The Berlin Wall
On November 9, 1989 The Berlin Wall was torn down. The Wall stood for more than just a barrier, but year of suffering, sacrifice and division. This is a huge historical moment in American and World History. It was the last straw in the cold war. My research from primary and secondary sources that will reveal significant detail about this event that plays a big part in American History.
Ronald Reagan was leading the fight to tear the Berlin wall, ever since he was a kid he was a fighter; “Ronald’s father Jack Reagan was proud of his youngest son’s competitive spirits” (Fox 17). Even though Reagan was a big part his wasn’t the on to truly tear the wall down but only as more of a persuasion to the soviets. The people of Germany from both sides helped tear the wall down, some by sledge hammer or chisel, worse cases by ramming their vehicles into the wall. The tearing down of the wall was only the beginning to the reunification of the two sides, yet it was a huge step took in the right direction as a united country.
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They leaders from the East had to do something so “communists vast are undertaking to seal off East from West Know as the Escape Hatch” (Fredrick). “Within a few weeks the improvised wire obstacle across the city started to morph into a formidable cement one that would become known as the Berlin Wall” (Fredrick). The wall was a horrible thing that separated families, neighborhoods, and anything else you can imagine, but sadly the wall was what most people remember the most, “For the former citizens of East Germany the wall had been a fact of life since Aug. 13 1963”