During this period, Jewish groups in Vienna were attempting to determine more specific details regarding Mengele’s reported arrest. For instance, on April 8, 1947, Wilhelm Krell and one Mr Lewit from the Jewish community in Vienna, wrote to Dr Schmorak of the Polish-Jewish committee asking him to reveal where Mengele was being held so that they could submit the material they had collected against him. They had received no answer to a similar request for information from their contact in Germany – Mordka Danielski. OSI has found no record of any response to this request (Yad Vashem : 0-5/11, Krell to Schmorak 8 April 1947).
Continue Reading >>>
Dec
21
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 17306(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/12/21/22504-js-34068-josef-mengele-04/%2822%2950%2F4-Js-340%2F68+%3A+Josef+Mengele+%2804%292009-12-21+09%3A47%3A49Snafu
Category : Holocaust, Josef Mengele
Tags: 21st Army Group, 430th CIC Detachment, 970th CIC Detachment, A. G. Hardy, Adalbert Rueckerl, Antwerp, Armstadt, Auschwitz, Austrian Resistance, Autenried, Baden-Baden, Benjamin Ferencz, Benjamin Gorby, Birkenau, Brig Gen Telford Taylor, Bruckenau, Bund der Politischen Verfolgten, Civil Affairs Division, Col C. E. Straight, Col Clio Straight, Col David Markus, Col Marion Mushkat, Cracow, CROWCASS, Dachau, Dachau Concentration Camp, Damon M. Gunn, Death Camp, Department of Justice, Der Neue Weg, Deutsche Dienststelle, Dr Franz Dannimann, Dr Hans Muench, Dr Jeno Vamosi, Dr Joseph Kermish, Dr Karl Clauberg, Dr Kurt Lambertz, Dr Otto Wolken, Dr Scapesius, Dr Schmorak, Dr Simon Eisen, Dr Wilhelm Krell, Dr. Kirk Grunwald, Drexel Sprecher, Ehringen, Ellenville, Ernst Barie, Fédération Nationale des Déportés, France, Frau Erich Naumann, French Liaison Department, French Liaison G5, French Ministry of Justice, Gisella Perl, Great-Britain, Grossberg, Guenzburg, Hans Lipschis, Hans Wolfson, Hauptsturmfuehrer, Heidelberg, IG Farben, Innsbruck, International Military Tribunal, James McHaney, Jewish Historical Commission, Josef Kneer, Josef Mengele, Josef Sixtl, Karl Bach, Karl Mengele, Lodz, Lt Col Mark Amen, Lt Gérard Meillet, Manfred Wolfson, Martha Bleicher, Military Governor, Milton Daniels, Moe Kove, Mordka Danielski, Mr Alfred N. Mantell, Mr J. G. du Pac, Mrs Julia Hebel-Kane, Munich, Nachman Blumenthal, Nazi Party, New York, Nuremberg, OCCWC, Oesterreichs, Office of Chief Counsel, Oswiecim, Palestinian Jewish Davar, Paris, Pentagon, Poland, Polish-Jewish Committee, PWIB, Regensburg, Region V, Rogues Gallery, Rosenheim, Saxony, Soviet Union, Special Agent, SS Hygiene Institute, The New Republic, Theater Judge Advocate, Tuvia Friedman, Vienna, VIII Corps, War Crimes Branch, War Crimes Group - ETO, War Crimes Investigative Team, War Service Cross, Warsaw, WCIT, Wilhelm Krell, XIII Corps
Dec
14
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 16546(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/12/14/msg-i-was-9-years-old-in-1944/MSG+%3A+I+was+9+Years+Old+in+19442009-12-14+16%3A28%3A50Snafu
Category : EUCMH Mails Center
Tags: 17th Airborne Division, Antwerp, Ardennes, Black Watch, Christmas 1944, High Land Division, Longchamps, Netherlands, Night Mass, Promised Land, Scottish Soldiers
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
Dear Sir,
Thank you very much for the pictures of Longchamps. You thought it was about as cold as it was Christmas 1944. You might be wrong. In my memories it was much colder 65 years ago. I lived and still live in the Southern part of the Netherlands. South-Limburg what in my opinion can be called the Promised Land. In winter in the Ardennes the temperature is some degrees lower than in South-Limburg and also there is more snow in the Ardennes.
