Tuesday, July 07, 2015

Heinz Meixner defects from East Germany by driving through Checkpoint Charlie after removing his windshield 5 May, 1963



One evening Meixner met Margarete Thurau at a dance in East Berlin. As love grew, they made plans for marriage, and Margarete asked permission to emigrate to Austria. East German authorities denied her request.

Undeterred, Meixner decided to drive under one of the steel beams that stretch across the narrow exits in the Wall. He chose Checkpoint Charlie, and riding a borrowed motor scooter, stalled it while the guard checked his passport. Meixner managed to measure the height of the barrier. It was only 37 1/2 inches above the pavement.

Meixner began a painstaking survey of West Berlin`s car rental agencies to find an automobile low enough to slip under the barrier. He selected a sports car, a red Austin-Healey Sprite. Without its windshield the sports car measured 35 1/2 inches in height. He chose a Sunday, shortly after midnight, for his run.

A few hours before starting he removed the windshield and, for added insurance, let some air out of the tires to lower the car even further. Margarete huddled in the tiny section behind the driver`s seat. Meixner`s future mother-in-law was crammed into the cramped luggage area. For protection against possible gunfire, Meixner had surrounded her with 30 bricks.

Sunday, May 5, 1963. It was time for the run. In the early-morning darkness, Meixner drove to the first barricade on the East Berlin side of the checkpoint. He displayed his passport to the guard, who motioned him on to the customs shed. Instead he gunned the motor, whizzed around the vertical bars and skidded past the startled guard.

Before the guards could fire their submachine guns, Meixner raced to the last steel bar, ducked his head, floored the accelerator and rocketed into West Berlin. He was traveling so fast that when he finally hit the brakes the tires left 96-foot-long skid marks.

After the American guards recovered from their shock at this apparition that had materialized out of the early-morning gloom, they welcomed Heinz Meixner, Margarete Thurau and her mother.

Meixner told the Americans, ``I figured it would take the guards three seconds to draw their weapons once they knew what I was doing. I knew Margarete`s mother was protected by the bricks. I felt I could make it with about three inches to spare . . . Now we can get married.``

http://www.vintag.es/2015/07/heinz-meixner-defects-from-east-germany.html

8 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing this story. What an ingenious and brave young man he was.

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  2. Are they still alive?

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    1. I haven't any idea. You should google that

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  3. I hope that he refitted the windshield before returning the car to the rental agency!

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  4. Very brave very smart man. Did the impossible, caught them napping. Great adventure, great man.

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  5. 1959-ben vonultam be,1961 novemberében kellett volna leszerelnem,de emiatt a rohadt fal miatt tovább kellett szolgálnom még három hónapot.Gyűlöltem ezt a falat.Egyszer voltam közel hozzá a keleti oldalon,mondhatom gyönyörűséges egy látványt nyújtott.Ujjongtam mikor láttam élő adásban hogy verik szét.

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    1. Google translate says: I went in 1959, I had to disassemble it in November 1961, but for that reason I had to serve another three months because of the damn wall. to beat.

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    2. Tell us more!

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