Read Mission at Nuremberg Online
Authors: Tim Townsend
114Â Â
“He stared up at the clouds . . .”:
West, “Greenhouse with Cyclamens I (1946),” p. 16.
114Â Â
lodged in the broken roof:
Gaskin,
Eyewitnesses,
p. 103.
115Â Â
“exhaled the stench of disinfectant . . .”:
West, “Greenhouse with Cyclamens I (1946),” p. 10.
115Â Â
death flowed from the wreckage:
Gaskin,
Eyewitnesses,
p. 115.
115Â Â
were miraculously untouched:
Ibid., p. 102.
115Â Â
Resurrecting a city:
Description of the Allied rebuilding of Nuremberg comes from “Nuremberg: Historical Evolution,” pp. 7â10.
115Â Â
uncovered caches of machine guns:
Gaskin,
Eyewitnesses,
p. 109.
117Â Â
You sure do,
Gerecke thought:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
117Â Â
battling Indians:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 49.
117Â Â
“the story of a lost sheep . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
117Â Â
“ . . . to surprise you”:
Ibid.
117Â Â
“Chaplain, just remember . . .”:
Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 116.
Â
CHAPTER 6
118Â Â
“Beloved, never avenge . . .”:
NRSV.
118Â Â
“ . . . I grew increasingly confused . . .”:
Speer,
Spandau,
p. 52.
119Â Â
Andrus, who was furious:
Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
p. 53.
119Â Â
a show of force:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
pp. 145â146.
119Â Â
contained 530 offices:
“Memorium Nuremberg Trials.”
119Â Â
$75 million today:
CPI.
119Â Â
GIs removed courtroom walls:
“Memorium Nuremberg Trials.”
119Â Â
The prison's four wings:
Schneider interview.
120Â Â
Two of the prison's wings:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 126.
120Â Â
Andrus oversaw about 250 people:
Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
p. 55.
120Â Â
the ground floor of Wing Four:
Schneider interview.
120Â Â
could be run by five guards:
Ibid.
120Â Â
Philadelphia's Cherry Hill Prison:
“Eastern State Penitentiary.”
120Â Â
Each cell measured:
Fritzsche,
Sword in the Scales,
pp. 17â19.
120Â Â
a “Judas window”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
120Â Â
a steel cot, fastened to the wall:
Description of the Nazis' cells is largely drawn from Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
pp. 68â74.
121Â Â
created by knocking down a wall:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
122Â Â
Guards were ordered to yell:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 127.
122Â Â
freshly laundered underwear:
Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
p. 68.
122Â Â
could take a hot shower:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 127.
122Â Â
hand the prisoner a spoon:
Andrus, “Prisoner Routine, Nurnberg Jail.”
122Â Â
Breakfast usually consisted of:
“Menus, Nuremberg prison, 17 June 1945 to 30 April 1946.”
122Â Â
he was handed a broom:
Andrus, “Prisoner Routine, Nurnberg Jail.”
123Â Â
a small 140-by-100-foot:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 128.
123Â Â
followed eight paces behind:
Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
p. 67.
123Â Â
they prepared legal defenses:
Tusa and Tusa,
Nuremberg Trial,
p. 130.
123Â Â
A typical dinner:
“Menus.”
123Â Â
The creation of the Nuremberg Laws:
Unless otherwise noted, the description of how the Nuremberg trials came to be come primarily from Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials
(pp. 4â39) and Overy, “The Nuremberg Trials.”
124Â Â
wrote to Sir Cecil Hurst:
Pell, Letter to Sir Cecil Hurst, 8 May 1944.
127Â Â
“considerable pressure . . .”:
Archibald King, Memorandum for the Judge Advocate General, 7 September 1944.
128Â Â
The middle option:
Ibid.
128Â Â
“ . . . no detailed directive . . .”:
Ibid.
130Â Â
in the vicinity of Aachen:
Aachen's Wanted Nazis.
130Â Â
“Assuming that there is . . .”:
Daniel, Letter to Colonel Joseph Hodgson, 4 April 1945.
131Â Â
“We believe that whatever their guilt . . .”
:
Dean, “The statement which appears below.”
133Â Â
outlining the plan for a major trial:
Jackson, Letter to Lord Wright of Durley, 5 July 1945.
134Â Â
Jackson publicly stated:
Jackson,
Statement by Robert H. Jackson Representing the United States,
12 August 1945.
135Â Â
“We are all worried about”:
Taylor, “We Are All Worried.”
136Â Â
“complete freedom . . .”:
“Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War,” Geneva, 27 July 1929.
136Â Â
“granted the protection . . .”:
Twelfth Army Group Headquarters.
136Â Â
the religious rights of POWs:
European Theater of Operations Headquarters. “Standing Operating Procedure No. 49.”
136Â Â
there are no records:
Brinsfield interview.
137Â Â
“He'll be your assistant”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
137Â Â
Gerecke met chaplains Sixtus O'Connor and Carl Eggers:
Ibid.
137Â Â
“How does a man . . .”:
Venzke,
Confidence in Battle.
137Â Â
the son of a schoolteacher:
John O'Connor interview.
137Â Â
enjoyed a classical education:
O'Connor, Transcript of Record.