How do I remember Christmas 1944 as I was a young boy of 9+?
In our house Scottish soldiers of a High Land Division (nicknamed the Black Watch) were embedded. They fought Rommel in Africa. A Christmas tree was not common in our hamlet. We had a Christmas stable. The images and the skeleton were stored on the ceiling. A couple of days before Christmas they were taken down and the “creating” of the stable could begin.
Continue Reading >>>
Sep
01
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 9104(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/09/01/engineers-in-the-battle-of-the-bulge-william-c-baldwin/291st+Engr+Combat+Bn+Stavelot+19442009-09-01+03%3A52%3A35Snafu
Category : 291st-ECB, Battle of the Bulge
Tags: 002nd Infantry Division, 101st Airborne Division, 106th Infantry Division, 1111th Engineer Combat Group, 158th Engineer Combat Battalion, 168th Engineer Combat Battalion, 291st Engineer Combat Battalion, 299th Engineer Combat Battalion, 35th Engineer Combat Battalion, 3rd Armored Division, 44th Engineer Combat Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 51st Engineer Combat Battalion, 7th Armd Div, 81st Engineer Combat Battalion, 82nd A/B Div, 84th Infantry Division (US), Adolf Hitler, Antwerp, Ardenne, Bastogne, Belgium, Capt Preston Hodges, Capt Sam Scheuber, Corps of Engineers, D-Day, Distinguished Unit Citation, Egypt, France, German Panzers, Golden Lion, Hotton, Huertgen Forest, Huy, Indian Head, Istanbul, La Roche, Lt Col Clarion J. Kjeldseth, Lt Col David E. Pergrin, Lt Col Harvey Fraser, Lt Col Sam Tabet, Lt Col Thomas J. Riggs, Luxembourg, Maj Robert B. Yates, Malmedy, Malmedy Massacre, Marche, Meuse River, Odessa, Ortheuville, Ourthe River, Paris, Port Said, Pvt Bernard Michin, Pvt Lee Ishmael, Rochefort, Roer River, Saar River, Sgt Kenneth Kelly, St Vith, Stavelot, Trois-Ponts, US Army, VIII Corps, Warsaw, Wiltz, Wiltz River
Although D-day gave the western Allies a beachhead in northern France, it took them almost two months of bitter fighting to break out of the Normandy hedgerows. After the breakout, Allied armies raced across France, liberated Paris, and headed toward the German frontier. The rapid pace of the advance placed a severe strain on Allied logistics, which, along with bad weather and stiffening German resistance, slowed the offensive. By mid-December, American armies had reached the Roer River inside Germany and the West Wall along the Saar River in eastern France. Between these two fronts lay the Ardenne, a hilly, densely forested area of Belgium. The Germans had attacked France through this supposedly impassable region in 1940. In early December 1944, five American divisions and a cavalry group held the 85-mile-long Ardenne front. The difficult terrain of the region and the belief that the German army was near exhaustion had convinced the Allied commanders that the Ardenne sector was relatively safe. Thus, three of the divisions were new, full of green soldiers who had only recently arrived on the continent; the other two were recuperating from heavy losses suffered in the bitter fighting in the Huertgen forest farther north. In addition, the heavy demand for American troops in some sectors had forced Allied commanders to lightly man other portions of the front .
