Holzminden prisoner-of-war camp

Kaserne B at Holzminden, with prisoners and guards.

Holzminden prisoner-of-war camp was a World War I prisoner-of-war camp for British and British Empire officers (Offizier Gefangenenlager) located in Holzminden, Lower Saxony, Germany. It opened in September 1917, and closed with the final repatriation of prisoners in December 1918. It is remembered as the location of the largest PoW escape of the war, in July 1918: 29 officers escaped through a tunnel, of whom ten evaded subsequent recapture and managed to make their way back to Britain.

The prisoner-of-war camp is not to be confused with Holzminden internment camp, a much larger pair of camps (one for men, and one for women and children) located on the outskirts of the town, in which up to 10,000 civilian internees were held. The internees mainly comprised Polish, Russian, Belgian and French nationals, as well as a small number of Britons.

The camp

Plan of Holzminden PoW camp by H.G. Durnford. South is at the top.

The prisoner-of-war camp opened at the beginning of September 1917, under the auspices of X Army Corps, headquartered in Hanover. Other camps for officers under the command of X Corps, all smaller, were those at Clausthal, Ströhen and Schwarmstedt. Many of the initial intake of prisoners were transferred from these camps, and others at Freiburg and Krefeld, which had become overcrowded.[1]

The camp held between 500 and 600 officer prisoners.[2] There were also approximately 100–160 other ranks prisoners, designated orderlies: these men acted as servants to the officers and performed other menial tasks around the camp.[3]

The camp occupied the premises of a cavalry barracks erected in 1913.[4] The principal buildings, in which the prisoners lived, were two four-storey barrack blocks, known to the Germans as Kaserne A and Kaserne B, and to the British as A House and B House. Although the greater part of both blocks housed officer prisoners, both were partitioned internally: the western end of Kaserne A formed the Kommandantur, in which the German garrison was quartered; while the eastern end of Kaserne B was occupied by the orderlies. The basements included cells in which prisoners could be held in solitary confinement as punishment. Several wooden single-storey buildings in front of the barrack blocks accommodated service facilities, including the cookhouses, woodshed, bath-house, and parcel-room.

Regime and camp life

Caricature of Hauptmann Karl Niemeyer

The camps of X Corps came under the authority of General Karl von Hänisch, who encouraged a harsh regime.[5] The Kommandant at Holzminden when it opened was the elderly Colonel Habrecht ("a kindly old dodderer of about seventy"[6]); but he was replaced after less than a month by his second-in-command, Hauptmann Karl Niemeyer, who remained Kommandant until the camp's closure.[7][8] Niemeyer's twin brother, Heinrich, was Kommandant of the camp at Clausthal. The brothers had lived in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for 17 years – until the spring of 1917, when the United States entered the war – and as a result Karl was able to speak English. However, his language was filled with idiomatic errors and slang terms: it was described by one prisoner as "bar-tender Yank";[9] while another stated that Niemeyer "talked broken American under the impression that it was English".[10] The prisoners constantly ridiculed him, and nicknamed him "Milwaukee Bill". One error, which became notorious, was his assertion that "You think I do not understand the English, but I do. I know damn all about you."[11]

The camp was described by the Daily Sketch in January 1919 as "the worst camp in Germany".[12] This assessment needs to be understood in context: as a rule, officer prisoners enjoyed a more comfortable regime than other ranks prisoners (see World War I prisoners of war in Germany). Nevertheless, Niemeyer's regime was often arbitrary and punitive, and atrocities were committed, including the bayoneting of prisoners.[13] Two "celebrity" prisoners who appear to have been singled out for harsh treatment were William Leefe Robinson (who had shot down a German airship over Britain, and who spent much of his time at Holzminden in solitary confinement), and Algernon Bird, the 61st victim of Baron von Richthofen.[14] Robinson died in England in December 1918 from the effects of the Spanish flu pandemic, but the Daily Express was in no doubt that he was "in reality driven to death by the notorious Niemeyer.... He was murdered by Niemeyer, who was resolved to employ every instrument of cruelty against him".[15]

One deprivation suffered by the prisoners was a poor diet, although again this must be seen in context: as a result of the economic blockade of Germany, little food was available locally even for the civilian population. Prisoners were able to supplement their diet with the contents of parcels sent by their families at home, and by the Red Cross and other humanitarian organisations. As a result, they were often better fed than the Germans.[16] Prisoners were often able to use items of food to bribe their guards in return for lenient treatment or contraband equipment; while at other times they made a point of taunting their captors with the superiority of their material welfare, for example by drawing their full ration of German black bread only to burn it.[17][18] Before the prisoners finally left the camp in December 1918, they made a bonfire of the furniture and everything else combustible: "it was a splendid sight and the Germans could only stand by helplessly, condemning the waste".[19][20][21]

Cast list for "Home John", a revue performed at Holzminden on 27 July 1918. James Whale appeared as "Charwoman".

