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Mission at Nuremberg

Page 41

by Tim Townsend


  Rising, David. “On Trail of Most Wanted Nazi.” Associated Press. 30 April 2008.

  Roschke, E. L. Letter to Henry F. Gerecke. 27 December 1946. Private collection of Henry H. Gerecke.

  Rosen, David. “The Concept of Forgiveness in Judaism.” January 2003.

  Rosenberg, Joel W. “Genesis: Introduction.” In The HarperCollins Study Bible: New Revised Standard Version. Ed. Wayne A. Meeks. New York: HarperCollins, 1993.

  Rothe, O. Letter to Army and Navy Commission. 27 May 1943. Henry F. Gerecke Collection. Concordia Historical Institute. St. Louis, Missouri.

  Schmidt, Dana Adams. “11 Nazis Cremated, Ashes ‘Dispersed.’ ” New York Times. 18 October 1946.

  “Short History of the St. Louis Lutheran City Mission (40th Anniversary).” n.d. Henry F. Gerecke Collection. Concordia Historical Institute. St. Louis, Missouri.

  Simon, Edward A. “The Influence of the American Protestant Churches on the Development of the Structure and Duties of the Army Chaplaincy, 1914–1962.” Ph.D. diss. Princeton Theological Seminary, 1963.

  Snyder, Timothy. “Hitler vs. Stalin: Who Killed More?” New York Review of Books. 10 March 2011.

  “Song Sheet.” “25th anniversary of P. Gerecke’s Installation as pastor.” 4 February 1951. Collection of Irene Kornmeier.

  St. Bonaventure’s College and Seminary Annual Catalogue, 1925–1926. Allegany, New York.

  Stokes, Richard L. “Goering Had Poison Vial from Day of His Arrest.” St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 27 October 1946.

  . “Inquiry Begun on How Goering Got the Poison.” St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 16 October 1946.

  . “St. Louis Chaplain Tells of Rushing to Goering’s Cell as He Killed Self.” St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 17 October 1946.

  Suchara, T. W. Orders, Chaplain (Captain) Henry F. Gerecke. Memo. 31 October 1946. Chaplains Reports and “201” Files. Entry 484. Records of the Office of the Chief of Chaplains (RG247). National Archives II, College Park, Maryland.

  Sullivan, James P. “Efficiency Report for Henry F. Gerecke, 1 March 1945.” Chaplains Reports and “201” Files. Entry 484. Records of the Office of the Chief of Chaplains (RG247). National Archives II, College Park, Maryland.

  . “Historical Report, 4 April to 15 July 1944.” Written 7 July 1944. WWII Operations Reports, 1941–48. Medical. MDGH 97.0.3 to MDGH 98.1.13. Entry 427. Box 17283 Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1917–(RG407). National Archives II. College Park, Maryland.

  . “Historical Report, 16 July to 30 September 1944.” Written 13 October 1944. WWII Operations Reports, 1941–48. Medical. MDGH 97.0.3 to MDGH 98.1.13. Entry 427. Box 17283 Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1917–(RG407). National Archives II. College Park, Maryland.

  . “Historical Report, 1 January to 8 May, 1945.” Written 21 May 1945. WWII Operations Reports, 1941–48. Medical. MDGH 97.0.3 to MDGH 98.1.13. Entry 427. Box 17283 Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1917–(RG407). National Archives II. College Park, Maryland.

  . “Historical Report, 9 May to 23 May 1945.” Written 2 June 1945. WWII Operations Reports, 1941–48. Medical. MDGH 97.0.3 to MDGH 98.1.13. Entry 427. Box 17283 Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1917–(RG407). National Archives II. College Park, Maryland.

  . “Period Report, Medical Department Activities, 1 Jan.–31 Dec. 1945.” Memo. WWII Operations Reports, 1941–48. Medical. MDGH 97.0.3 to MDGH 98.1.13. Entry 427. Box 17283 Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1917–(RG407). National Archives II. College Park, Maryland.

  . “Period Report, Medical Department Activities, 1 Jan.–31 Dec. 1945, Munich addendum.” Memo. WWII Operations Reports, 1941–48. Medical. MDGH 97.0.3 to MDGH 98.1.13. Entry 427. Box 17283 Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1917–(RG407). National Archives II. College Park, Maryland.

  Sunday, Papers of William and Helen, 1882 -[1888–1957] 1975. A Guide to the Microfilm Edition. Ed. Robert Shuster. Billy Graham Center, Wheaton College. Wheaton, Illinois.

