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Schöneberg Town Hall

from the audio walk Berlin Like You’ve Never Heard It Before – True Stories & Secrets

Berlin Like You’ve Never Heard It Before – True Stories & Secrets
80 Stations
254:05 min Audio
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Schöneberg Town Hall

Imagine this: It is June 26, 1963. Tens of thousands of people are thronging in front of Schöneberg Town Hall. Stepping up to the microphone on the steps, John F. Kennedy utters the sentence that would go down in history: “Ich bin ein Berliner.” Two years after the construction of the Wall, he gives courage to the people of this divided city—and the square erupts with enthusiasm.
Yet the history of this building begins much earlier. Built of light-colored sandstone between 1911 and 1914, it was once the administrative center of the independent city of Schöneberg. Until 1920, the City Assembly met here—that is, until Schöneberg became part of Greater Berlin.
Dark years followed: After 1933, the National Socialists seized power here as well. During the Second World War, bombs struck the Town Hall heavily, and in the final days of the war, it was used solely for defensive purposes.
Beginning in 1949—while still under reconstruction—the Berlin government moved in. From Schöneberg, West Berlin was governed until 1993. Time and again, the Town Hall square became the setting for moving moments: in 1949 and 1953, Berliners gathered to commemorate the end of the airlift blockade and the suppressed popular uprising in the GDR.
But there were also days of mourning: On June 2, 1967, violent clashes broke out nearby during a visit by the Shah of Persia. The student Benno Ohnesorg was fatally shot—an event that deeply shook the Federal Republic.
And then: November 10, 1989. One day after the fall of the Wall, people here celebrated late into the night. Willy Brandt gave voice to what everyone was feeling: “Berlin will live, and the Wall will fall.” To this day, every noon at the stroke of twelve, the Freedom Bell—a gift from the Americans in 1950—serves as a reminder, with its deep resonance, of the values ​​for which people here fought, hoped, and celebrated.

Image 1: Original work

Image 2: By unknown author – Grüße aus Berlin und Umgebung (Greetings from Berlin and the Surrounding Area), published by Kunstanstalt W. Sommer, Berlin-Schöneberg, 1898; Public Domain; https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1019690

Image 3: By Robert Knudsen, White House – The John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston [1]; Public Domain; https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2221406


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Other stops on this audio tour:

A Brief Excursion into Berlin's History (7:59 min) • St. Nicholas' Church / St. Nicholas' Quarter (2:49 min) • Newspaper District (4:28 min) • Checkpoint Charlie (1:55 min) • Former Gestapo Headquarters (2:57 min) • Former Tempelhof Airport (3:46 min) • 7 Wannsee Conference (4:45 min) • Walther Rathenau Memorial (2:34 min) • Olympic Stadium / 1936 Olympic Games (5:36 min) • Commune 1 (2:27 min) • Benno Ohnesorg / Student Movement (2:16 min) • Rolf Eden (1:54 min) • Café Kranzler (2:08 min) • Kurfürstendamm (3:03 min) • Zoo Palace (3:47 min) • Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church (2:22 min) • Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg (3:28 min) • Former Sportpalast / Sportpalast Speech (5:12 min) • Bendlerblock/Stauffenberg assassination attempt (4:47 min) • Kroll Opera House / Enabling Act (3:09 min) • Reichstag Building (4:14 min) • Reichstag Fire (4:28 min) • Brandenburg Gate (2:52 min) • People's Court (3:08 min) • Potsdamer Place (2:58 min) • Former "Führerbunker" (5:06 min) • "Tresor" (Safe) (1:43 min) • Popular Uprising in the GDR (2:11 min) • Reich Chancellery / Hitler's Seizure of Power (5:11 min) • "Die weiße Maus" (The White Mouse) (2:57 min) • Friedrichstraße Station / "Tränenpalast" (Palace of Tears) (3:46 min) • Humboldt University (1:56 min) • Berlin Palace (5:04 min) • Red City Hall (2:30 min) • Alexanderplatz (2:30 min) • Otto Weidt's Workshop for the Blind / Anne Frank Center (2:05 min) • Hackesche Höfe (5:21 min) • Rosenthaler Platz (2:58 min) • St. Sophia's Church (3:03 min) • Sophie-Gips Courtyards (2:08 min) • Koppenplatz (3:16 min) • Clärchen's Dance Hall (3:54 min) • New Synagogue (2:19 min) • Berliner Ensemble (3:55 min) • Friedrichstadt-Palast (4:02 min) • Dorotheenstadt Cemetery (2:25 min) • Bloody May (2:18 min) • Humboldthain Flak Tower (5:17 min) • Chris Gueffroy and the Victims of the Wall (1:28 min) • Tunnel 57 / Egon Schultz (2:40 min) • AMIGA (1:37 min) • Bernauer Street (4:07 min) • Former Bornholmer Straße Border Crossing (3:26 min) • Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn Sports Park (3:43 min) • Mauerpark (4:07 min) • Arkonaplatz (3:03 min) • Zion Church (3:44 min) • Prenzlauer Berg Fire Station (3:18 min) • Hirschhof (2:41 min) • Freya Klier (2:28 min) • Prater (2:28 min) • Oderberger Straße Municipal Baths (3:36 min) • Oderberger Street 2 (1:58 min) • Currywurst (2:16 min) • Konnopke's Snack Bar (2:43 min) • Gethsemane Church (2:09 min) • Museum in the Kulturbrauerei (1:06 min) • Kulturbrauerei (3:24 min) • Frannz-Club (2:31 min) • Husemann Street (1:58 min) • Jews' Passage (3:32 min) • Prenzlauer Berg Water Tower (2:37 min) • Rosa Luxemburg Square (4:34 min) • Mont Klamott (1:43 min) • Samaritan Church (2:23 min) • Former Stasi Headquarters / Stasi Museum (2:48 min) • Berlin-Karlshorst Museum / Unconditional Surrender (2:54 min) • East Side Gallery (2:59 min) • House Squatting in the 1980s (2:34 min)


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