Thursday, May 9, 2024

The conditions in the camps were inhumane, and women were often subjected to forced labor, starvation, and medical experiments.

The conditions in the camps were inhumane, and women were often subjected to forced labor, starvation, and medical experiments.


Women were treated differently in concentration camps than men. The camp was designed to dehumanize prisoners, and women were often subjected to sexual abuse and other forms of torture including.

One of the most notorious concentration camps where women were held was Auschwitz-Birkenau. There, women were subjected to forced labor, starvation, and medical experimentation. Many were killed in gas chambers or through other forms of execution.

The camp was designed to dehumanize prisoners, and women were often subjected to sexual abuse and other forms of torture.

Despite the atrocities that women faced in concentration camps, many managed to survive and tell their stories.

Some even organized resistance movements within the camps, showing remarkable bravery and resilience in the face of overwhelming adversity.

Today, their stories serve as a reminder of the horrors of the Holocaust and the need to ensure that such atrocities never happen again.

It consisted of Auschwitz I, the main camp (Stammlager) in Oświęcim; Auschwitz II-Birkenau, a concentration and extermination camp with gas chambers; Auschwitz III-Monowitz, a labor camp for the chemical conglomerate IG Farben; and dozens of subcamps. The camps became a major site of the Nazis' final solution to the Jewish question.

After Germany sparked World War II by invading Poland in September 1939, the Schutzstaffel (SS) converted Auschwitz I, an army barracks, into a prisoner-of-war camp.

The initial transport of political detainees to Auschwitz consisted almost solely of Poles for whom the camp was initially established.

The bulk of inmates were Polish for the first two years. In May 1940, German criminals brought to the camp as functionaries established the camp's reputation for sadism.

 Prisoners were beaten, tortured, and executed for the most trivial reasons. The first gassings—of Soviet and Polish prisoners—took place in block 11 of Auschwitz I around August 1941.

Construction of Auschwitz II began the following month, and from 1942 until late 1944 freight trains delivered Jews from all over German-occupied Europe to its gas chambers. Of the 1.3 million people sent to Auschwitz, 1.1 million were murdered.

Kazimiera Mika, a ten-year-old Polish girl, mourns the death of her older sister, who was killed in a field near Jana Ostroroga Street in Warsaw during a German air raid by Luftwaffe.

Kazimiera Mika, a ten-year-old Polish girl, mourns the death of her older sister, who was killed in a field near Jana Ostroroga Street in Warsaw during a German air raid by Luftwaffe.


Kazimiera Mika, a ten-year-old Polish girl, mourns the death of her older sister, who was killed in a field near Jana Ostroroga Street in Warsaw during a German air raid by Luftwaffe.

Photographer Julien Bryan described the scene in ‘Warsaw: 1939 Siege; 1959 Warsaw Revisited’: “As we drove by a small field at the edge of town we were just a few minutes too late to witness a tragic event, the most incredible of all. 

Seven women had been digging potatoes in a field.There was no flour in their district, and they were desperate for food. 

Suddenly two German planes appeared from nowhere and dropped two bombs only two hundred yards away on a small home. Two women in the house were killed.

The potato diggers dropped flat upon the ground, hoping to be unnoticed. After the bombers had gone, the women returned to their work. They had to have food.”

“But the Nazi fliers were not satisfied with their work. In a few minutes they came back and swooped down to within two hundred feet of the ground, this time raking the field with machine-gun fire. Two of the seven women were killed. The other five escaped somehow.

“While I was photographing the bodies, a little ten-year old girl came running up and stood transfixed by one of the dead.

The woman was her older sister. The child had never before seen death and couldn’t understand why her sister would not speak to her...

The child looked at us in bewilderment. I threw my arm about her and held her tightly, trying to comfort her. She cried. So did I and the two Polish officers who were with me...

In 1962 Clint Eastwood appeared as a guest in the popular tv show, Mr Ed.Clint was riding high on the success of his own show.

In 1962 Clint Eastwood appeared as a guest in the popular tv show, Mr Ed.Clint was riding high on the success of his own show, Rawhide, but it wouldn’t be long before he appeared in his breakout role as The Man With No Name.


The show was written especially for him and was entitled, Clint Eastwood Meets Mr Ed and he was to act as himself.

Many actors have admitted that the hardest role is to act as themselves and Clint admitted this was true of him. Perhaps surprisingly, he said that the experience made him a better actor.

 Incidentally, it wasn’t the first time he appeared with a talking animals having acted with Francis the Talking Mule some years earlier, Francis In The Navy.

That's when I first caught on that I didn't want to overthink things — I was asking myself a lot of questions you shouldn't pose, like, 'What would the real me do in this situation? 

The hardest thing for a professional actor to do is to play themselves. Most actors are hiding behind roles and don't know who they really are.

Also appearing in the same episode was the beautiful Donna Douglas, who would herself achieve great fame just a few months later as Elly May Clampett in, The Beverly Hillbillies


Wednesday, May 8, 2024

The worst and terrible execution of Dancer and spy Meta Hari is executed by firing squad.

October 15, 1917, Dancer and spy Mata Hari is executed by firing squad. 



Mata Hari spent much of her career claiming that she was raised as an Indian temple dancer. In reality, however, she was born Margaretha Zelle on August 7, 1876, and grew up the daughter of a haberdasher in the Dutch town of Leeuwarden. 

Desperate for adventure, at age 18 she answered a newspaper ad and wed a much older army captain named Rudolf MacLeod. 

His military career later took the couple to Indonesia, where they had two children, but their marriage was plagued by infidelity and domestic violence. Following the death of their young son, they moved back to Europe and divorced. 

The 27-year-old Margaretha was left impoverished. In 1903, after losing custody of her daughter, she moved to Paris and looked to start over. “I wanted to live like a colorful butterfly in the sun,” she later said.

It was in the City of Lights that Margaretha Zelle reinvented herself as an artist. Drawing on her experiences in the Dutch East Indies, she developed a “Hindu” dance act and began performing under the name “Lady Gresha MacLeod.” As part of each routine, she would cast off a series of colorful robes and veils until she was left nearly nude. 

“I never could dance well,” she later admitted. “People came to see me because I was the first who dared to show myself naked to the public.” To add to her mystique, Margaretha adopted the stage name “Mata Hari,” a Malay phrase meaning “eye of the day.”

Audiences were entranced by Mata Hari’s claims that her rhythmic, undulating movements were part of an ancient temple rite from the Orient, and her shows quickly became a sensation. “Mata Hari personifies all the poetry of India,” one reviewer wrote, “its mysticism, its voluptuousness, its languor, its hypnotizing charm.” 

Declared a “Star of Dance” in 1908, the olive-skinned beauty spent the next several years traveling Europe and performing before sold out crowds. She also began affairs with a series of military officers and wealthy aristocrats, many of whom showered her gifts and cash. 

“Tonight I dine with Count A and tomorrow with Duke B,” she once quipped. “If I don’t have to dance, I make a trip with Marquis C. I avoid serious liaisons.”

By 1914, however, Mata Hari’s dalliances with rich men had become a matter of financial survival. She was now nearly 40, and she had watched her dancing career slowly stagnate. Her problems only mounted with the outbreak of World War I. 

She was in Berlin at the time, and when she tried to travel to France, the Germans confiscated her luggage and bank accounts. She was forced to return to her neutral homeland of Holland, where she resumed an old affair with a wealthy Dutch baron.