  Taylor, Telford. “We Are All Worried.” Memo. 6 September 1945. TTP-CLS: Series 4; Subseries 1–2. Box LC4, Folder 5: “Memoranda July–October ’45.” Telford Taylor Papers, Arthur W. Diamond Law Library, Columbia University Law School, New York, New York.

  Technical Manual, TM 16–205: The Chaplain. U.S. Army. July, 1944. Cited in “The Military Chaplaincy of the U.S. Army, Focusing on World War II Chaplains in Combat” by Patrick G. Skelly. Ph.D. diss. Norwich University, 2007.

  This Is the Life. Short film. Lutheran Hour Ministries, 1952.

  Trial of Major War Criminals (TMWC): Yale Law School Avalon Project: avalon.law.yale.edu/subject_menus/imt.asp.

  Twelfth Army Group Headquarters. Memo. 13 February 1945. General Administrative Records, 1942–1957. Judge Advocate Division, War Crimes Branch. File: “Organization 1945.” HM1989. Box 1, “Organization 1943 thru Organization 1947.” Records of United States Army Europe (USAEUR). Record Group 549. National Archives II, College Park, Maryland.

  U.S. Army Regulation 190–8: Enemy Prisoners of War, Retained Personnel, Civilian Internees and Other Detainees. Washington, DC: Headquarters Departments of the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, and the Marine Corps, 1997.

  Visser, Jacob Carl. “Evangelism in the Military Chaplaincy.” Ph.D. diss. Nazarene Theological Seminary, Kansas City, Missouri. 1964.

  Voigtländer, Nico, and Hans-Joachim Voth. “Persecution Perpetuated: The Medieval Origins of Anti-Semitic Violence in Nazi Germany.” Working paper. University of California Los Angeles. April 2011.

  Wade, H. H. Staffs of the German Concentration Camps: Mauthausen. Record of the Office of the United States Commissioner, U.N. War Crimes Commission. NM–66. Entry 52K. File 153: United Nations War Crimes Commission, Research Officer. Wade file. General Correspondence (Red Files). National Archives Collection of World War II War Crimes Records (RG238). National Archives II, College Park, Maryland.

  Waite, Robert G. “Gusen (with Gusen II and Gusen III).” The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. I: Early Camps, Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps Under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA). Vol. ed. Geoffrey P. Megargee. Part B. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009.

  . “Mauthausen Main Camp.” The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Volume I: Early Camps, Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps Under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA). Vol. ed. Geoffrey P. Megargee. Part B. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009.

  Wilberding, Carl L. Letter to Henry F. Gerecke. 23 June 1943. Chaplains Reports and “201” Files. Entry 484. File: Gerecke, Henry F. Records of the Office of the Chief of Chaplains (RG247). National Archives II, College Park, Maryland.

  Wittmer, George W. Letter to Army and Navy Commission. 2 June 1943. Henry F. Gerecke Collection. Concordia Historical Institute. St. Louis, Missouri.

  Zittlow, Todd. Concordia Historical Institute, St. Louis, Missouri. 2009.

  Zwingli, Ulrich. “An Exposition of the Faith,” 1531.

  INTERVIEWS

  Unless noted otherwise, all interviews were conducted by the author in person.