Continue Reading >>>
Jul
13
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 7594(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/07/13/battle-of-the-bulge-chapter-02/The+Battle+of+the+Bulge+%282%292009-07-13+14%3A50%3A07Snafu
Category : Battle of the Bulge, The Bulge (CMH)
Tags: 12. SS Corps, 17. Bayerisches Kavallerie Regiment, 2. Motorcycle Rifle Battalion, 2. Panzer Div (WH), 25. Kavalerie Regiment, 2nd Baltic Front, 2nd Belorussian Front, 3. Preussisches Kavallerie Regiment, 5 Panzer Army, 52. Infantry Regiment von Alvensleben, 6. Prussian Infanterie Division, 7. Panzer Grenadier Brigade, 8. Panzer Division, Abwehrschlacht im Westen, Adolf Hitler, Africa, Alpbachtal, Antwerp, Arlon, Army Group Afrika, Army Group B, Army Group Center, Army Group North, Army Group Vistula, Arnhem, Arras, Aufmarschanweisungew, Austria, Baccarat, Bamberg, Baranovichi, Battle of Bastogne, Battle of Berlin, Battle of France, Battle of Kursk, Battle of the Hürtgen Forest, Battle of Verdun, Belgian Ardenne, Belgium, Belgorod, Belorussia, Berlin, Berlin-Krampnitz, British Troops, Brussels, Canadians Troops, Charles V. P. von Luttichau, Colonel Friedrich August von der Heydte, Courland Pocket, Diekirch, Division von Broich, Dnieper River, Dr. Schuster, Dresden, Echternach, Eifel, Epinal, Erich von Manstein, Erwin Rommel, Estonia, Feldmarschall Gerd von Rundstedt, Fichtenhain, France, Free Democratic Party of Germany, Freikorps, Friedrich von Mellenthin, Galicia, Geilenkirchen, General der Infanterie Hans Krebs, General der Kavellerie Siegfried Westphal, General der Panzertruppen Hasso-Eccard von Manteuffel, General Erhard Raus, General Gotthard Heinrici, General Konstantin Rokossovsky, Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel, Generalleutnant Bodo Zimmermann, Generalleutnant Friedrich John, Generalmajor Franz von Rantau, Generaloberst Alfred Jodl, Generaloberst der Waffen-SS Josef "Sepp" Dietrich, Genthin, Georg von Küchler, Georg-Hans Reinhardt, George S. Patton J, German Bundestag, German Revolution, German Spring Offensive, Gestapo, Givet, Grenadier Division Großdeutschland, Guard Ersatz Division, Günther von Kluge, Hans von Seeckt, Hans-Jürgen von Arnim, Heinz Guderian, Heinz Harmel, Hermann Balck, Hermann Breith, Hermann Göring, Hermann Hoth, Herta Huyssen, Hürtgen Forest, Hussar Regiment, Imperial German, Iohnca, Ivan Konev, Jodl, Joseph Goebbels, Kalinin, Kampfgruppen, Kavallerie Regiment Erfurt, Kharkov, Kirovograd, Koln, Konstantin, Krefeld, Kremlin, Kriegsschule, Lama River, Leningrad, Liège, Lithuania, Lokhvitsa, Longwy, Lorraine, Lt Gen George S. Patton Jr, Ludwig Beck, Lützkampen, Luxembourg, Lvov, Maastricht, Marshal Georgy Zhukov, Martelange, Mecklenburg, Metz, Meuse River, Minsk, Monschau, Montbéliard, Moscow, Namur, Nancy, Narva, Neisse, Netherlands, Neufchateau, Nuremberg, OB WEST, Oberbefehlshaber West, Oder River, OKW, Oosterbeek, Operation Alcase, Operation Bagration, Operation Barbarossa, Operation Buffalo, Operation Citadel, Operation Herbstnebel, Operation Holland, Operation Kutuzov, Operation Liège, Operation Lorraine, Operation Luxembourg, Operation Market-Garden, Operation Mars, Operation Typhoon, Otto Sponheimer, Panzer Group 3, Panzer Group Eberbach, Panzer Troop Command, Panzer Troop School II, Poland, Potsdam, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Randow Swamp, Rathenow, Red Army, Reichswehr, Reith, Rhine River, Rokossovsky, Romania, Roslavl, Rostov, Run, Schild und Schwert, Seelow Heights, Semois River, Seymour Freiden, Sittard, Smolensk, Somme, Soviet Union, Stettin, Sudetenland, Susteren, Sychevka, Thuisko von Metzch, Truppenamt, Tunisia, Tyrol, Ukraine, US Military Academy West Point, V-1 Rockets, V-2 Missiles, Vesoul, Vilnius, Volkhov, Wacht am Rhein, Warsaw, Wasserbillig, Wehrmachtfuehrungsstab, Weimar Republic, Western Front, Western Pomerania, Willi Bittrich, William Richardson, Zhitomir, Ziegenberg
