David Wilson
Contributor
As promised, here is a new thread in a series focusing on underwater swimming equipment manufactured in certain East European countries during the second half of the twentieth century.
A short history lesson. We are beginning with the German Democratic Republic (GDR), which started life after World War II as the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany, while the Federal Republic of Germany (IFRG) arose from the territory of the American, British and French Occupation Zones of Germany. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 ended the GDR and its territory was soon absorbed into the FRG to create a united Germany. In its time, the GDR was known within the western world as "East Germany" and its capital city East Berlin usually only appeared in western newspapers whenever GDR border guards fired on East Germans attempting to escape to West Berlin. Since then, press articles have tended to focus on matters such as the files kept by the East German Stasi security police whenever the subject of the former GDR arises.
This vision of the former GDR was one of the reasons why I visited the country during the 1970s to make up my own mind about the land and its people. Another reason was that I felt obliged, as a schoolteacher of German, to familiarise myself with what was the least known and understood German-speaking country of Europe. What I saw and experienced there confirmed some aspects of western press coverage, but opened my eyes to the fact that the country had a functioning economy, including retail outlets, restaurants, hotels and the people were friendly and curious about my visit, although officialdom was somewhat brusque. If nothing else, I valued staying in the hotel where the post-war Potsdam Agreement was signed and in the Weimar hotel where Germany's Shakespeare, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, used to accommodate his lady friends. I left East Germany with a critical but more rounded view of the country.
I recall reading somewhere decades ago that the sale of underwater swimmining equipment in general, and breathing equipment in particular, was restricted in the GDR due to its potential use for escape to the west. I can't confirm whether this is so, but during my stay I managed to locate the GDR's diving magazine Poseidon, which contained plenty of articles and photographs about recreational subaquatic activity by young and old alike. Within the pages of this issue, the pictures showed divers wearing the fins, masks and snorkels I will showcase here and in related threads.
Right, enough talk and on to the fins. I am indebted here to online diving gear museums, which have East German fins among their inventory. First up is a fin home-made by a Dr Rauschert in 1950 but never commercially manufactured:
Dr Rauschert fin
Next up is the so-called Kessner fin:
Kessner fin
According to easydive24.de | Exponate des Sporttauchermuseums: Flossen, this fin was designed by Helmut Kessner at the outset of the 1950s and went into industrial production at the Deutsche Gummiwarenfabrik (known as DeGuFa) rubber goods factory in 1953 as the first in the series of fins manufactured in the GDR.
I'll leave it there for today. In my next contribution I will showcase the fins accompanying the GDR MEDI diving outfit of the 1950s.
A short history lesson. We are beginning with the German Democratic Republic (GDR), which started life after World War II as the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany, while the Federal Republic of Germany (IFRG) arose from the territory of the American, British and French Occupation Zones of Germany. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 ended the GDR and its territory was soon absorbed into the FRG to create a united Germany. In its time, the GDR was known within the western world as "East Germany" and its capital city East Berlin usually only appeared in western newspapers whenever GDR border guards fired on East Germans attempting to escape to West Berlin. Since then, press articles have tended to focus on matters such as the files kept by the East German Stasi security police whenever the subject of the former GDR arises.
This vision of the former GDR was one of the reasons why I visited the country during the 1970s to make up my own mind about the land and its people. Another reason was that I felt obliged, as a schoolteacher of German, to familiarise myself with what was the least known and understood German-speaking country of Europe. What I saw and experienced there confirmed some aspects of western press coverage, but opened my eyes to the fact that the country had a functioning economy, including retail outlets, restaurants, hotels and the people were friendly and curious about my visit, although officialdom was somewhat brusque. If nothing else, I valued staying in the hotel where the post-war Potsdam Agreement was signed and in the Weimar hotel where Germany's Shakespeare, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, used to accommodate his lady friends. I left East Germany with a critical but more rounded view of the country.
I recall reading somewhere decades ago that the sale of underwater swimmining equipment in general, and breathing equipment in particular, was restricted in the GDR due to its potential use for escape to the west. I can't confirm whether this is so, but during my stay I managed to locate the GDR's diving magazine Poseidon, which contained plenty of articles and photographs about recreational subaquatic activity by young and old alike. Within the pages of this issue, the pictures showed divers wearing the fins, masks and snorkels I will showcase here and in related threads.
Right, enough talk and on to the fins. I am indebted here to online diving gear museums, which have East German fins among their inventory. First up is a fin home-made by a Dr Rauschert in 1950 but never commercially manufactured:
Dr Rauschert fin
Next up is the so-called Kessner fin:
Kessner fin
According to easydive24.de | Exponate des Sporttauchermuseums: Flossen, this fin was designed by Helmut Kessner at the outset of the 1950s and went into industrial production at the Deutsche Gummiwarenfabrik (known as DeGuFa) rubber goods factory in 1953 as the first in the series of fins manufactured in the GDR.
I'll leave it there for today. In my next contribution I will showcase the fins accompanying the GDR MEDI diving outfit of the 1950s.
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