«Lucius Clay Dies; Led Berlin Airlift». The New York Times(engelsk). 17. april 1978. ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «General Lucius D, Clay, the former commander of United States forces in Europe following World War II. died last night at his home in Cape Cod, Mass.»
«West Berliners Mourning Death of Lucius D. Clay». The New York Times(engelsk). 18. april 1978. ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «WEST BERLIN, April 17—Thirty years ago, when Gen. Lucius D. Clay stepped to the window of his office at the United States headquarters here, lie looked upon a bustling thoroughfare bearing his own name. The man who masterminded the Berlin airlift was the first. American honored by this city in having a street named after him.»
Jones, Charisse (14. februar 1994). «Lucius Clay Jr. Is Dead at 74; Led Air Defense». The New York Times(engelsk). ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «Lucius DuBignon Clay Jr. was born July 6, 1919, in Alexandria, Va. His grandfather was Senator Alexander Stephens Clay of Georgia, and his father was Gen. Lucius D. Clay Sr. After World War II, the senior General Clay, who died in 1978, commanded American forces in Europe, served as the military governor of the American sector of occupied Germany and was a force behind the 1948-49 Berlin airlift and the rebuilding of West Germany.»
Colitt, Leslie (24. oktober 2011). «Berlin crisis: the standoff at Checkpoint Charlie». The Guardian(engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «or 16 hours from the 27 to 28 October 1961, US and Soviet tanks faced each other in divided Berlin and the two superpowers came closer to kicking off a third world war than in any other cold-war confrontation, bar the Cuban missile crisis a year later. … General Clay, the pugnacious American hero of the 1948-49 Berlin Airlift who had been sent by Washington to deal with the Russians after the erection of the Berlin Wall, ordered that the next American diplomat entering East Berlin was to be escorted by armed US army military police in jeeps.»
worldcat.org
«Lucius Clay Dies; Led Berlin Airlift». The New York Times(engelsk). 17. april 1978. ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «General Lucius D, Clay, the former commander of United States forces in Europe following World War II. died last night at his home in Cape Cod, Mass.»
Colitt, Leslie (24. oktober 2011). «Berlin crisis: the standoff at Checkpoint Charlie». The Guardian(engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «or 16 hours from the 27 to 28 October 1961, US and Soviet tanks faced each other in divided Berlin and the two superpowers came closer to kicking off a third world war than in any other cold-war confrontation, bar the Cuban missile crisis a year later. … General Clay, the pugnacious American hero of the 1948-49 Berlin Airlift who had been sent by Washington to deal with the Russians after the erection of the Berlin Wall, ordered that the next American diplomat entering East Berlin was to be escorted by armed US army military police in jeeps.»
«West Berliners Mourning Death of Lucius D. Clay». The New York Times(engelsk). 18. april 1978. ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «WEST BERLIN, April 17—Thirty years ago, when Gen. Lucius D. Clay stepped to the window of his office at the United States headquarters here, lie looked upon a bustling thoroughfare bearing his own name. The man who masterminded the Berlin airlift was the first. American honored by this city in having a street named after him.»
Jones, Charisse (14. februar 1994). «Lucius Clay Jr. Is Dead at 74; Led Air Defense». The New York Times(engelsk). ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 28. januar 2019. «Lucius DuBignon Clay Jr. was born July 6, 1919, in Alexandria, Va. His grandfather was Senator Alexander Stephens Clay of Georgia, and his father was Gen. Lucius D. Clay Sr. After World War II, the senior General Clay, who died in 1978, commanded American forces in Europe, served as the military governor of the American sector of occupied Germany and was a force behind the 1948-49 Berlin airlift and the rebuilding of West Germany.»