How Hitler’s final telephone ended up in an Ashland, KY, museum
By: Noah Hickman Leading up to the end of WW2, the Allies put in place a reparations committee which would make both East and West Germany pay war reparations. President Harry Truman called a man by the name of Paul G. Blazer (President of Ashland Oil & Refining Company) and offered one of his employees, J. Howard Marshall, the position of General Counsel for the American Delegation of the Reparation Commission. Accepting the position, Marshall traveled to Europe and one of the stops he made was to Berlin. At one point, he visited Hitler’s bunker (this was after Hitler and his one-day wife committed suicide). He would find a lamp and a bedside telephone. But, the one obstacle was that the bunker was under Soviet control and had been ransacked. Determined, Marshall gave one of the guards two packs of “look the other way” cigarettes so he could collect his treasures. The lamp would end up being a personal possession of Marshall’s for an unknown period of time. Marsha...