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Bremerhaven

Bremerhaven (, literally " Bremen's harbour", Low German: Bremerhoben) is a city at the seaport of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, a state of the Federal Republic of Germany. It forms an enclave in the state of Lower Saxony and is located at the mouth of the River Weser on its eastern bank, opposite the town of Nordenham. Though a relatively new city, it has a long history as a trade port and today is one of the most important German ports, playing a crucial role in Germany's trade.

Usage examples of "bremerhaven".

But as the Russian exercise came to an end, he headed back to his home base, the sprawling Navy listening post at Bremerhaven, where he specialized in analyzing intercepted Russian communications.

A clerk in a ticket agency in North Germany sent a message to say a certain bakery proprietor in Bremerhaven had just confirmed bookings on a winter cruise for himself and his wife.

The pair would be touring the Caribbean for four weeks, leaving from Bremerhaven on Sunday, February 16.

A man in Bremerhaven, a former SS colonel, is going on a sea cruise, starting February sixteenth.

By the time Mrs Danziger took the train to Bremerhaven to catch the S.

Both were from the Bremerhaven area, both had flown combat jets, and both had the same birthday, although Gruder was a year younger.

The whole black market, from Trankgasse to the Amis in Bremerhaven, takes its cue from Goldmouth.

Up the newly formed Amazon came a twenty-thousand-ton ship from Bremerhaven, Germany, its dark flag flying in the jungle breeze, its nose pointed toward Manaus.

You may not have run ammunition, but how many neutral ships were loaded off how many piers in India with textile cargoes bound for Bremerhaven and Cuxhaven during the same period.

Kyller had passed out sword of honour cadet from Bremerhaven Naval Academy in 1910.

It replaced listening posts in Bremerhaven, Germany, and in Morocco, and soon became host to Army and Air Force eavesdroppers as well.

He decided to aim for the German border and take the long route back to England, from Hamburg or Bremerhaven, rather than the shorter, more obvious route via Calais or Ostend.

There is only a handful of ports, and all on the Baltic: Hamburg, Bremerhaven, Stettin, and others as well as her main naval facilities at Kiel and Wilhelmshaven.

Bremen and Bremerhaven, and the necessary staging areas in that immediate vicinity, will be vested in the commander of the American Zone.

Bremen and its subsidiary Bremerhaven seemed to meet the American needs, and their control over this zone was adopted.