CHAPTER II
Planning the Counteroffensive
Details of the Plan
About 25 September Generalorberst Alfred Jodl was ordered to begin a detailed analysis of the Hitlerian concept, the only function now left to the great General Staff. Some latitude remained to the individual staff officers and those favored few in the high echelon of command who retained access to the Führer in kneading and shaping the very general outline handed down by Hitler into an operations plan. The outline as it now had taken shape contained these major points :
- (a) the attack should be launched sometime between 20 and 30 November;
- (b) it should be made through the Ardenne in the Monschau – Echternach sector;
- (c) the initial object would be the seizure of bridgeheads over the Meuse River between Liège and Namur;
- (d) thereafter, Antwerp would be the objective;
- (e) a battle to annihilate the British and Canadians would ultimately be fought north of the line Antwerp, Liège, Bastogne (1);
- (f) a minimum of thirty divisions would be available, ten of which would be armored;
- (g) support would be given by an unprecedented concentration of artillery and rocket projector units;
- (h) operational control would be vested in four armies and two panzer armies abreast in the lead, two armies composed largely of infantry divisions to cover the flanks;
- (i) the Luftwaffe would be prepared to support the operation;
- (j) all planning would aim at securing tactical surprise and speed;(k) secrecy would be maintained at all costs and only a very limited number of individuals would be made privy to the plan.
Jun
18
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 6470(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/06/18/movies-rolling-to-the-rhine-red-ball-express/Rolling+to+the+Rhine+1944+%28VO%292009-06-18+17%3A56%3A48Snafu
Category : Archives Movies, Rolling to the Rhine
Tags: African Americans, Antwerp, Belgium, Chartres, Cherbourg, Col Loren Albert Ayers, D-Day Beaches, Dolhain, Eupen, France, German Luftwaffe, June 6 1944, Little Patton, Normandy, Red Ball Express, Verviers
The Red Ball Express was a gigantic convoy system created by Allied forces to supply their forward-area combat units moving through Europe following the breakout from the D-Day beaches in Normandy. The term “Red Ball” was a railroad phrase referring to express shipping. The system lasted only three months, from August 25 to November 16, 1944, when the port facilities at Antwerp, Belgium were opened. The term Red Ball is often used incorrectly to refer to all WWII European supply convoys by historians and the veterans themselves.
Continue Reading >>>
Mar
02
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 1403(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/03/02/soe-europe-code-names/SOE+Operations+Western+Europe+%28N-Z%292009-03-02+17%3A23%3A22Snafu
Category : OSS & SOE
