Monuments, Men, and Nazi Treasures

Monuments, Men, and Nazi Treasures

monuments men and nazi treasures U.S. Occupation Forces Faced a Myriad of Problems In Sorting Out Riches Hidden by the Third Reich by GREG BRADSHER n late Januar y 1945, Russian troops moved closer to the massive Tannenberg Memorial near IHohenstein, in what is now Olsztynek in northern Poland near the Baltic Sea. It commemorated the German soldiers killed there in World War I.And it was a battle in which the German commander, Paul von Hindenberg , who was later elected president, became a hero. Colonel-General Hans Reinhardt, commander of Army In a room measuring roughly 45 x 17 feet, they placed Group Center, ordered the memorial to be blown up, but the caskets of Prussian kings Frederick William I (reign not before certain things were removed. Those things were 1713–1740) and Frederick the Great (1740–1786), both the bodies of Field Marshal and Weimar President von of whom had been buried in the church of the Potsdam Hindenburg and his wife. Lt. Gen. Oskar von Hindenburg garrison, and of Field Marshal and Frau Gertrud von supervised the evacuation of the flags of the Prussian regi­ Hindenburg. Three of the caskets were made of wood; the ments and the coffins of his parents, which were moved to fourth, containing the remains of Frederick the Great, was Berlin. metal and larger than the others. Each casket bore a paper Thus began what a 1950 Life magazine article called “one label fastened with cellophane tape. of the most curious and complicated enterprises the U.S. In the same room the soldiers also placed treasures from Army of Occupation ever undertook.” the Hohenzollern Museum in Berlin. Each item had an It was perhaps one of the most unlikely and interest­ identifying card attached. Most of the items had been ing World War II German cultural property evacuation made for or used at the coronation of King Frederick I and endeavors. The story involves four caskets; military flags; Queen Sophie in 1701. More than 200 German regimen­ famous artwork; the Hohenzollern Museum treasure (from tal flags, some painted and some embroidered, were hung the Monbijou Palace in Berlin), including the crown jewels above the coffins. They dated from the early Prussian wars and the coronation paraphernalia of Frederick William I; and included many from the World War I era. A variety and cultural treasures. of other cultural items were placed in the room, and the In March 1945, the German Army transported the entrances were sealed with brick and mortar on April 2. caskets of the Hindenburgs, Frederick the Great, and Frederick William I, as well as the cultural items named Officers with Art Expertise above, to a one-time salt mine in the northern reaches Arrive to Supervise Operations of the Thuringian Forest, about 18 miles southwest of The items were not concealed for long. By the end of Nordhausen, that had been converted to a munitions plant April, the mine treasure would be in American hands. Not and storage depot. long afterward, the caskets, paintings, and flags would be There, German Army officers supervised 2,000 Italian, stored in Marburg, awaiting political decisions as to what French, and Russian forced laborers working in the plant. to do with them. About 400,000 tons of ammunition and other military Marburg is situated on a hillside along the Lahn River, supplies were stored in the mine. 60 miles north of Frankfort. From a military standpoint in A group of large warehouses adjacent to the entrance 1945, Marburg was important for its marshalling yards at into the shaft contained munitions, signal supplies, cloth­ the south end of town, which were used for the transship­ ing, and other military stores. A large store of dynamite was ment of German military personnel and supplies. located in relatively close proximity to the depository in the The U.S. Army Air Forces bombed the yards four times mine. Two rooms in the mine already stored records. in March. The historic buildings in the central part of the German officers sent all civilians out of the area in mid- town were undamaged from these bombings, but the new March. Working with great secrecy and using only military Staatsarchiv Building (occupied in 1938), suffered moder­ personnel, they brought objects into the mine. ate damage. Not long after the last aerial bombardment of Marburg, Opposite: The casket of Frederick the Great is removed from the the American military forces entered the town and cap­ Bernterode cave southwest of Nordhausen, Germany, in April 1945. tured it by the end of March. Monuments Men and Nazi Treasures Prologue 13 When American forces entered the Bernterode salt mine in April 1945. they found four caskets in a chamber. The coffin of Frederick Wilhelm I is not