The details of Mata Hari’s espionage career remain sketchy, but it seems to have begun in the fall of 1915, when she was approached by Karl Kroemer, the honorary German consul in Amsterdam. 

Kroemer evidently considered her high-class contacts and neutral Dutch citizenship a valuable asset, so he offered her 20,000 francs to become a spy for the Kaiser. 

The cash-strapped dancer accepted the money—she later claimed she considered it payback for the assets seized from her a year earlier—but whether she actually took part in espionage is unclear. Whatever the case, the 39-year-old was assigned a German codename: “H 21.”

Over the next several months, Mata Hari continued traveling through Europe and carrying out flings with military officers and politicians. 

Her constant movements—not to mention her presence in Germany at the beginning of the war—had soon attracted the attention of British intelligence, which suspected her of being an enemy agent. 

After questioning Mata Hari when she passed through England, the British cautioned their French allies to watch her closely. 

“Although she was thoroughly searched and nothing incriminating found,” a report read, “she is regarded by Police and Military to be not above suspicion, and her subsequent movements should be watched.”

Mata Hari only sank deeper into wartime intrigue in 1916. That summer, a French intelligence operative named Georges Ladoux approached her in Paris with yet another lucrative espionage offer—this time to spy for France. 

Ladoux was well aware of Britain’s suspicions that she was a German agent, but he seems to have considered the recruitment a means of either entrapping her or turning her to his side. By then, Mata Hari had begun a passionate romance with Vladimir de Masloff, a 21-year-old Russian army captain.

 Anxious to make money to start a new life with him, she accepted Ladoux’s deal and announced her intentions to seduce military secrets out of high-ranking Germans.

Following an abortive attempt to travel to Belgium in November 1916, Mata Hari ended up in neutral Spain, where she bedded a German major named Arnold Kalle. 

Just what transpired between the two is the subject of much debate. The dancer evidently made a bumbling attempt to glean information from Kalle, but she may have also offered him her services as a spy. 

In either case, by the time she returned to Paris, a French wireless station at the Eiffel Tower had intercepted coded messages that Kalle sent to Berlin. Each of the communiqués referred to agent “H 21,” whom the French quickly identified as Mata Hari. 

Kalle’s messages may have been a calculated ploy to expose her—he allegedly sent the telegrams in an old code that the Germans knew the Allies had cracked—but they were all the evidence Ladoux needed. 

On February 13, 1917, Mata Hari was arrested, charged with espionage and confined to Paris’ infamous Saint-Lazare prison.

When not languishing in her damp, lice-ridden cell, the dancer spent the next several months under interrogation. 

While she spoke frankly about her promiscuous lifestyle, she was adamant that she had never committed espionage for any country other than France. “A courtesan, I admit it,” she said. 

“A spy, never!” When questioned about Kalle’s messages, she came clean about accepting money from the Germans, but denied passing them any secrets. “I never considered myself a German agent with a number,” she pleaded, “because I never did anything for them.”

Mata Hari’s espionage trial commenced on July 24, 1917. Despite a lack of evidence about the secrets she might have passed to the Germans, the prosecution blamed her for the deaths of thousands of Allied soldiers and pointed to her numerous affairs as proof that she had been gathering intelligence. 

“The evil that this woman has done is unbelievable,” prosecutor Andre Mornet concluded in his final statement. 

“This is perhaps the greatest woman spy of the century.” In the end, it took a military tribunal less than an hour to find her guilty and sentence her to death.

The question of Mata Hari’s guilt continues to fascinate historians to this day. The documents from her trial were sealed for several decades, but many of the researchers who’ve since studied them have concluded that the case against her was flimsy. 

Most of the prosecution’s evidence was circumstantial, and her defense attorney was prevented from introducing witnesses that might have backed up her claims. 

While many scholars remain convinced that Mata Hari was indeed a spy, others contend that she was scapegoated or even framed in order to raise French morale during one of the darkest periods of the war. Nevertheless, the true extent of her espionage may never be known for certain.

Whether guilty or innocent, at dawn on November 17, 1917, Mata Hari was driven to a field on the outskirts of Paris. 

After refusing a blindfold, she was placed against a wooden stake and executed by a firing squad of twelve French soldiers. 

Ever the performer, she supposedly blew a kiss to the troops moments before the fatal shots rang out.

During the Battle of the Bulge, an infantryman and a medic of the 80th Infantry Division take a short break from the war to read a comic in Luxembourg 🪖

During the Battle of the Bulge, an infantryman and a medic of the 80th Infantry Division take a short break from the war to read a comic in Luxembourg 🪖


Lasting six brutal weeks from December 1944 to January 1945, the Battle of the Bulge took place during frigid weather conditions, with some 30 German divisions attacking battle-fatigued Allied troops across 85 miles of the densely wooded Ardennes Forest in Belgium. 

Called “the greatest American battle of the war” by Winston Churchill, the clash was Hitler’s last major offensive in World War II against the Western Front.

 It would prove to be costly for the US Army, which suffered roughly 90,000 casualties and lost 19,000 men killed in action. 

The 746th FEAF Band recorded the only known album by a frontline band unit in the jungles of the Pacific.

 Stream the music of front line WW2 on Spotify and Apple Music or download a digital copy of the album for free on the band website. Streaming is free….freedom is not.🇺🇸

📸 American soldiers pose for the camera with their weapons, during the Battle of the Bulge in January of 1945.

📸 American soldiers pose for the camera with their weapons, during the Battle of the Bulge in January of 1945.


Lasting six brutal weeks from December 1944 to January 1945, the Battle of the Bulge took place during frigid weather conditions, with some 30 German divisions attacking battle-fatigued Allied troops across 85 miles of the densely wooded Ardennes Forest in Belgium.

Called “the greatest American battle of the war” by Winston Churchill, the clash was Hitler’s last major offensive in World War II against the Western Front.

It would prove to be costly for the US Army, which suffered roughly 90,000 casualties and lost 19,000 men killed in action.

The 746th FEAF Band recorded the only known album by a frontline band unit in the jungles of the Pacific. Stream and add these veterans music to your Spotify and Apple Music playlists or download a digital copy of the album for free on the band website.

Your streams and downloads will help these World War II veterans earn a Best Historical Grammy nomination later this year. Streaming is free….freedom is not.🇺🇸

During the Battle of the Bulge, Paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division run a phone line over a knocked out Tiger II.

During the Battle of the Bulge, Paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division run a phone line over a knocked out Tiger II Tank as a woman and two young ladies walk by in January of 1945.


Lasting six brutal weeks from December 1944 to January 1945, the Battle of the Bulge took place during frigid weather conditions, with some 30 German divisions attacking battle-fatigued Allied troops across 85 miles of the densely wooded Ardennes Forest in Belgium. 

Called “the greatest American battle of the war” by Winston Churchill, the clash was Hitler’s last major offensive in World War II against the Western Front.

 It would prove to be costly for the US Army, which suffered roughly 90,000 casualties and lost 19,000 men killed in action. 

The 746th FEAF Band recorded the only known album by a frontline band unit in the jungles of the Pacific.

 Stream and add these veterans music to your Spotify and Apple Music playlists or download a digital copy of the album for free on the band website.

Your streams and downloads will help these World War II veterans earn a Best Historical Grammy nomination later this year. Streaming is free….freedom is not.🇺🇸

James Inglis - The Britain’s fastest execution on record took place at Strangeways on Tuesday the 8th of May 1951.

James Inglis - The Britain’s  fastest execution on record took place at Strangeways on Tuesday the 8th of May 1951. Albert Pierrepoint, assisted by Sid Dernly, had to almost run with James Inglis from the condemned suite to the gallows.