Prisoners found a variety of ways of dealing with the enforced idleness and monotony of prison life, including sports (football, hockey and tennis were all played), concerts and plays, lectures, debates, and reading.[22] Lt James Whale found the amateur theatricals, in which he participated as an actor, writer, producer, and set designer, "a source of great pleasure and amusement", and the audience reaction "intoxicating": it was his introduction to stagecraft, and he went on to become a leading Hollywood director.[23][24] O.G.S. Crawford spent much of his time reading and studying, and later reported that he was "far less unhappy" at Holzminden than he had been at his public school, Marlborough College.[25]

Escapes

From the outset, numerous officer prisoners attempted to escape from the camp. Techniques included cutting through the perimeter fence, and walking through the gates disguised as German guards, civilian workers, or (on at least one occasion) a woman.[26][27] Many of these escapes were successful in the first instance, but virtually all escapers were recaptured within a matter of days.

The largest and most celebrated escape was that made through a tunnel, on the night of 23/24 July 1918. The tunnel had been under excavation for some nine months. Its entrance was concealed under a staircase in the orderlies' quarters in Kaserne B. As officers were forbidden to enter the orderlies' quarters, in the early months the excavators had to reach it by disguising themselves in orderlies' uniforms. At a later stage, a secret access door between the officers' and orderlies' quarters was created in the attic. Eighty-six officers were on the list of those waiting to use the tunnel but, on the night of the escape, the thirtieth man became stuck and the enterprise had to be abandoned. Of the twenty-nine who did escape, ten succeeded in making their way to the neutral Netherlands and eventually back to Britain.[28] Among them was Colonel Charles Rathborne, the Senior British Officer in the camp, who – on account of his good German – was able to travel by rail without arousing suspicion, and managed to cross the Dutch border after only five days.[29] The other escapers travelled on foot, and most took at least 14 days.

The camp today

Although now surrounded by suburban development, the two main barrack blocks of the camp survive, and are still in military use as barracks for the German Army.[30][31]

Notable prisoners

Prisoners at Holzminden, including Aubrey de Sélincourt (seated, right)

Film

See also

References

  1. Hanson 2011, p. 35.
  2. Numbers of officer prisoners were recorded as 560 in the autumn of 1917: Hanson 2011, p. 35. Other rougher estimates were 550 (Durnford 1920, pp. 27, 78); 500 (Crawford 1955, p. 141); and 600 (Hanson 2011, plate opp. p. 229; Cook 2013, pp. 32, 52). About 100 newly captured officers entered the camp following the Spring Offensive of March 1918: Durnford 1920, p. 103.
  3. Numbers of orderlies were recorded as between 140 and 160 in the autumn of 1917 (Hanson 2011, p. 35); but elsewhere as "over 100" (Durnford 1920, p. 78); and as 80 (Hanson 2011, plate opp. p. 229). For orderlies' roles, see Hanson 2011, pp. 27–30.
  4. Hanson 2011, p. 23.
  5. Yarnall, John (2011). Barbed Wire Disease: British & German Prisoners of War, 1914–19. Stroud: Spellmount. pp. 168–9. ISBN 9780752456904.
  6. Durnford 1920, p. 18.
  7. Winchester 1971, pp. 191–8.
  8. Hanson 2011, pp. 46–53.
  9. Durnford 1920, p. 37.
  10. Harvey 1920, p. 225.
  11. Durnford 1920, p. 37. "Damn all" is a colloquial expression in English meaning "absolutely nothing".
  12. Winchester 1971, plate 16; reproducing page from the Daily Sketch, 13 Jan. 1919, p. 6.
  13. Hanson 2011, pp. 49–50.
  14. Hanson 2011, pp. 66–8.
  15. "Captain Robinson, V.C., Driven to Death". Daily Express. 2 January 1919. p. 1.; quoted in Wilkinson, Oliver (2015). "A Fate Worse Than Death? Lamenting First World War Captivity". Journal of War & Culture Studies. 8: 24–40 (30).
  16. Hanson 2011, pp. 71–90.
  17. Durnford 1920, p. 46.
  18. Winchester 1971, pp. 112–3.
  19. Crawford 1955, p. 145.
  20. Hanson 2011, p. 248.
  21. Cook 2013, pp. 226–7.
  22. Hanson 2011, pp. 98–104.
  23. Whale 1919, p. 318.
  24. Hanson 2011, p. 102.
  25. Crawford 1955, pp. 26, 142–3.
  26. Hanson 2011, pp. 105–36.
  27. Rathborne 2016, pp. 97–8.
  28. Hanson 2011, pp. 191–239.
  29. Rathborne 2016, pp. 100–102.
  30. Holzminden PoW camp today.
  31. Crawford 1955, pp. 146–7, describes a visit made to the camp in 1953.
  32. Hanson 2011, p. 260.

Bibliography

Memoirs

Secondary works

Coordinates: 51°49′57″N 9°27′39″E / 51.832490°N 9.460941°E / 51.832490; 9.460941

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