Tags: 2em Bureau, Add new tag, Adolf Hitler, Airborne, Albert Canal, Alfred Goebbel, Ali Baba, Alice, Allouis, Andenne, Antoine, Antwerp, Anvers, Arboretum, Arlette, Armée Secrête, Arnhem, Assassination, Asti, Austria, Avocat, Babette, Bad Aussee, Badger, Bari, Belgium, Belt, Bergamasco, Beringen, Berthe, Bib Red, Biella, Biérene, Blois, Blue, Bonassola, Bracelet, Breslau, Brewer, British Officer, Brussels, Bruxelles, Capo, Captured, Charleroi, Chevron, Civer, Claude, CLNAI, Colette, Communist, Constantine, Cordier, Cotulla, Cufflinks, Dachau, Daniel-Marmoset, De Gaulle, Delphine, Denmark, Duff Cooper, Dutch Army, Ebensburg, Echalotte, Edwards, Elba, Electra, Emelia, Emilia, Emilio Varas Canal, Empoli, England, Enorbarbus, Envelope, Eros, Escape Route, Eucalyptus, Eugénie, Euphronius, Evansville, Evaporate, Exfiltration, ExfiltrationPrince Charles, Fabius, Falaise, Fano, Ferret, Ferret-I, Ferrula, Flaminius, Flanders, Flap Fin, Flavius, Fleckney, Floodlight, Fordwick, Fortinbras, Foxley, France, Free French Recruit, Frilford, Gabrielle, Gambling, Gauntlet, Gela Blue, General Cardona, General Gusto Pesenti, Genesse, Genoa, Genon, Germany, Ghent, Gibbon, Gibraltar, Glamis, Glove, Gratiano, Graz, Greek Islands, Greenleaves, Greyhound, Griffon, Group G, Guineapig, Gypsy, Hail, Hamster, Hangman, Hapage, Hapeville, Haras, Harrisburg, Hecate, Hector, Hector II, Helenus, Herrings, Herrington, Hillcat, Hintshingen, Hireling, Historian, Holland, Hollowshoes, Homestead, Horatio, Hortense, Hortensius, Hotton, Houskeeper, Hubertine, Huguette, Huy, Iachimo, Iago, Imogen, Incisor, Incomparable, Indelible, Independence, Innsbruck, Insulin, Intersection, Italy, Itarra, Jacqueline, Jeanette, Jeannine, Jedburg-Daniel, Jedburgh, Jedburgh-Clarence, Jedburgh-Claude, Jedburgh-Edward, Jerboa, Josephine, Josephine B, Junius, Klagenfurt, Koala, Kuyoper, Labrador, Lacquer, Lamb, Laquer, Lavinia, Lear, Lemur, Lepidus, Les Telots, Lesdains, Lessines, Leyton, Liaison Officer, Liège, Ligarius, Liguria, Ligurian Coast, Limburg, Lodovico, Lombardy, London, Lt Dubois, Lucullus, Luculuss, Lunese, Luxembourg, Lynx, M-11, M-12-Tiber, M-6, Macduff, Maj W. O. Churchill, Majordomo, Mallaby, Man Friday, Mandamus, Mandrill, Manelaus, Maquis, Marcius, Mardian, Margot, Market, Market Garden, Marmot, Mastiff, Mathilde, Menas, Mencrates, Menenius, MI5, Mink, MNB, Modena, Mongoose, Mons, Montano, Moselle, MoselleSardinia, Mouse, Mule, Musjid, Namur, Navarre, Neck, Necklage, Nelly, Neufchteau, Newsagent, Nicanor, Nivelles, Noémie, Nola, Oberlauchringen, Oderigo, Odette, Olaf, Olga Jackson, Oltre, Operation Little Foxley, Opinion, Osric, Othello, Outcast, Outhaul, Pandarus, Panicle, Pantarlier, Parasol, Patroclus, Patron, Paulette, Pavese, Periwig, Pesaro, Pessac, Petrucci, Philotus, Phrynia, Piacentina, PID, Piedmont, Pigeon Carrier, Ping Pong, Platypus, Po, Polka, Polonius, Pompey, Pool I, Pool II, Potato, Priam, Publius, PWE, Pyx, Radio Paris, Rankin, Rat-Goat, Reel, Regan, Reggio, Relator, Reproach, Reynaldo, Rhombold, Ricco, Richard Mallaby, Richard Tucker, Rochefort, Rome, Rosalie, Rosencrantz, Rudder, Ruina, Rummy, Sable, Sabotage, Sainfoin, Saki, Samoyede II, San Andrea, Savanna, Savona, Scheldt, Scipio, Scullion, Seafront, Sempronius, Sempronus, Siamang, Siena, Silkmerchant, Simone, Sling, Socrates, SOE, Sophie, Spain, Spanish, Stanley, Stentor, Sureté, Tangier, Temple, Terrier, Tiddlewinks, Toffee, Turdus, Tybalt, Underground, Union, Val d'Aosta, Val Maria, Vald'Aosta, Valentine, Vampire, Vannes Airfield, Varro, Velutus, Veluwe, Vercors, Vermillion, Victorine, Vienna, Vittorio Veneto, Vosges, Wanneberg, Wig, Woochuck, Yapok

Special Operations Executive Summary of Operations in Western Europe
This summary refers only to those operations with the fullest material in the files. For reasons of space it does not refer to every operation mentioned in the records. Similarly, the newly released records do not contain evidence on every operation which was mounted by the sections.