Just seven seconds later his lifeless body was dangling in the cell below. This is about half the typical time for a hanging in this period.

Inglis had been convicted of the murder of 50 year old Alice Morgan, whom he had battered and strangled to death at her home in Eton Terrace on Cambridge Street in Hull on the evening of Thursday the 1st of February 1951. 

Alice was a prostitute and she and Inglis quarrelled over her payment, having spent some time drinking together before she took him home for sex. The following day, he nearly killed his landlady, Amy Gray. 

Alice’s body was discovered by the postman, Thomas Brougham, who on Saturday the 3rd of February had tried three times to deliver a parcel.

The third time he noticed the door wasn’t locked and went in.  Alice was lying on the settee with a silk stocking round her neck.  She also had facial injuries from being punched.

Inglis was arrested at 11.30 pm. on the 3rd of February.  He told police that he and Alice had been out for a drink and that she had complained of feeling unwell.  They left the pub around 8 p.m. and he had put her to bed.

He returned to the pub at 9.10 p.m.  He admitted to punching her in the face but did not recall strangling her.  Afterwards he could not sleep and kept seeing her “bloody face”.

At his trial, in Leeds before Mr. Justice Ormerod on the 19th and 20th of April, the defence of insanity was put forward by his counsel, Raymond Hinchcliffe, but this was rejected by the jury. 

He was transferred to Strangeways and hanged three weeks later, as he did not appeal his sentence.

Sid Dernley recalls in his memoirs that Inglis tried to help Pierrepoint pinion his arms and was smiling when they entered the condemned cell.

Inglis was quite a small man at 5’ 6” tall and 139 lbs. in weight.  Albert set the drop at 8’ 0” which caused fracture/dislocation of the 2nd cervical vertebra.

Monday, May 6, 2024

On August 25, 1944, during World War II, Paris was finally liberated from German control by the Allies after four brutal years of occupation.

On August 25, 1944, during World War II, Paris was finally liberated from German control by the Allies after four brutal years of occupation.


German troops took control of Paris in June 1940, following a stunning blitzkrieg invasion of France.Strict rationing of food and other important supplies began soon after the German take over, and many Parisians began to go hungry. 

By 1942, thousands of the city’s Jewish population were rounded up and sent away, most to the horrific Auschwitz concentration camp. 

Underground groups of French resistance fighters attempted to keep up a constant subversion of the Germans, covertly launching raids, ambushes, and other attacks meant to cause disruption in any way possible. Finally, after four years, the Allies arrived back in France following the D-Day invasion.

Americans, British, French, and others fought their way slowly but surely through the hedgerow country of Normandy, facing camouflaged and entrenched Germans at every turn. By late August, they were on the outskirts of the French capital.

On August 25, troops of the French 2nd Armored Division and the American 4th Infantry Division captured the city after encountering only light resistance from Germans under the command of General Dietrich von Choltitz. 

This was in stark contrast to the orders Choltitz had received from Hitler just days before. The Fuhrer had instructed him to fight to last man, and to leave the Allies only “a field of ruin”. 

Hitler even went so far as to instruct Choltitz to destroy all of the city’s famous landmarks, but this order, too, was not obeyed.

On the 25th, as the city was falling, Choltitz was arrested by the Allies, at which time he promptly signed a document surrendering the city to Charles De Gaulle’s new French government. The City of Lights was finally back under Allied control.

Five hundred Canadians lost their lives after landing in Sicily as part of Britain’s Eighth Army on July 10, 1943.

Five hundred Canadians lost their lives after landing in Sicily as part of Britain’s Eighth Army on July 10, 1943.


Two months later, a combined Canadian, British and American force made the first full-scale invasion of mainland Europe, attacking on the toe of Italy and reaching Naples on Oct. 1. Later in 1943, Canadian troops fought brutal battles at Ortona and Monte Cassino.

 In May 1944, they took part in the costly, but successful, attack on the Hitler Line north of Cassino, then moved north through Italy, breaking the Gothic Line and enemy defences at Rimini, until reaching the Senio River early in 1945. Nearly 6,000 Canadians died while fighting in Italy.

A COUPLES' REMARKABLE LOVE STORY DURING WORLD WAR II AND THE HOLOCAUST WAS LEFT UNTOLD...UNTIL NOW.

A COUPLES' REMARKABLE LOVE STORY DURING WORLD WAR II AND THE HOLOCAUST WAS LEFT UNTOLD...UNTIL NOW.


Hello  My name is Michael Ruskin and I am writing to share a very important book with you.  It is a remarkable love story between two people which was left untold for nearly 80 years.

And now for the first time, their story has been made into a book which contains a message for all of us!

THE VOW, A Love Story and the Holocaust is based on the lives of two people who fell in love in the shadows of the Holocaust.

The two people were my parents, the late David and Dora Ruskin, Holocaust survivors from the country of Lithuania.

Through the pages of my book you will be taken back to a time when death and destruction darkened the skies over Europe by one man, Adolf Hitler and the 3rd Reich, As his reign of terror swept across central and eastern Europe enslaving and killing millions, there were two people whose love would not be denied, even during the brutal occupation of Lithuania (1941-1945) which tragically took the lives of  nearly 97% of the country's Jewish population.( the highest percentage of Jewish deaths by country in Europe). 

When you consider the odds of both my parents surviving, there is little room to doubt they were a "miracle couple" who deserve to be honored...their legacy preserved.

To preview my book describing how their unwavering love, faith and courage took them from the ashes of the Holocaust to the shores of New York's Ellis Island.

Was the Wehrmacht’s High Command aware of their logistical limitations while they planned Operation Barbarossa?

Was the Wehrmacht’s High Command aware of their logistical limitations while they planned Operation Barbarossa?




Originally Answered: Was the Wehrmacht’s High Command aware of their logistical limitations while they planned Operation Barbarossa ?

According to my father, who was an officer in the Transportation Corps, the High Command did not understand logistics for mechanized warfare.

They had simple calculators for how many miles tanks and trucks might travel per day, and did not realize the limits to how far tanks (especially) can travel before breaking down and needing serious repair and repair parts.

By the Fall of 1942, much of the original equipment (pictured) was worn out, and parts were being cannibalized. Spare parts were a nightmare, he said, because much of the truck fleet was captured equipment of many types.

He really admired the Ford trucks the Soviets had, which had a spare engine pack behind the driver’s cabin. When something went wrong with the engine or transmission, they were quickly unbolted and a new pack was thrown in.

Although he came up with many Field Repair Expedients (he was an automotive engineer), he said there was a limit to how much you could use wires and duct tape to repair vehicles.

The motorized forces had no tank transporters other than rail. The many kilometers chewed up the tanks, one by one. The cold added to the problem, as lubricants froze, and the mud of spring and autumn chewed up more fuel and repair parts.

He had pretty wide experience, having operated with his battalion from Moscow to Leningrad to Stalingrad (up to 20 November, 1942), and said that lack of understanding and providing for logistics was a critical weakness of the Axis (not just the German) forces.

Being constantly on the watch for partisans slowed him down, too. Although the locals were relatively cooperative while the Axis moved forward, even pulling down statues of Stalin (pictured), they were of course less so as the Axis retreated, and travel at night became so dangerous it was slow or impossible.

He evaded attack by the Soviets several times, he said, only because his vehicles were so variable and coated with mud they were not recognizable as German.