138Â Â
interested in how modern philosophy:
O'Connor, “Augustin Gemelli,” pp. 450â451.
138Â Â
dropped out of St. Bonaventure College:
St. Bonaventure's College and Seminary Annual Catalogue
, 1925â1926, p. 93.
139Â Â
O'Connor professed:
Davies and Meilach,
Provincial Annals.
139Â Â
rigged a sound system:
John O'Connor interview.
139Â Â
was harassed by party thugs:
Brian Jordan interview.
139Â Â
his love affair with teaching:
Callahan,
Provincial Annals,
p. 134.
140Â Â
was anxious to become:
Maguire, Letter to “Brothers in St. Francis.”
140Â Â
O'Connor listed his height:
Sixtus R. O'Connor,
Application for Service
.
140Â Â
The closest person:
John O'Connor interview.
140Â Â
on any official army documents:
Ibid.
Biographical Data
, 10 August 1944.
140Â Â
guessed the priest to be:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
140Â Â
Gerecke was frightened:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
140Â Â
Gerecke offered the Nazi:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
140Â Â
It wasn't an easy gesture:
Ibid.
141Â Â
“in order that the Gospel . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
141Â Â
“ . . . of an all-loving Father . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
141Â Â
“ . . . on the Cross for them”:
Gerecke, “My Assignment.”
141Â Â
leaving Gerecke and Hess alone:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
141Â Â
they had all been boys:
Hank Gerecke interview, 23 March 2011.
141Â Â
He fought in the same regiment:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 18.
141Â Â
the rank of first lieutenant:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 110.
141Â Â
a chest wound:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 18.
141Â Â
studied with a geography professor:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 110.
141Â Â
traditional German imperialism:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 126.
142Â Â
Hess had taken stenography:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 19.
142Â Â
including those on
lebensraum
:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 131.
142Â Â
third in line to lead the Reich:
Ibid.
142Â Â
Hitler addressed in the familiar:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 110.
142Â Â
He had sought out father figures:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 131.
142Â Â
“There is one man . . .”:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 111.
142Â Â
Hess's take on
“the Jewish problem”:
Kelley,
22 Cells at Nuremberg,
p. 20.
142Â Â
to be rid of Jews:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 110.
142Â Â
his part in planning:
Ibid., p. 125.
143Â Â
“Would you care . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
143Â Â
a copy of St. John's Gospel:
“Kesselring Cried at His Sermon.”
143Â Â
“My first attempt . . .”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
143Â Â
he dreaded meeting:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
143Â Â
“You want in now, Chappie?”:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
143Â Â
“I heard you were coming . . .”:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
144Â Â
his mother, Franny, sailed to Haiti:
Mosely,
Reich Marshal,
p. 8.
144Â Â
“highest aspiration . . .”:
Bewley,
Hermann Göring,
p. 19.
145Â Â
Red Baron . . . Goering was married:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
pp. 102â103.
146Â Â
with huge feasts:
Ibid., p. 103, and Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 63.
146Â Â
a man who loved animals:
Davidson,
Trial of the Germans,
p. 63.
146Â Â
in style on his own train:
Ibid., p. 93.
146Â Â
a title held previously:
Ibid., p. 96.
147Â Â
“I hereby charge you . . .”:
Ibid., p. 75.
147Â Â
the end of his favor with Hitler:
Ibid., p. 60, and Wistrich,
Who's Who,
p. 104.
147Â Â
packing up as many rugs:
Unless otherwise noted, the description of Goering's final days on the run comes from Mosely,
Reich Marshal,
pp. 338â348.
148Â Â
Hitler had become hysterical:
Kershaw,
Hitler, 1936â45,
p. 807.
148Â Â
better without him:
Ibid., p. 804.
148Â Â
hounding Hitler for months:
Ibid., p. 807.
148Â Â
Bormann drew up a document:
Ibid., p. 808.
149Â Â
decided to search:
Lesjak, “Bagging a Bigwig.”
150Â Â
“ . . . Eisenhower's personal protection . . .”:
Mosely,
Reich Marshal,
p. 351.
150Â Â
a Stinson L-5 Sentinel:
Alford,
Nazi Plunder,
pp. 45â47.
151Â Â
his valet, Robert Kropp:
Descriptions of Goering's arrival at Mondorf taken from Andrus and Zwar,
I Was the Nuremberg Jailer,
pp. 25â37.
152Â Â
considerable amount of charm:
Gerecke and Sinclair, “I Walked the Gallows.”
152Â Â
everything in his power:
Gerecke, Toastmasters.
153Â Â
“Another day with the men . . .”:
“Kesselring Cried at His Sermon.”
153Â Â
had directed the bomb attacks:
Wistrich,
Who's Who,
pp. 170â171.
153Â Â
“He is one gentleman
. . .”:
“Kesselring Cried at His Sermon.”
153Â Â
“a city of ruins . . .”:
Gerecke, “Monthly Report of Chaplains,” November 1945.
Â
CHAPTER 7
154Â Â
“He who covers up his faults . . .”:
Tanakh.
154Â Â
A succession of six prosecutors:
Barrett, “Raphael Lemkin and âGenocide' at Nuremberg, 1945â1946.”
154Â Â
“Until they began to react . . .”:
Taylor,
Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials,
p. 165.