  Black, Peter. Washington, D.C. 8 March 2008

  Brinfield, John. Fort Jackson, South Carolina. 18 August 2010

  Cash, June. Chester, Illinois. 12 July 2011

  Collins, David J. Personal telephone interview. 7 December 2011

  Dietzfelbinger, Eckart. Nuremberg, Germany. 31 August 2010

  Frank, Niklas. Itzehoe, Germany. 5 May 2011

  Fuchs, Moritz. Fulton, New York. 19 July 2011

  Geist, Tom. East Meadow, New York. 10 March 2008

  Gentsch, Don. Chester, Illinois. 12 July 2011

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 4 January 2008

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 2 February 2008

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 20 August 2008

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 21 Octo
ber 2009

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 26 June 2010

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 30 October 2010

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 23 March 2011

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 30 June 2011

  Gerecke, Hank. Cape Girardeau, Missouri. 13 July 2011

  Harris, Whitney. St. Louis, Missouri. 26 April 2008

  Jordan, Brian (Rev.) New York, New York. 21 June 2013

  Kaul, Hans-Peter. The Hague, Holland. 20 August 2010

  Kornmeier, Irene. Arnold, Missouri. 22 March 2011

  Legow, Jerry. St. Louis, Missouri. 24 March 2011

  Nischwitz, Ruth and Harvey. Gordonville, Missouri. 23 March 2011

  O’Connor, John. Oxford, New York. 19 July 2011

  Powley, Colette and Paul. Chester, Illinois. 12 July 2011

  Schirach, Klaus von. Munich, Germany. 6 May 2011

  Schneider, Georg. Nuremberg, Germany. 30 August 2010

  Scholl, Travis. St. Louis, Missouri. 2010

  Volf, Miroslav. Osijek, Croatia. 25 August 2010

  Volf, Miroslav. Novi Sad, Serbia. 26 August 2010

  Willig, Mark. (Rev.) Personal e-mail interview, 29 September 2011

  Zentgraf, Henrike. Nuremberg, Germany. 30 August 2010

  All Bible verses quoted in this book are from the New Revised Standard Version, the Jewish Publication Society’s Tanakh Translation, or the American King James Version—the Bible Henry Gerecke read and used in his ministry.

  Index

  The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.