He loved his personal car, a Tatra (pictured), which got him great traction—even the middle light in front helped light the way, especially around curves (it was open, whereas the other two lights were either slits or had blue filters by wartime regulations).

His boss in France, Rommel, liked it so much he also got one after he saw dad’s at a dinner meeting in Paris. It was the forerunner of the Porsche, a great design with an air cooled engine.

At times his command vehicle (pictured) was down, and he had to ride around on horses (pictured). Occasionally, he was able to get around on a Fieseler Storch (“Stork”) airplane, which had incredibly short takeoff and landing capability (pictured with my mom in the front of the.

I had the privilege of speaking with George Patton’s son, who was also an Army general, and even commanded his dad’s 2nd Armored Division.

He told me his dad studied the Civil War extensively—not just for the combat actions that were the sole focus at West Point, but for the logistics involved, such as the standardization of railroad gauges by the North and the failure to do so by the South.

He also told me his dad (like general Rommel) would initially ask his tank commanders what their fuel requirements were, and would then double that for his planning.

Later on, both generals learned that tank unit commanders would start to “fluff” their requirements to get extra—the kind of thing they learned by being on the front lines instead of behind a desk.

Patton was a major backer of the Red Ball Express in WW2, the convoy system with 6,000 trucks that supplied 12,500 tons of supplies a day.

The trucks, marked with red balls, had priority at all times, including some routes reserved only for them (to the annoyance of many generals).

Named after a railroad code (red balls signified a train segment had priority), the Red Ball Express and the (primarily) African-American soldiers that drove its trucks were a major contributor to victory in the West. Patton’s understanding of the tricks and challenges of logistics was one more indicator of what a great general he was.

It’s great to see a number of Quora members understand the importance of this, because, in my experience, most generals do not.

What is it like to take point position in a formation? Do soldiers dread this role?

What is it like to take point position in a formation? Do soldiers dread this role?



Nobody likes to walk point. The point man is at the head of a patrol in enemy territory and is usually the first soldier to get shot at.

I remember the first time I was told to walk point: our battalion conducted a search and destroy operation in the Bosnian mountains and just one minute before my platoon would march into enemy territory, my commander walked up to me and said: “Is it okay for you to walk point? Now?” That came as a surprise.

 Only two days earlier, a soldier of our company got shot in the stomach while walking point. Now it was my turn!

I could have said no, but to be honest, I also felt honored that my commander came to me and not to somebody else. Not every soldier is able to make a good point man: A US Army infantry point man in Vietnam

A point man has to be very perceptive and must be able to spot an often well camouflaged enemy. He must know how to detect landmines and have an eye for possible ambush situations. 

At the same time he must be quick and not slow down his unit’s movements, an impossible task!

Everything went well, we were chasing the enemy and we decided that I would continue to walk point for the rest of the operation. Once I got used to my new job I was quite thrilled.

Soldiers rarely volunteer for any combat related activity and this is especially true for the point man position. 

When your commander asks you to walk point you neither say “yes” nor “no”. You simply clench your teeth and do the job.

German face of The battle of Bulge.Famous picture of Waffen-SS soldier: Walter Ambrusch, during the Battle of the Bulge.

German face of The battle of Bulge.Famous picture of Waffen-SS soldier: Walter Ambrusch, during the Battle of the Bulge. 




The desperation on his face has come to symbolize the state of Germany's exhausted military in 1945.
Some sources  states that this photo is not of Walter Ambrusch.

Another source state that, 
A young soldier from the 1st SS Panzer Division carrying ammunition boxes forward during the Battle of the Bulge after the men had ambushed and completely destroyed the US Army 14th Cavalry Group on the road between Poteau and Recht, Belgium, 18 December, 1944.

Ambush at Poteau – Battle of the Bulge, December the 18th 1944.  MG42 Machine Gunner possibly belonging to the 2.Kompanie/1.SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment/LSSAH, Kampfgruppe Hansen at Poteauer Strasse, Belgium.

   Early in the morning an American convoy of the 14th Cavalry Group was ambushed by SS Kampfgruppe “Hansen” . 

With help from the heavy fog 'Hansen' achieved complete surprise and forced the allies to abandon their vehicles and pull back to the town of Poteau to set up a hasty defence perimeter.  

Many have tried to identify the face in this most famous wartime photo , it has been claimed that it is not a 'Walter Ambrusch' but more than likely to be 'Hans Tragarsky' who survived the war and died on the 7th January 2011.  

He was 23 when this photo was taken and all that he recalled about that day was that his unit ambushed a convoy of American armour & soft skinned vehicles and, after the fight was over, they took food, weapons and cigarettes from the US wreckage. 

Cameramen from the "Propagandakompanie" came by, stopped and asked if they could take pictures.... nothing spectacular, another skirmish, another day.

  The images found their way into US hands (from a captured cameraman as a newsreel shows us) so at least we can see the cine images for ourselves to get a feel for what may have transpired.

1944: The Hurtgen Forest - slaughter of the U.S army on German soil...

1944: The Hurtgen Forest - slaughter of the U.S army on German soil...


79 years ago today in 1944, a bloody clash of arms that was set to become the longest single battle ever fought by the U.S army and the longest battle of the war fought on German soil began as American troops entered the jaws of the Hürtgen Forest.

 Though largely overshadowed due to the wider coverage given to the subsequent Battle of the Bulge, the battle at Hürtgen was to be one of the fiercest fought on the Western Front with many soldiers coming to call it the ‘Death Factory’ or ‘Meat Grinder’ of the U.S army (U.S troops pictured).

In the aftermath of the D-Day landings, Allied forces had swept over much of France and the Low Countries in a seemingly unstoppable tide. 

Within a couple of months, they were faced with the western frontier of the Reich itself.

 Eager to keep the momentum going and to defeat the enemy as swiftly as possible, the Americans chose to cross the Rhine and invade Germany. 

The ancient medieval city of Aachen near the Belgian border came under siege. U.S commanders however had severely underestimated the enemy, believing that after their retreat following the Normandy Landings the German soldier would be psychologically exhausted and would easily yield to them. 

The contrary however would prove to be the case. The German garrison at Aachen under Oberst Gerhard Wilck proved to be a tougher nut to crack than expected. 

All along the line moreover Bradley and Hodges’ soldiers were encountering especially stiff resistance from the enemy. 

The exact motives which led to the attack on the Hürtgenwald have remained the subject of debate amongst military historians, but it has generally been surmised that Bradley, Hodges and Collins feared on the one hand that the Germans might use the Rur dam to release water that would swamp their forces. 

The best way to take hold of the dam was to head through the forest. On the other hand, they may have hoped that cutting through the forest and seizing the town of Schmidt would serve as an outflanking manoeuvre to prevent any further reinforcement of the garrison in Aachen or anywhere else along the German frontier. 

Others still have claimed that the decision to attack the forest was nothing short of a blunder. 

A military blunder was certainly what it appeared to be to the Wehrmacht. General Walter Model and his comrade could hardly believe his luck. 

Known as ‘The Führer’s Fireman’, Model was a genius of defensive warfare who had proved his worth many times over on the Eastern Front at holding the line against the Soviet onslaught. 

In the densely wooded terrain of the Hürtgenwald, the Americans’ overwhelming advantage in numbers and air superiority would count for nothing, the trees concealing enemy positions from the air and hampering the use of tanks and vehicles. 

The forest had been prepared well in advance as part of the Siegfried Line with many concrete bunkers, blockhouses and minefields straddling the woody domain, their presence concealed with mud and snow. 

