Members of a cell of the Black Communist Rebellion (BCR) preparing to launch attacks on Japanese strategic positions near Oakland, 1963
Photograph of George Wallace, Governor-General of Alabama from 1955 to 1960. Wallace, an ardent supporter of segregation, was appointed as Governor-General in 1955 following the imprisonment of his predecessor Orval Faubus on the grounds of suspected treason. Wallace would rule with an iron fist and preside over the total extermination of the state's Jewish population by 1959. African-Americans also suffered greatly under Wallace. However, Wallace's attempts to empower the Alabama National Guard on the grounds of 'Negro subversion' were met with alarm by New York and Berlin and Hitler ultimately ordered the Alabaman assassinated in 1960.
One of the few known photographs of Robert F. Kennedy alongside a crowd of African-American children he successfully smuggled out of the Reich, 1959. Kennedy was the son of Deputy Reichsmarshall Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. and his eldest surviving son. Despite his father's high-profile role in the Reich, RFK was disgusted by Nazi ideology and the genocide of Jews and African-Americans being carried out by the Germans in occupied America. Kennedy took advantage of his status to help smuggle large numbers of Jewish and African-American individuals (especially children) out of the East to safety in western Canada, the Neutral Zone and the Caribbean. Kennedy was able to get away with these acts for nearly a decade thanks to his father's position serving to insulate him from the usual consequences. However, in 1957, his father would suffer a fatal stroke and thus RFK's security would be lost. Despite this, he continued to attempt to smuggle out 'undesireables' from the Reich for another couple years. Ultimately, however, in 1961 he was finally captured by agents of the ARBI and executed for treason. It is nevertheless estimated his actions managed to save at least half a million people from certain extermination.