  Abel and Cain, 247–51

  age limits, for chaplains, 58, 60

  agriculture, in Missouri, 22–23

  Airborne League, 77

  Aktion T4, 121

  Aleutian Islands, 5, 31, 44

  Allied Control Council (ACC), 246, 268, 287–88

  American Civil War, 21, 23, 54–56

  American Forces Network (AFN), 91–92

  American Revolution, 52–54

  Amun-Ra, 52

  Andrus, Burton

  appearance of, 97–98

  background of, 2, 97

  at Fort Oglethorpe, 97–98

  Gerecke’s promotion to major, 290, 306

  at Mondorf camp, 98–103, 151–52

  at Nuremberg prison, 103–5, 118–23

  arrival, 103–4, 118–19

  cremation of bodies, 287–88

  daily prisoners’ health check, 123

  executions, 258, 269–72, 274, 275

  family visits, 184, 190, 233–34, 235, 239, 254

  Gerecke’s arrival, 137

  Goering’s suicide and, 3, 268, 269

  Keitel and, 1–4, 9–10

  recruitment of chaplains, 96–97, 103–4

  request for Gerecke’s return, 290–91

  request for Gerecke transfer, 96–97, 103–5, 117

  Speer and, 253

  suicides, 1–2, 3, 120–21, 122

  Sunday services, 187

  trial verdicts, 240–43

  anti-Semitism

  of Frank, 192

  of Fritzsche, 178–79

  in Nuremberg, 109–13

  “On the Jews and Their Lies” (Luther), 109–10

  Rintfleisch pogroms, 109, 110

  scapegoating of the Jews, 109–12

  of Schirach, 181

  of Streicher, 101, 105, 157

  Ardennes Offensive (Battle of the Bulge), 202, 209, 256

  Ark of the Covenant, 52

  Armenian Genocide, 218

  Army and Navy Commission, 45–46, 58

  army chaplains. See chaplains

  Army Medical Corps, 64

  Army Mortuary No. 1, U.S., 289

  Army of Greater Virginia, 56

  Army Regulation 350-1500, 61

  Army Signal Corps, 276

  Arnold, William R., 6, 49–50

  Ashcan Camp (Mondorf-les-Bains), 98–103, 151–52

  atheists, and Gerecke with the Ninety-Eighth, 76

  atonement in Christianity, 260–61, 262

  Augsburg Confession, 21–22, 24, 264

  Augustine of Hippo, 220

  Auschwitz concentration camp, 211–18

  Austria, in World War II, 193–96

  Austrian SS, 193–94

  Babi Yar, 157

  Babylonians, 106, 111

  Badewitz, Albert, 215–16

  Bad Tölz camp, 184–85

  Barth, Karl, 62

  baseball, World Series (1946), 4, 259, 266

  baseball team, of the Ninety-Eighth, 80, 84

  basketball team, of the Ninety-Eighth, 76–77, 80

  Battle of Chancellorsville, 55–56

  Battle of Concord, 52

  Battle of El Alamein, 200–201

  Battle of Lexington, 52

  Battle of the Bulge, 202, 209, 256

  Beer Hall Putsch of 1923, 141–42, 145, 256

  beer rations, 116

  Bender, Alma Isselhardt, 13–14, 16, 17, 19–20

  Bender, Jacob, 13–14, 16

  Bender, Virginia, 13, 17

  Benedict XV, Pope, 57

  Berchtesgaden, 149

  Berlin bunker (Führerbunker), 133, 147–48

  Berlin University, 175

  Bernays, Murray, 126, 127–29, 132

  Bethesda Hospital and Home for Incurables (St. Louis), 38

  Bewley, Charles, 144

  Bismarck, Otto von, 106

  Black Death, 110

  Bonhoeffer, Dietrich, 280

  Book of Concord, 27

  Bormann, Martin, 148, 222, 242

  Boston Red Sox, 4, 259, 266

  Bradley, Omar, 86, 136

  “brand of Cain,” 247–49

  bread and wine, in Christianity, 262–63

  Briand, Aristide, 126

  British Civilian Defense Organization, 74

  British Women’s Volunteer Services, 83

  Brooklyn Dodgers, 259

  Brunswick, Germany, 10

  Cain and Abel, 247–51

  Calvin, John, 22

  Camp Ashcan (Mondorf-les-Bains), 98–103, 151–52

  Camp Barkeley, Texas, 200–201

  Camp Ibis, California, 201

  Camp Mauthausen. See Mauthausen concentration camp

  Camp Myles Standish, Massachusetts, 7

  Camp Pall Mall, France, 86

  Camp Pickett, Virginia, 66

  Camp Polk, Louisiana, 201

  cannibalism, at Mauthausen, 205

  capella, 51

  capellani, 51

  Carinhall, 145–46, 147

  Cash, Eric, 301–2, 306–7

  Catholic chaplains, 49, 54, 56–57, 59, 70. See also O’Connor, Sixtus “Richard”

  Catholic Church, 27, 56–57

  Catholic University of the Sacred Heart (Milan), 138

  Chamberlain, Houston Stewart, 181

  chapelains, 51

  Chaplain Corps, 5–7, 45–50, 55–58

  “chaplain,” origin of term, 51

  chaplains, 50–61. See also specific chaplains

  after American Civil War, 56

  in American Civil War, 54–56

  in American Revolution, 52–54

  Catholic, 49, 54, 56–57, 59, 70

  in Colonial America, 52

  by denominational quota, 58

  duties, 57, 59

  first black army, 54

  first female, 54–55

  first Jewish, 54

  history of, 52–61

  Martin of Tours and origin of, 50–52

  National Defense Act and, 56

  providing religious support to enemies, 136–37

  relationship between the divine and war and, 52, 60

  requirements for, 58, 60

  role in battles, 203

  training, 60–61

  in World War I, 56–57

 
; in World War II, 5–6, 57–60

  Chaplain School, 60–61

  at Harvard University, 6–7, 48–50, 61, 65

  Charlemagne, 106

  Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, 110–11

  Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, 21–22

  Cherry Hill Prison (Philadelphia), 120

  Chicago Daily News, 303

  Chicago White Stockings, 24

  chlamys, 51–52

  Christ Lutheran Church (St. Louis), 17–20, 41, 42–43

  Christmas, 67, 82–83, 183–88

  Chrysler Imperial, 73

  Chrysostomos, 30

  Churchill, Winston, 123–24, 126–27, 178

  Church of the Nativity (Bethlehem), 184

  CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), 81

  Civil War, American, 21, 23, 54–56

  Clayton, Phillip C., 257–58

  Clement VII, Pope, 21

  Colored Troops, United States, 54

  concentration camps. See also Mauthausen concentration camp

  Auschwitz, 211–18

  Buchenwald, 101, 196, 204, 284

  Dachau, 8, 94–95, 157, 195

  Flossenburg, 204

  Heydrich’s design of system, 196

  Janowska, 281

  Concordia Seminary (St. Louis), 14, 15, 16, 31, 292

  condoms, 75

  Confederate States Army, 55–56

  confessions, 27

  Conot, Robert, 288

  Constantine, 50–51

  Conti, Leonardo, 121

  Continental Army, 53–54

  Continental Congress, 52–53

  corn farming, in Missouri, 22–23

  Corrie ten Boom, 293

  Courage for Today (radio show), 299

  cremation of bodies, 287–89

  Cressman, Samuel K., 84

  Croner, Norwood, 266

  Cross and the Swastika, The (Grossmith), 176

  Crowley, Paul, 220

  cyanide, 215

  Goering’s suicide by, 3, 4, 151, 266, 267, 268

  Czartoryski Museum (Krakow), 191

  Dachau concentration camp, 8, 94–95, 157, 195

  Dachau Trials, 255–56

  dancing, 18, 65, 78

  Daniel, Book of, 106

  Daniel, E. Clifton, Jr., 130–31

  Davidson, Eugene, 155, 172, 194

  DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane), 93

  Dean, Gordon, 131–32

  Dean, Patrick, 231

  Death’s Head Battalion, 196

  Declaration of Saint James Place, 124

  de Gaulle, Charles, 85

  Der Stürmer, 101, 105, 157

  Deuteronomy, 47, 48

 

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