The forest was also laced with hidden lines of barbed wire and various booby traps. The cover afforded by the conifers moreover meant that it was especially difficult to use any artillery or mortars.

 The Wehrmacht could make excellent use of the terrain to outflank and infiltrate the enemy, cropping up behind their lines, or holding out until the Americans had passed to attack them suddenly from the rear.

 With the weather taking a turn for the worst, the air growing cold and wet, the battlefield became an undulating morass of mud that was almost impossible to traverse and even harder to provide supplies to or get wounded back out. In short, the Germans had created a nightmarish death trap for the Americans.

In terms of the forces facing one another, both the Americans and the Germans were relying on green recruits. 

The Americans had lost many men during the battles that had followed Normandy and were now sending well-trained but ultimately unexperienced warriors into the meat grinder. 

Having lost so many men in Russia, the Germans too were relying at this stage on boys and old men to plug the gaps in their greatly diminished ranks. 

A crucial difference though was that unlike the Americans, the Germans had the asset of crack veterans that had years of fighting experience and commanders who were well accustomed to the necessities of fighting in winter and in forested terrain.

After the bombardments of the U.S air force and the advances of the Sherman tanks came to nothing, the infantry was sent in to clear the forest. No sooner had they entered than they began suffering especially heavy casualties. 

American soldiers had been trained to fall flat on the ground whenever they heard an incoming artillery shell. 

In the Hürtgenwald however every shell and mortar would explode prematurely after bouncing off the tree canopy, leading to a showering of burning hot shrapnel and splinters of shattered wood over the hapless soldiers. 

Eventually they realised that they had a better chance of preserving themselves if they hugged the trees. 

After the first day alone, the 60th Infantry Regiment’s 2nd Battalion was reduced to a mere third of its strength, having been cut to pieces by the Germans.

 For every inch of ground gained the Americans were made to pay with their blood as they were mercilessly cut down, harassed, and terrorised by the Germans. 

After a month of fighting they had gained 3,000 yards at the cost of 4,500 men. 

Fresh units were sent in to relieve the battered survivors and to take the Germans on from a different angle only to find themselves with neither air or armoured support. 

As October turned to November moreover, the weather turned increasingly grim and impeded the American advances even more. 

Though American forces eventually managed to cross the Kall Valley, cut the German supply route to Monschau and capture the objective point of Schmidt, their own supply lines were still highly limited by the poor terrain and lack of roads.

 Before long the 116th Panzer division had rumbled onto the scene and blasted the Americans out of Schmidt, hurling them backwards until they were met with a small number of Sherman tanks who managed to destroy five Panzer IV’s. 

By the second week of November the number of American wounded was in the thousands and a German doctor brokered a ceasefire to tend to the injured and mutilated souls.

 During this ceasefire many American soldiers’ lives were saved by German medics before they were sent back across the dividing line to fight and kill one another again. 

While the wounded were being tended to the American warlords drew up plans for a fresh offensive that would take them to the Rur river.

 Known as Operation Queen, the Americans deemed tanks to be essential this time and engineers began demolishing the forest to make routes for the armoured juggernauts. 

Though objectives were taken, the progress once again was slow and painful as the Germans put up a hard fight at every turn.

 Only with fresh bullet-fodder and elite units such as the Rangers was any ground gained and even then the enemy continued to make counterattacks for every morsel of German soil lost. 

By December the battle was over and the Battle of the Bulge was set to begin.

On the whole the battle was a defensive victory for the Germans who incurred enormous casualties on the Americans.

 Between thirty-three and fifty-five thousand Americans were lost in the battle, a quarter of them being lost not in combat but to diseases, frost-bite, trauma or accidents.

 The Germans meanwhile lost about 28,000 men and though the cost had been lower for them, in the long run they needed their men more than the Americans did, a fact which was clearly to be lost on them when they launched the ill-fated Battle of the Bulge. 

The forest of Hürtgen was not taken and cleared until the middle of February 1945.

On this day in 1924, President Calvin and First Lady Grace Coolidge lose their youngest son.

On this day in 1924, President Calvin and First Lady Grace Coolidge lose their youngest son.


The teenager had been under the care of doctors at Walter Reed Army hospital for several days.

It was an unexpected and shocking tragedy that left the Coolidges devastated.

The 16-year-old boy had been playing tennis on the White House lawn just a few days earlier when he got a seemingly harmless blister. He wasn’t wearing socks that day.

 Unfortunately, the blister got infected. It’s the type of injury that would be quickly treated with antibiotics today, but back then the infection was life threatening. 

Needless to say, Calvin Jr. was soon very ill.

President Coolidge is often remembered as a stoic figure, but his son’s illness left him distraught. How frustrating to hold such a powerful elected position, but to be completely powerless in the one area that matters: 

Coolidge could not help or cure his own son. He must have been desperate for *something* to do because he soon took an unusual step:

 He caught a small rabbit in the White House garden and brought it to young Calvin’s room. He knew that his son would love it, and he hoped to bring a moment of cheer.

What an odd time that must have been. Remember, Coolidge had then been in office for less than a year. He was supposed to be celebrating his first Independence Day as President, not hovering by his sick son’s bedside.

 He was also supposed to be celebrating his own birthday. Coolidge was the only American President born on July 4.

None of it was to be. Presumably, Coolidge was never again able to commemorate his birthday—and the nation’s birthday—without also remembering and mourning those final days with his son.

Future Vice President Charles Dawes remembers passing the door of Calvin’s room at about that time. He saw the President sitting near Calvin Jr.’s bedside.

 “I think I have never witnessed such a look of agony and despair that was on the president’s face,” Dawes concluded.

Ultimately, Calvin Jr. was unable to overcome the infection. He died of blood poisoning on July 7.

President Coolidge was devastated.

A journalist happened to be with him soon after Calvin Jr. had passed away. The President was crying. “He was not the president of the United States,” newspaperman John Lambert reported.

 “He was the father, overcome by grief and love for his boy. He wept unafraid, unashamed. The brief moments seemed to bear the age of years.” 

In the weeks before Calvin’s death, Coolidge had been nominated by the Republican Party to serve as its nominee during the 1924 election. 

Coolidge was elected that year, but his heart wasn’t really in it anymore. When the 1928 election came around, no one could convince him to run for a new term.
 
Did he blame himself for his son’s death? After all, if Coolidge had not been President, there would have been no occasion for a game of tennis at the White House.

“We do not know what might have happened to him under other circumstances,” Coolidge would write, “but if I had not been President he would not have raised a blister on his toe . . . . The ways of Providence are often beyond our understanding.

 It seemed to me that the world had need of the work that it was probable he could do. I do not know why such a price was exacted for occupying the White House.” 

Many have suffered tragedy and hardship in service of this great nation of ours. President Calvin Coolidge was no exception.

Sunday, May 5, 2024

I have always loved this picture. In case you are not a wrestling person....👇

I have always loved this picture. In case you are not a wrestling person....👇


At the 1972 Munich Olympics, Wilfred Dietrich, 38, executed the greatest throw in wrestling history, on 444-pound Chris Taylor.

 If you wrestled in the 70s, you know this poster. It happened at the 1972 Munich Olympics, in Greco-Roman wrestling.

Grit, Perseverance, Determination, Belief, Confidence, Defiance, Will Power..... Many words could be used to describe what it takes in order to fully commit to the execution of this move, in this moment. 

If you ever need just a picture to show you that anything is possible.....this is it. 