Source : Adam Matthew Publications
Continue Reading >>>
Mar
02
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 1395(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/03/02/soe-europe-code-name-a-b-c-d/SOE+Operations+Western+Europe+%28A-M%292009-03-02+15%3A29%3A52Snafu
Category : OSS & SOE
Tags: A(e)neas, Aemilius, Agamemnon, Agent, Agnès, Agrippa, Aileron, Aircaft Fighter, Alarbus, Alcibiades, Almouth, Aloes, Alsation, Amphill, Andromanche, Antenor, Anti-Scroch, Antwerp, Apennines, Arboretum, Ardennes, Argentina, Armada, Armadillo, Artikoche, Assen, Association, Atlow, Aufidius, Austria, Autogyro, Baboon, Backgammon, Badger, Balaklava, Balloonet, Balthazer, Bandon VII, Barcelona, Bassianus, Beauraing, Beheaded, Belgium, Bergenfield, Bernado, Bezique, Bianca, Blundell, Blundell-2, Borzoi, Boykin, Brabantio, Braddoch-I, Bremen, Briquet, Brittany, Broadbean, Brooch, Brussels, Bruxelles, Buckhound, Bullfrog, Caius, Calf, Calpurnia, Calvados, Canidus, Canticle, Caphis, Capt T. D. Gregg, Carcassone, Carical, Carinthia, Casement, Catalan, Cato, Cawdor, Cayote, Celeste, Charleroi, Cherokee, Chicken, Chiron, Cimber, Ciney, Cisco, Citronelle, Civet, Claribel, Claudius, Clowder, Coal, Codford, Coevorden, Colan, Colette, Collect, Collie, Collossus, Cominius, Conjugal, Coolant, Coolant Blue, Cordelet, Coriolanus, Corona, Courante, Crowd, D-Day, Danbury, Daranus, Defiance, Delphine, Denver, Deserter, Diane, Dicing, Dingo, Dolabella, Donaldbain, Donum, Downen, Drau Valley, Draughts, Dressmaker, Drop, Drybrook, Duncan, Duncery, Duval, Electricity, Escape, Exfiltration, FIL, Flemish Clandestine Press, Foxtrot, France, Frankfurt, Gavotte, Geneva, Germany, Gofer, Graimont, Graulhet, Group G, Hainault, Halle, Hamburg, Handbag, Heilbronn, Herminie, Holland, Huguette, Huy, Ida, Incendiary Devices, Infiltration, Irland, ISK, Italian Underground, Italy, Jedburgh, Kidnapping, Klagenfurt, Kootwyk, Kurt Koenig, Le Creusot, Légion Belge, Liège, Lisbon, Locket, Louise, Lucie, Mail, Maj Lett, Maquis, Marche, Marche en Famenne, Mastiff, Mazamet, Meffel, Minister of Finance, Mitten, MNB, Modena, Monique, Motor Sabotage, Necklage, Nelly, Neufchateau, Nicole Gaumont, Nina, Nivelle, North Sea, Odette, Office National du Travail, Operations, Partisans, Pau, Pedaso, Piacenza, PID, Piedmont, Pierlot, Power Plants, POWs, Railways, Reggio, Rivoli Airfield, Rochefort, Roland, Ruhr, Sabotage, Sash, Secret Army, Secrets Operation, Siena, Simone, Slazburg, SOE, Spain, Spanish, Spezia, Stanley, Stéphanie, Stuttgart, Sudetenland, Sureté, Suzanne, Tabella, Tante Caro, Taro River, Toulouse, Tournai, Trains Derailment, Turin, Turtle, Tybalt Claudius, Tyrol, U-Boats, Udine, Ursule, Valérie, Violet, Violette, VLF Radio, Western Europe, Yvonne, Zeltweg Airfield, Zone IV

Special Operations Executive Summary of Operations in Western Europe
This summary refers only to those operations with the fullest material in the files. For reasons of space it does not refer to every operation mentioned in the records. Similarly, the newly released records do not contain evidence on every operation which was mounted by the sections.
Source : Adam Matthew Publications
Continue Reading >>>














