adolf Hitler Street becomes Roosevelt Boulevard (1945)."

    Adolf Hitler Street becomes Roosevelt Boulevard (1945)
    by u/Creepy-Strain-803 in USHistory

    The picture has also appeared — sometimes in black and white ( archived ) and sometimes colorized ( archived ) — in posts on Facebook ( archived ) and on X ( archived ), as well as in multiple ( archived ) other Reddit posts ( archived ).

    Numerous Reddit users have noted the soldier's apparent resemblance to two American celebrities — "It's Always Sunny in Pennsylvania" actor Rob McElhenney and Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz.

    Others had questions about the photo's origins and authenticity. For example, one Reddit user commented :

    Can someone explain this to me? What city is this? Is it a joke? Explain it like I'm five please

    In short, a reverse image search showed it was indeed an authentic photo of a U.S. soldier taking down a German street sign reading "Adolf-Hitler-Str." and replacing it with a sign reading "Roosevelt Blvd."

    The original picture was captured in black and white, while the colorized versions ( archived ) that have circulated ( archived ) online were digitally retouched.

    One copy of the photo is currently in the collection of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), which described the scene depicted in the image as:

    An American soldier replaces an "Adolf-Hitler-Str." street sign with a hand-made one, "Roosevelt Boulevard".

    USHMM identified the man in the image as George A. Kaufman, a sergeant in the Ninth U.S. Army . The museum also said the picture was taken in the German city of Krefeld, not in Berlin, as some ( archived ) social media users ( archived ) claimed.

    The photo was dated March 9, 1945, around a week after Allied troops captured Krefeld. Franklin D. Roosevelt, for whom the street was temporarily renamed, was still the U.S. president at the time. He died April 12, 1945, around a month after the photographer snapped Kaufman changing the street signs. The German Third Reich unconditionally surrendered to the Allies in May 1945, around two months after the picture was taken.

    Various U.S. newspapers published the image in the spring of 1945 and corroborated the same details. For example, on March 21, 1945, New York City's Daily News included the image in a roundup of recent photos from the war effort in Germany.

    https://www.newspapers.com/article/daily-news/156376847/

    Article from Mar 21, 1945 Daily News (New York, New York)

    The headline and caption accompanying the photo read:

    'Strasse' Is Passe

    As Yanks Yank Nazi Sign

    OUT-DATED. Sign proclaiming street in the Adolf Hitler Strasse, in Krefeld, Germany, is given the old heave-ho by Sergt. George A. Kaufman, of Fort Smith, Ark. Kaufman, of the U. S. 9th Army, replaces Hitler sign with the Roosevelt Boulevard.

    The same image, paired with similar captions, also appeared in the Times Herald (Olean, New York), the Seminole Producer (Oklahoma), and the Alton Democrat (Iowa), among numerous other newspapers.

    Although the identity of the photographer was unclear, they appeared to have worked for the U.S. Army. The credit line accompanying the image in the Daily News was "Official Signal Corps foto," referring to the Army's communications branch , while the credit line that appeared in the Alton Democrat was "Released by U.S. War Department, Bureau of Public Relations." Meanwhile, USHMM credited the photo to the National Archives and Records Administration. Snopes contacted the museum for more specific source information and will update this story if and when they respond.

    As noted in articles in the German-language newspapers Westdeutsche Zeitung and Rheinische Post , the Krefeld street in question had originally been named Rheinstrasse, but was renamed for Hitler in April 1933. The March 1945 change to Roosevelt Boulevard was not permanent, and the street's name ultimately reverted to the original Rheinstrasse .

    Because the authenticity of the image has been well-documented, through its inclusion in the USHMM's collection and its publication in numerous newspapers in the spring of 1945, we have rated this claim as true.

    Sources:

    "Article Clipped from Daily News." Daily News, 21 Mar. 1945, p. 30. newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/article/daily-news/156376847/ .

    "Article Clipped from Seminole Producer." Seminole Producer, 23 Mar. 1945, p. 7. newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/article/seminole-producer/156376676/ .

    "Article Clipped from The Alton Democrat." The Alton Democrat, 10 May 1945, p. 2. newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-alton-democrat/156377654/ .

    "Article Clipped from Times Herald." Times Herald, 21 Mar. 1945, p. 1. newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/article/times-herald/156376758/ .

    Collections Search - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/pa1178707 . Accessed 2 Oct. 2024.

    Evon, Dan. "Snopes Tips: A Guide To Performing Reverse Image Searches." Snopes, 22 Mar. 2022, https://www.snopes.com//articles/400681/how-to-perform-reverse-image-searches/ .

    "Franklin D. Roosevelt." The White House, https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/franklin-d-roosevelt/ . Accessed 2 Oct. 2024.

    "General William H. Simpson's Ninth US Army and the Crossing of the Rhine." The National WWII Museum | New Orleans, 28 Mar. 2023, https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/general-william-h-simpsons-ninth-us-army-and-crossing-rhine .

    ONLINE, RP. "Krefeld: Straßennamen mit NS-Geschichte." RP ONLINE, 12 Apr. 2012, https://rp-online.de/nrw/staedte/krefeld/strassennamen-mit-ns-geschichte_aid-13708221 .

    "Signal Corps in World War II." Www.Army.Mil, 26 June 2020, https://www.army.mil/article/236799/signal_corps_in_world_war_ii .

    "Surrender of Germany (1945)." National Archives, 23 Sept. 2021, https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/surrender-of-germany .

    Wakefield, Ken. The Other Ninth Air Force: Ninth US Army Light Aircraft Operations in Europe 1944-45. Fonthill Media, 2014.

    Zeitung, Westdeutsche. "Als die Nazis die Krefelder Politik ausschalteten." Westdeutsche Zeitung, 23 Mar. 2011, https://www.wz.de/specials/nrw/krefeld/als-die-nazis-die-krefelder-politik-ausschalteten_aid-30857515 .

    Expand All
    Comments / 6
    Add a Comment
    Dru
    1d ago
    H. O. O. D. !!!
    Clayton Lowry
    3d ago
    i bet that would be worth something
    View all comments
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local News newsLocal News

    Comments / 0