Be inspired today. Realize that you are capable of greatness! The only thing in the way is your own mind.

 Confidence doesn't just appear, you have to achieve in order to believe. Survive in order to thrive. Just do it, to prove your grit. 

Wrap your arms around whatever is in your way and give it a toss!!! 💪

Was Hans Langsdorff a coward?

 Was Hans Langsdorff a coward?



No. Hans Langsdorff was one of those very rare things: a reasonably okay Nazi.

Hans Langsdorff, centre, saluting. Note that the guys around him are giving the Nazi salute, but he isn’t.

For those who’ve never heard of him, Hans Langsdorff was a captain in the Kriegsmarine, the navy of the Third Reich.

He commanded the pocket battleship Graf Spee, and shortly before the outbreak of WW2 he was commanded to take the Graf Spee to the south Atlantic, wait there, and get ready to start sinking allied shipping.

On 20 September 1939, he was given the order to go ahead and attack.

For the next several weeks, the Graf Spee was extremely successful, sinking nine British merchant ships. Langsdorff did his best to observe the Hague Conventions: he tried to avoid killing people, he picked up the crews of the ships he sank and treated them well, and he earned the respect of the ships’ officers.

On 13 December 1939, the Graf Spee spotted what it thought was a cruiser and two destroyers. The Graf Spee had engine trouble and couldn’t outrun them, so it moved to attack.

Only then did they realise they were in fact attacking a heavy cruiser, HMS Exeter, and two light cruisers, HMS Ajax and HMS Achilles.

In the ensuing battle (the Battle of the River Plate), Exeter got heavily damaged but so did Graf Spee, suffering from hits to its fuel-cleaning capacity and stores. Both sides broke off the combat and Langsdorff made for the nearest port, Montevideo in neutral Uruguay.

The Uruguayan authorities had no interest in taking sides, and gave Langsdorff only three days to make major repairs or be interned for the rest of the war.

Langsdorff sought instruction from Berlin, and was told that he couldn’t let the ship be interned, and neither could he let it fall into enemy hands.

The unspoken implication was that Langsdorff should try to fight his way out. But the British were making every effort to make it look like a larger British force was on the way.

On 17 December, the Graf Spee left the port, sailed out to the edge of Uruguayan waters and stopped. The crew left the ship and were ferried away on barges.

Then, pre-laid charges went off and the Graf Spee blew up. She sank, and still lies there, in shallow water.

Langsdorff was taken to Buenos Aires, where he wrote a few letters home.Three days later, he shot himself.

In my view, Langsdorff acted in the best interests of everyone involved, except himself and, arguably, the Third Reich.

He saved both his own crew and the British Navy from what would have been a battle to the death. The Nazis placed no value on human life: Langsdorff did.

To anyone who would call him a coward, I invite them to place themselves in his position and ask what would be the most humane course of action.

If, after that, they would still call him a coward, I invite them to consider their position.

His last days are sympathetically dramatised in one of the best and most gorgeously colourful of 50s British war movies, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s The Battle of the River Plate, where he’s played with understated charm and panache by the great Australian actor Peter Finch:

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Man gets life in prison in Germany for deadly attack on 2 University of Illinois grads.

Man gets life in prison in Germany for deadly attack on 2 University of Illinois grads.


BERLIN (AP) -- An American man was convicted of murder and other charges on Monday for brutally attacking two American women near Germany's famed Neuschwanstein castle last summer and pushing them into a ravine, fatally injuring one of them. He was sentenced to life in prison.

The Kempten state court also convicted the 31-year-old of attempted murder and rape with fatal consequences, the German news agency dpa reported.

Presiding judge Christoph Schwiebacher determined that the defendant bears particularly severe guilt, meaning that he likely won't be eligible for release after 15 years as is usually the case in Germany.

Defendants in the German legal system do not formally enter pleas to charges, but the suspect admitted to the charges when his trial opened on Feb. 19.


Following the Berlin Conference in 1885, King Leopold II established the Congo Free State, marking the beginning of one of history's most horrific genocides.

Following the Berlin Conference in 1885, King Leopold II established the Congo Free State, marking the beginning of one of history's most horrific genocides.



Despite Belgium's lack of interest, Leopold pursued control over the Congo, ultimately purchasing it privately.

Leveraging explorer Henry Morton Stanley's earlier efforts, Leopold secured recognition of his ownership by 13 European nations, establishing the Congo Free State under his personal rule and policing it with a private army.

Initially driven by ivory extraction, the Congo's economic focus shifted to wild rubber harvesting, leading to the implementation of ruthless quotas. 

Exploiting the Congolese through rape, torture, extortion, and murder became commonplace to maintain profitability, with failure to meet quotas resulting in brutal consequences for individuals and their families.

This reign of terror, extensively documented and globally condemned, led to estimates of millions of deaths, widely considered a genocide.

In response to these atrocities, the Congo Reform Association was founded in 1904 by Edmund D. Morel, drawing support from figures like Booker T. Washington and Mark Twain.

Public pressure eventually forced Leopold to relinquish control to Belgium in 1908, where he died the following year.

Despite his legacy as a "King-Builder" in Belgium, financing numerous urban projects, including cultural institutions, it's important to recognize that these were funded through the exploitation of the Congo and its people.

The Battle Of Berlin: May 2nd 1945 – The End Of Nazi Berlin.

The Battle Of Berlin: May 2nd 1945 – The End Of Nazi Berlin.


Matt Robinson...General Weidling surrenders with his staff to the Soviets...Weidling orders that the city’s remaining defenders should surrender...the storming of the Reich Chancellery...the Red Army control the Reichstag entirely...the Zoo Flak tower is taken...Soviet artillery stops firing...

At around 8:30am on May 2nd 1945 – the two Soviet army groups involved in the Battle of Berlin – the 1st Belorussian and the 1st Ukrainian – finally met at their interfront boundary on Savignyplatz.

Two tank armies convened where the German Müncheberg Panzer Division had been holding ground before its attempted breakout the previous night.

This small square on Kantstrasse is still a vibrant part of the Charlottenburg district of west Berlin – an area that saw an influx of Russian refugees in the early 20th century.

Some fleeing persecution, as eastern European jews – others literary exiles such as Boris Pasternak and Vladimir Nabokov.

Members of the intellectual class of Russian that fled the country following the 1917 Bolshevik revolution who would settle in this neighbourhood – earning it the title of Charlottengrad due to its abundance of Russian speakers.

Now the soldiers of the Motherland were on the streets of the Nazi capital. Bringing with them the ideology that many in Charlottengrad had fled from. The Bolshevik Stalinist system that now connected distant Vladivostok to the Elbe.

Most of the soldiers on the streets would be too young to remember anything before the Soviet Union. Many of them had lived the past 28 years under the paternal gaze of Comrade Stalin.

Now the flag of revolution was draped all the way across the European continent – from Moscow to Berlin – and the red banner flew high over the Reichstag.

Across the city – with Adolf Hitler dead and many of the city’s remaining defenders now attempting to navigate their way through the Soviet lines – the official announcement to surrender was being prepared.

Father of 3 beats wife to death over house rent in Rivers.

Father of 3 beats wife to death over house rent in Rivers.


PORT HARCOURT— A father of three children, identified as Michael Chidozie, has allegedly beaten his wife to death in Rivers State over issues around house rent.

The suspect killed his 32-year-old wife, Mrs Ufuoma Chidozie, in the early hours of Tuesday at Mile 4, Port Harcourt.

Police said the suspect has been arrested and detained for further investigation for allegedly beating his wife to death.

