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1935 SS Bremen incident... Nazi flag tossed...

Item # 725590
July 27, 1935
THE NEW YORK TIMES, July 27, 1935 

* German ocean liner SS Bremen incident 
* Anti-fascist protesters storm ship 
* Nazi flag is torn down and disposed of

The top of the front page has a two column headline: "REDS RIP FLAG OFF BREMEN, THROW IT INTO HUDSON; 2,000 BATTLE THE POLICE" with subheads. Lengthy coverage continues inside with two related photos. (see images)  
Complete with 28 pages, light toning at the margins, a little spine wear, generally nice.

background: On July 26, 1935, the SS Bremen incident ignited a diplomatic firestorm when a group of anti-fascist protesters, led by communist seaman Bill Bailey, boarded the German luxury liner at Pier 86 in New York City and tore the swastika flag from its jackstaff, tossing it into the Hudson River. The act occurred amidst a chaotic riot involving over a thousand demonstrators on the pier, but the true historical weight of the event landed in the courtroom of Magistrate Louis Brodsky. In a scathing ruling that dismissed charges against the "Bremen Six," Brodsky characterized the Nazi emblem as a "black flag of piracy" representing a "revolt against civilization," an assessment that infuriated the German government. This legal defiance provided Adolf Hitler with the perfect pretext to radicalize German symbolism; within weeks, at the Nuremberg Rally, the Reich Flag Law was enacted, officially replacing the traditional imperial tricolor with the swastika as the sole national flag of Germany. Consequently, a localized act of Manhattan street protest became the direct catalyst for the formal "Nazification" of German national identity on the world stage.