pictured. Left, top: Frederick the Great; bot- tom: Frederick's bronze coffin draped with a Nazi flag. Center, top: Field Marshal and President Paul von Hindenburg; bottom: von Hindenburg's coffin. Above: The casket of Frau von Hindenburg in the Bernterode cave. Soon thereafter, in early April, Capt. through masonry and rubble to a depth of dramatic display of the splendid flags, Walker K. Hancock inspected the pri­ more than five feet, uncovered a latticed hung in deep rows over the caskets mary cultural institutions and locations. door padlocked on the opposite side. and stacked with decorative effect in Hancock was an officer specialist with Breaking through, they entered a room the corners; the presence of the caskets the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives divided into a series of compartments hung themselves; all suggested the setting for (MFA&A) Section, whose members were with brilliant flags and filled with paintings, a modern pagan ritual. The pictures in known as the “Monuments Men.” As a re­ boxes, and tapestries. The contents were the entrance bay . seemed to have nowned sculptor, Hancock had won the grouped around four caskets, one of which been brought in as an afterthought. prestigious Prix de Rome before the war and had been decorated with a wreath and red Two hundred and seventy-one artworks, designed the Army Air Medal in 1942. At silk ribbons bearing Nazi symbols and the many of them 18th-century court portraits the castle, he found three great halls packed name Adolf Hitler. and paintings apparently from the Sans with parcels from the Staatsarchiv and An inspection of the room the following Souci palace at Potsdam, lay scattered about. Marburg town archives. At the Staatsarchiv day, April 28, brought to light a richly jew­ There were also several works of Lukas he found that the building and its archival eled scepter and orb, two crowns, and two Cranach the Elder from a 1937 Berlin exhi­ holdings had sustained greater damage from swords with finely wrought gold and silver bition, and works by noted artists Boucher, the occupying troops than from the bombs. scabbards. Hancock inspected the deposi­ Watteau, and Chardin. While Hancock was dealing with the situ­ tory the next day and later wrote: On the right of the central passageway ation in and around Marburg, other U.S. Crawling though the opening into were three wooden coffins, with the iden­ troops came across the Bernterode salt mine. the hidden room, I was at once forcibly tifications indicating they contained the During their inspection of the mine, they struck with the realization that this was Hindenburgs and Frederick William I. In observed a masonry wall built into the side no ordinary depository of works of art. the last compartment on the left was the of the main corridor about 550 yards from The place had the aspect of a shrine. The great metal casket of Frederick the Great. the elevator shaft. symmetry of the plan, a central passage­ Near that casket was a small metal box, Noticing that the mortar was still fresh, way with three compartments on either from the Kriegschule in Potsdam, contain­ they made an opening and, after tunneling side connecting two large end bays; the ing 24 photographs in color (with copies 14 Prologue Summer 2013 in black-and-white) of portraits of German Fourteen French laborers, former plant military commanders from Frederick workers, helped move the objects to the William I to Hitler. elevator shaft. German crews operated the A large heap of tapestries and altar cloths elevators. The cage of the elevator was too lay damp and unwrapped by the door. There small for a few of the objects—large paint­ were 65 steel ammunition boxes and cases of ings and the caskets—and the engineers had books, some with the stamp of the Crown to make temporary alterations to accommo­ Prince’s Library, and some china in boxes. date them. The last to be hoisted was the cas­ ket of Frederick the Great, which weighed The Art Experts Find at least 1,200 pounds and filled the elevator, Treasures of a Nazi Future with not a half-inch to spare. Hancock telephoned another Monuments As Frederick the Great’s casket neared the Man at 12th Army Group Headquarters, top of the shaft, a radio in the distance blared This Prussian crown was part of a collection of cor- Navy Reserve Lt. George Stout, one of onation paraphernalia found at Bernterode. Below: forth the “Star-Spangled Banner,” and just America’s foremost experts in the field of art Two finely wrought swords of Frederick the Great. as the coffin came into view, the radio band conservation. He told Stout that he was at a struck up “God Save the King.” It was May mine “with 400,000 tons of explosives in it.

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