The Police Public Relations Officer of the state command, Grace Iringe-Koko, confirmed the arrest of Chidozie, yesterday.

It was gathered that the suspect was arrested, Wednesday by Police personnel attached to Agip Police Division, Mile 4, Port Harcourt, following credible intelligence and transferred to State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department, SCIID, Port Harcourt for discreet investigation.

It was learned that the remains of Ufuoma had bruises believed to have been inflicted on her by her husband.

It was also gathered that the suspect had fled the house after calling the brother of the deceased to come to the house over an emergency.

A source, who preferred anonymity, said when the brother to the victim arrived, he found the lifeless body of his sister, while the suspect was nowhere near home.

The source noted that the suspect had mounted pressure on his wife that she should take responsibility for paying their house rent and that the refusal of the woman to yield had caused a serious argument.

It further alleged that when the victim dropped dead, the suspect fled home, leaving the victim with their three children.

1945 Adolf Hitler Commits Suicide in his underground bunker in Berlin marked the imminent collapse of the Nazi regime and a turning point toward the end of World War II in Europe.

Vigilante father beats and kills man who groomed 11 year old daughter than posts gory video of victim begging for mercy online

The father of an 11-year-old girl who was allegedly the victim of online grooming filmed himself beating the man responsible before killing him in a gory video.

The unidentified man, who was 23, was said to have harassed the girl for several months. 
It is believed he sent pictures to her via Whatsapp and arranged to meet her in the state of Goias, Brazil.

But he had not realised he had actually been talking to the young girl's father. 

When he arrived for the supposed meeting, the man badly beat him and filmed it before killing him.  

A gory video of the attack has been posted online by the girl's father, as a 'warning that those who do wrong, have to pay for it', he said. 

In it the man can be seen bleeding heavily from a gaping wound around his mouth.  

In the video an angry exchange can be heard, with the alleged attacker swearing that he will never again try to contact the young girl.

He can barely speak as he begs for mercy and appears to be being held up by the neck by the older man.

Asked by the girl's father the man, with a swollen lip and face, pleads in Portuguese: 'Never again, never again, never again.' 

The father is said to reply:  'You will learn from this beating that you will now take you b*****d.'

The camera is then taken off the alleged predator's face. He is heard screaming before it cuts out.  

The young man's body was found three days later in the middle of the thicket where the beating took place.

Last year a man jailed for the rape and killing of his one-year-old son was reportedly viciously attacked by inmates at a Brazilian prison after turning himself in.

Reports claimed Daryell Dickson Meneses Xavier was stabbed in the back by fellow convicts and raped repeatedly after details of his crimes spread through the prison in Taguatinga. 

Elsewhere an Indian mob broke into a prison where a suspected rapist was being held to break him out for a public lynching this week. 

Syed Faird Khan was beaten to death and hung from a clock tower in Nagaland state after being put in a cell accused of attacking a 19-year-old student in February. 

It came after thousands were outraged by the blocking of a film about the high-profile gang rape of a student on a bus in the country in 2012. 

Friday, May 3, 2024

An americaan soldier looking at Panzerwerfer 42 and a dead german soldier lying in front of him.

An americaan soldier looking at  Panzerwerfer 42 and a dead german soldier lying in front of  him.



The German Panzerwerfer refers to either of two different types of half-tracked multiple rocket launchers employed by Nazi Germany during the Second World War.

The Panzerwerfer 42 auf Maultier was used for larger scale rocket barrages against Soviet positions where a large bombardment of a big area would be more effective than more accurate artillery fire. 

The Panzerwerfer's rocket barrages covered much larger areas and added more psychological elements to the fight: the amount of noise, smoke, splinters, and flying debris as the rockets hit and exploded was considerable.

 The extensive use on the Eastern Front showed that this weapon could be employed effectively on the Western Front as Well. 

The weapon was finally introduced throughout the army on May 14, 1944, in France

The Battle of the Bulge saw intensive use of German armored rocket launchers. The most concentrated, massed salvos were used in the Ardennes region of Belgium in 1944 during the weeks of the German offensive

Panzerwerfers saw extensive use during April and May 1945, as the Soviets were quickly advancing on Berlin and the German forces employed rocket artillery in a defensive mode.

MEET THE WOMAN THAT BROKE WORLD RECORD BY SLEEPING WITH 919 MEN.

MEET THE WOMAN THAT BROKE WORLD RECORD BY SLEEPING WITH 919 MEN.


The American Matured movie actress and director Lisa sparks popularly called Lisa Sparxxx (born October 6, 1977) competed against two other women one of which was the former world record holder who literally made love with 759 men in a day.

The very nature of their work requires them to make love to many different people.

But no person took this to the extreme, and in the process created a new world record.

That person is matured movie actress Lisa Sparxxx who made love to 919 men in only one day.

During World War II, the United States held 400,000 Axis prisoners of war in some 500 POW camps.

During World War II, the United States held 400,000 Axis prisoners of war in some 500 POW camps.




Some of these camps were located in the Midwest and Great Plains areas, but the majority were in the South and Southwest.

Despite the large number of prisoners and the relatively lax security at many of the work sites that employed them, very few of the POWs tried to escape.

 Only 2,222 of the Axis POWs, fewer than one percent, ever attempted a breakout, according to Smithsonian — and most who did escape were quickly recaptured.

The most notorious escape occurred during the evening of Dec. 23, 1944 when 25 German POWs made their way through a tunnel they had dug out of the Camp Papago Park, a prison compound in a desert park outside of Phoenix, Arizona. 

The escape became known as “The Great Papago Escape” — and for a brief moment it captured the American public’s imagination.

Camp Papago Park began accepting prisoners in 1943 and eventually housed 3,100 German soldiers and officers, many of them from the Kriegsmarine, the German navy.

 Among the naval prisoners were many “troublesome U-boat captains and their crews,”.

Among the most infamous prisoners was Jurgen Wattenberg, a former U-boat captain and the highest-ranking prisoner at Camp Papago Park. 

According to his obituary in The New York Times, Wattenberg graduated from the Prussian Naval Academy and had served in the German navy for more than 20 years before three British destroyers sank his submarine in the Caribbean on Sept. 3, 1942.

 The British navy later turned the submarine skipper over to the United States.

“Wattenberg was a highly educated, very dedicated officer,” historian Lloyd Clark stated in The Great Escape of ’44. Soon after arriving at the camp, Wattenberg began planning an escape.

Wattenberg and his co-conspirators decided that digging a tunnel would be their best bet. 

They began digging, but after filling empty attics in unused barracks with dirt and flushing heaps more of dirt down toilets — this according to The Arizona Republic — they realized they were going to need a cover story to explain all the dirt they would have to excavate.

“One day in September 1944, when the tunnel was in its infancy, four U-boat captains in 1A idly watched American G.I.s as they headed toward their athletic field,” the Republic reported.

 “An idea came to the wily Germans who had highly developed engineering skills and hours of unsupervised time: Why couldn’t they have a sports area in their compound?”

Wattenberg asked camp officials for permission to create a faustball court, faustball being a German game similar to volleyball. “Camp officials made a mistake when they welcomed Capt.

 Wattenberg’s request for dirt, shovels and other tools to build a German version of a volleyball court,” the Times obituary noted. 

“When the Germans started digging their tunnel behind a bathhouse, working in small groups on 90-minute shifts and using spoons, screwdrivers and shovels, the piles of dirt provided handy cover.”

“Even so, the tunnel, whose entrance was hidden by the bathhouse, a coal bin and a clothesline, produced so much dirt that the prisoners eventually had to devise a new way to dispose it,” according to the Times. 

“A result was a veritable profusion of carefully tended, and extremely well-sodded, prison gardens.”

As the men worked on the tunnel they also made other preparations, such as hoarding food and sewing “civilian” clothes to change into once they escaped.

 “Three men in the group, called the ‘three crazy boatmen’ by other escapees, believed they could walk 40 or 50 miles westward from Papago Park, then float down the Gila River to freedom,” the Republic reported.

“Gathering any wood they could, they designed a boat made of wood and canvas that could be broken down and placed in a bag and carried out the tunnel. 

They even tested its seaworthiness in a small lake dug in Compound 1A. 

Unfortunately, upon arrival at the river, they soon learned what most Arizonans know — the Gila wasn’t much of a river. They burned the boat.”

By December 1944, the prisoners had dug a 178-foot tunnel, complete with a string of electric lights, that led beyond the camp’s barbed-wire fences, according to the Times. 

On the evening of Saturday, Dec. 23, they began slipping through the tunnel in groups of two and three. In all, 25 of them escaped.

According to the Republic, one of the biggest slip-ups the camp personal made was allowing POWs to sleep in on Sundays, delaying the daily headcount until the afternoon.

Camp personnel didn’t report the escape until 8:00 P.M. on Christmas Eve. “By that time, one of the POWs was already in custody,” the Republic reported.

 “He had hitched a ride with a civilian who drove him directly to the sheriff’s office.”

The escapees’ general plan was to head south to Mexico in small groups at night. During the day, they hid anywhere they could, in stables, bushes, caves and even the basement of a local high school, according to the Republic.

Things didn’t go well for them. “Extensive news reports caused a flurry of citizens to write angry letters to Arizona newspapers. One letter — of many — accused the camp authorities of being ‘damn slack.’”

The public outcry led to a full-scale manhunt for the remaining escapees. “With citizens, soldiers, police and Papago Indian scouts looking for them, all but one POWs were gathered up” within a few weeks, the Republic reported.

Wattenberg was the last to holdout. He hid in a cave for nearly a month before he ran out of food and finally “cleaned himself up and walked into downtown Phoenix, where he politely turned himself in to a policeman,” according to the Republic.

The first African American in Marine Corps history to be promoted to the rank of Sergeant Major.

The first African American in Marine Corps history to be promoted to the rank of Sergeant Major.


Born in Alabama in 1919, Huff joined the Corps in 1942, making him a member of the renowned Montford Point Marines.

After service in the Pacific Theater, Huff went on to serve as Gunnery Sergeant with the 1st Marine Division in Korea. He became the first Black Sergeant Major in the history of the US Marine Corps in 1955.

Huff later served two tours in Vietnam. During the Tet Offensive, Sergeant Major Huff was awarded the Bronze Star Medal with combat ‘‘V’’ for valor for saving the life of his radio operator.

Despite decades of enduring injustice and mistreatment due to his skin color, Huff would later remark:

“I never let any of these things make me prejudice right back. Especially in combat. Especially in Vietnam. I am the sergeant major. I take care of all my men, black and white.”

Following his second tour in Vietnam, Huff retired on September 30, 1972. Reflecting on his service, he said:

“When I retired, I had been Sergeant Major longer than anyone on duty at the time in all the services. I was the senior enlisted man in the whole United States Armed Forces.

I could look back to becoming the first black Sergeant Major in the Marine Corps…including Vietnam, when it was the largest marine force ever assembled.”

Huff died on May 2, 1994, at Camp Lejeune Naval Hospital and is interred in Plot A-69 of Coastal Carolina State Veterans Cemetery, a VA Grant Funded Veterans Cemetery. Please take a moment to remember his service today.

Thursday, May 2, 2024

The heroic Story of German Women Who Rescued Jews During the Holocaust.

The heroic Story  of German Women Who Rescued Jews During the Holocaust.


From 1942 until the end of the war, the war widow, Johanna Eck (b. 1888) sheltered, successively, four victims of Nazi persecution.

Two of those who found refuge in her home were Jews. Eck had been acquainted with the family of the first, Heinz Guttmann, for many years before the war. Heinz’s father, Jakob, and Eck’s husband had been comrades-in-arms during World War I.

In 1942, Jakob, his wife, and their children were deported to the East, never to return. Young Heinz alone had barely managed to escape arrest and was wandering aimlessly in the streets without a plan, without a place to stay, and without any food-ration cards.

 Everybody he turned to for help refused to have anything to do with a Jewish illegal for fear of being caught. 

Eck alone, of all his non-Jewish acquaintances, stood by him in this difficult moment, offering him refuge in her home, and sharing her meager food allowance with him. 

She would spend several days on end away from home in an effort to obtain additional food rations from trustworthy friends. 

When, in November 1943, the house was destroyed in an air raid, Eck took it upon herself to locate an alternative hiding-place for Heinz. 

Even while he was living away from her, Eck kept in close contact with Heinz, providing him from time to time with food-ration cards, and, as the need arose, with vital contacts.

It was through Heinz’s landlady, Ms. M. that Eck came to be acquainted with Elfriede Guttmann (no relation to Heinz), a Jewish girl who was hiding in her home.

 In December 1943, the Gestapo, raided Ms. M’s house. Elfriede, who had been hiding under one of the beds, barely managed to escape detection.

 Shattered by this traumatic experience, the Jewish girl visited Eck and told her what had happened. Eck, who had in the meantime been assigned a single-room apartment, immediately agreed to offer her refuge.

One day, as they were standing in line in a bakery shop, Elfriede was warmly greeted by a girl of the same age. 

It turned out that this was Erika Hartmann, a former classmate, who had attended the same school in Mühlhausen, East Prussia (today Mlynary in Poland).

 Hartmann, who was deeply touched by the lot of the Jewish girl, was very eager to help. She gave Elfriede some of her personal Aryan documents, including one confirming that she had done work for the labor service.

This was soon to prove invaluable. When, on the night of January 30, 1944, Allied planes wrought havoc in the skies of Berlin, Eck took advantage of the ensuing confusion to register Elfriede with the police authorities as Erika Hartmann, whose house and personal documents had been burned down in the recent air raid. 

It was by means of such subterfuge that she could legalize the Jewish girl’s existence and have her officially registered as a lodger in her apartment.

Elfriede’s end was very tragic. The Jewish girl, who survived the horrors of the war intact, succumbed to a sudden stomach constriction shortly after the liberation. She passed away in June 1946, on the eve of her projected emigration to the United States.

 Eck, a nurse by training, sat at her bedside at the hospital until she passed away. She later inquired with the Jewish community as to the names of Elfriede’s parents and brother. 

Although they had all perished, she had the names inscribed on the gravestone that she set up at her own expense at the Berlin-Weissensee cemetery. Questioned about her motives, Eck expressed herself as follows:

“The motives for my help? Nothing special in a particular case. In principle, what I think is this: If a fellow human being is in distress and I can help him, then it becomes my duty and responsibility. 

Were I to refrain from doing so, than I would betray the task that life – or perhaps God? – demands from me. Human beings – so it seems to me – make up a big unity; they strike themselves and all in the face when they do injustice to each other. These are my motives.“

The conditions in the camps were inhumane, and women were often subjected to forced labor, starvation, and medical experiments.

The conditions in the camps were inhumane, and women were often subjected to forced labor, starvation, and medical experiments. Women were t...